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Query: UMLS:C0917798 (
cerebral ischemia
)
17,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fenoxedil chlorhydrate (FC), which is used as a treatment for cerebral circulatory failure and peripheral vascular disease, has been given to 100 patients with a cardiac arrhythmia: atrial fibrillation (78 cases), atrial flutter (4 cases), atrial tachysystole (2 cases), ventricular extrasystoles (12 cases), and supraventricular extrasystoles (4 cases). FC has been prescribed alone, or as a complement to current anticoagulant or digitalis treatment; combination with prenylamine, amiodarone, dysopyramide or a drug of the quinidine group must always be avoided, and the potassium level checked and corrected if necessary before treatment. In 78 cases of atrial fibrillation, the authors found that sinus rhythm was restored in 58 (74.4%); four cases of flutter were restored, and one case out of two of atrial tachycardia. In case of supraventricular and ventricular extrasystoles the results are less clear, and merit a further study with a larger number of cases. The electrocardiographic disorders encountered in this series have been evaluated: lenghthening of the QT interval, disorders of atrioventricular conduction, sinus inhibition. They were either produced by or aggravated by the FC. No cases of axis deviation were encountered. The authors make mention of the complications observed by other authors, but draw a distinction between the prescription of FC in cases of
cerebral vascular insufficiency
, without previous knowledge of the exact cardiac status of the patient (otherwise there is a risk of severe accidents), and the use of FC in cases of arrhythmia which have undergone full assessment before the drug is used. According to this study, FC appears to be a very effective anti-arrhythmic agent, but its use demands very rigorous clinical and electrocardiographic supervision.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1976 Nov
PMID:[Treatment of rhythm disorders by fenoxedil hydrochloride]. 6 36
Thirty out of 287 patients (10.4%) admitted to hospital for infective endocarditis between December 1970 and January 1990 had neurological complications. Twenty-three patients had native valve infectious endocarditis and 7 had prosthetic valve endocarditis. The clinical features were characterized by the frequency of aortic valve involvement (23 out of 30) and other complications, especially cardiac failure (16 cases) and peripheral vascular manifestations (7 cases). The commonest organism was the staphylococcus (53% of identified organisms) but the number of negative blood cultures was high (50% of cases). The neurological complication was often the presenting symptom of the endocarditis (19 cases) but it occurred after bacteriological cure in 4 cases. The complications observed were
cerebral ischemia
(16 cases), cerebral haemorrhage (11 cases), coma (2 cases), and one peripheral neuropathy causing a Claude Bernard Horner syndrome. These complications presented with hemiplegia in 17 cases, a meningeal syndrome in 8 cases, a convulsion in 1 case, a Von Wallenberg syndrome in 1 case, and a Claude Bernard Horner syndrome in 1 case. Twelve patients had a transient or permanent neurological coma. Cerebral CT scan showed ischemic lesions in 7 cases and haemorrhagic lesions in 10 cases. Carotid angiography demonstrated mycotic aneurysms in 6 patients. Twelve patients died: the cause of death was neurological coma (7 cases), low cardiac output (4 cases) and haemorrhagic shock (1 case). Four patients underwent neurosurgery: 3 for clipping a mycotic aneurysm and 1 for drainage of an intracerebral haematoma. Poor prognostic factors were: coma, cardiac failure, cardiac valve prosthesis and, above all, the extent and multiplicity of the neurological lesions. The authors propose the following measures to improve the prognosis: early surgery in cases of large and/or mobile vegetations especially when the infecting organism is a staphylococcus and when a systemic embolism has occurred; routine CT scanning and/or digitised cerebral angiography in all patients with infective endocarditis to detect surgically accessible mycotic aneurysms.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1991 Jan
PMID:[Neurologic manifestations of infectious endocarditis]. 201 89
Since 1978, the authors have observed 7 cases of dissecting aneurysm in the internal carotid artery. Symptoms were severe headache and subsequent neurologic deficit in young persons (3 women, 4 men; mean age 35 years). The underlying pathology was spontaneous dissection of the cervical internal carotid artery, with surgical confirmation in 3 cases and typical angiographic patterns in all cases. Spontaneous dissection of the cervical internal carotid artery is being increasingly recognized as a cause of
cerebral ischemia
in young adults. Moreover this clinicopathologic event is more common than had previously been supposed. The etiology remains unclear, except in 15% of cases in which dystrophy of the media (Marfan's syndrome) is in cause. No history of cervical trauma can be found. Typical clinical features consist in ipsilateral headache preceding an abrupt neurologic deficit in a 40-year-old person. An incomplete Horner syndrome (oculosympathetic paresis without facial anhidrosis) associated with facial pain and numbness is pathognomonic, but the majority of dissections are less typical. The typical angiographic pattern is an elongated regular stenosis of the high cervical internal carotid artery, 2 cm above the non-involved bulbus ("string sign"). The dissection may modify to a tapered occlusion above the point of origin of the internal carotid artery. The natural course is spontaneous resolution of the stricture, without relapse. Optimal management is non-operative since medical treatment has proved to be efficient. These cases confirm the benign course and overall good prognosis of spontaneous dissections of the internal carotid artery which are not as rare as the scarcity of reports might indicate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
J
Mal
Vasc 1990
PMID:[Spontaneous dissection of the internal carotid artery. Apropos of 7 cases and a review of the literature]. 217 45
The authors are reporting their experience about percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) in atheromatous stenosis of proximal supra-aortic arteries. In this series of 17 patients, with a 6-month follow-up, vertigos were the main clinical symptoms (8 cases), and it must be pointed out that 5 of these 8 patients also underwent a proximal angioplasty of one or the two of their vertebral arteries at the same time. Three subclavian steