Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0917798 (cerebral ischemia)
17,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The post cardiotomy state is typically delirious and although organic factors are important it is multi-determined. Cerebral ischaemia has been implicated in the development of psychological disorder after resuscitation but longer term neurotic disorders also occur. Affective disturbances, particularly depression, are associated with the coronary care experience. The following conditions are directly related to an increased incidence of psychological disorder: age, loss of sleep, sensory deprivation, stressful experiences, pre-operative morbidity (both physical and mental), the severity of both surgical trauma and the post-operative medical state. For both the staff who administer intensive therapy and the patient who receives it there are unique psychological hazards, the management of which depends largely on mutual understanding and support.
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PMID:The psychiatric aspects of cardiac intensive therapy: a review. 110 11

We reported a rare case of cortical blindness in cerebral ischemia following post-anoxic state confirmed by single photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT) and visual evoked potential. A 45-year-old woman who had been suffering from bronchial asthma was admitted to our hospital because of sudden progressive dyspnea and depressed consciousness. When she arrived at the hospital by ambulance, she was in hypoxic state and fell into cardiac arrest. Her respiratory condition gradually improved with respirator assistance, and she recovered consciousness, but complained of bilateral visual loss. She had no history of any neurological or psychiatric illness, nor of drug abuse. On neurological examination, she was alert and oriented. Light reflex, optic fundi, extraocular movement and other neurological findings were all normal, with the exception of bilateral blindness. EEG showed generalized slow background activity, but cranial CT scan and MRI showed no abnormalities. 99mTc-HMPAO SPECT indicated hypoperfusion in prominent bilateral occipital and parietal lobes. Simultaneous recordings of pattern reversal visual evoked potential (VEP) and electroretinograms (ERG) using transient checkerboard pattern reversal in 15 min and 30 min checks were recorded. The results showed normal b waves but absent P100 in the bilateral eyes. From the patient's neurological symptoms and the results of SPECT and VEP, she was diagnosed as cortical blindness in post-anoxic state. On the 30th hospital day, her visual acuity and visual fields improved, but she was suspected of having visual agnosia. Eighty-five days after the onset of the neurological abnormalities, no traces of visual disturbances were observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of cortical blindness confirmed by single photon emission computerized tomography and visual evoked potential]. 820 Jan 41

The assessment of cerebral functions has long been the domain of positron-emission tomography and single photon emission computed tomography. The use of rapid imaging sequences and contrast agents enables physiological and pathophysiological cerebral processes to be assessed and monitored by magnetic resonance imaging. Both T1- and T2-weighted contrast-enhanced fast imaging sequences can be used to assess tissue perfusion, vascularity, and microcirculation by applying models developed in nuclear medicine. The diffusion of water molecules and hemodynamic aspects of the macrovasculature can also be monitored. Functional magnetic resonance (MR) imaging enables the visualization of neuronal function and activity, and MR spectroscopy makes possible the metabolic mapping of lesions and surrounding tissue. The advantages of MR techniques includes their low invasiveness, multiplanar imaging ability, and lack of radiation. This contribution discusses the clinical use of functional MR imaging methods and their role in neuroradiological diseases. Measuring perfusion and diffusion allows detailed insight into the pathophysiology of cerebral ischemia and is already being used routinely in acute ischemic stroke. Dynamic MR angiography enables the hemodynamic assessment of vascular malformations. In CNS neoplasms these imaging techniques can improve lesion characterization and the selecting, planning, and monitoring of therapy. Functional MR imaging techniques have also revolutionized the study of psychiatric illness; however, their clinical utility here is still limited. Initial results in patients with dementia and schizophrenia have provided insight into the pathophysiological changes of these diseases.
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PMID:[Functional magnetic resonance tomography in neuroradiology]. 1110 7

A 38-year old male patient with no history of psychiatric illness developed a progressive psychotic disorder after bilateral (predominantly left) mesencephalo-thalamic cerebral ischaemia. The reason of the emergency hospitalization was the sudden onset of a confusional state, culminating in a fluctuating comatose status. The neurological examination found mild right hemiparesia, praxic disorders and reactive left mydriasis with paresia of the downward vertical stare, leading to the hospitalisation in the neurology department for suspicion of a cerebral vascular ischaemic accident. The psychiatric symptoms started with acoustic-verbal hallucinations, poorly structured paranoid delusions, progressively developed over two weeks, followed by behavioural disorders with psychomotor agitation and heteroaggressivity. The patient was transferred to the psychiatric department, because of the heteroaggressive risk and lack of morbid consciousness, in spite of recovering from the confusional status. An intensive psychiatric management was proposed, combining a psychotherapeutic approach with 4 mg of risperidone and adjustable doses of benzodiazepine according to the psychomotor agitation. During the next days, there was a net recovery of the behavioural disorders, in spite of the persistence of the ideas of persecution. All the neurological symptoms also decreased. An anomaly of the polygon of Willis was found on a cerebral arteriography (the posterior cerebral arteries had a foetal origin, dependent on carotidal axes and not on the vertebro-basilar system). The main emboligen risk factor was the presence of a permeable foramen ovale, discovered during a transoesophageal echography. The patient underwent a surgical correction of the permeable foramen ovale. The psychiatric hospitalization for three months was continued by ambulatory follow-up. The initial positive symptoms (delusions, acoustic-verbal hallucinations) progressively diminished while negative symptoms became predominant after few months. One year after the first hospitalization the patient presented a second psychotic decompensation, with delusions of persecution, jealousy and behavioural disorders with heteroaggressivity, that required an emergency psychiatric hospitalization. The wife of the patient decided to divorce, because she was "frightened by the threats of death" from her husband. A neurological assessment during the second hospitalization in psychiatry did not find new ischaemic lesions after the cardiac surgery for the permeable foramen ovale, nor relevant changes in cerebral perfusion. The final diagnosis after the psychiatric follow-up of 14 months was: psychotic disorder with delusional ideas, due to cerebral ischaemia (DSM IV). There are relatively few data in the literature regarding persistent psychotic disorders in the context of ischaemic mesencephalo-thalamic lesions. However, several authors support the hypothesis of a possible disconnection of the thalamic nuclei, the frontal lobes and limbic system as a risk factor or a triggering factor for psychotic disorders in cerebral ischaemia. Observations concerning the occurrence of psychotic disorders following cerebral--especially localised--ischaemia may help to better understand the neuro-physiological mechanisms triggering or accompanying the psychiatric symptomatology. The role of functional cerebral imagery in the detection of possible structural lesions related to clinical observations must be emphasised. The slow progression (over a year) to psychotic disorder with predominantly negative symptoms emphasized the importance for long-term prospective studies. Isolated clinical observations arouse the interest for a specific scale for psychotic disorders occurring after cerebral ischaemia, similar to existing specific scale for post-ischaemic depressive disorders. The necessity of systematic psychiatric examination and re-evaluations in thalamic cerebral ischaemia is to be highlighted, both for the differential diagnosis and for the early psychiatric care.
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PMID:[Persistent psychotic disorder following bilateral mesencephalo-thalamic ischaemia: case report]. 1553 16

This systematic review summarizes and critically appraises the literature on the effect of erythropoietin (EPO) in schizophrenia patients and the pathophysiological mechanisms that may explain the potential of its use in this disease. EPO is mainly known for its regulatory activity in the synthesis of erythrocytes and is frequently used in treatment of chronic anemia. This cytokine, however, has many other properties, some of which may improve the symptoms of psychiatric illness. The review follows the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analysis (PRISMA) statement guidelines. Three databases (Medline, Web of Science, and Cochrane) were searched combining the search terms 'erythropoietin AND (psychotic disorders OR schizophrenia)'. Seventy-eight studies were included in qualitative synthesis, a meta-analytic approach being prohibited. The findings suggest that several EPO cerebral potential properties may be relevant for schizophrenia treatment, such as neurotransmission regulation, neuroprotection, modulation of inflammation, effects on blood-brain barrier permeability, effects on oxidative stress and neurogenesis. Several potentially detrimental side-effects of EPO therapy, such as increased risk of thrombosis, cancer, increased metabolic rate and mean arterial blood pressure leading to cerebral ischemia could severely limit or halt the use of EPO. Overall, because the available data are inconclusive, further efforts in this field are warranted.
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PMID:Treating patients with schizophrenia deficit with erythropoietin? 2272 70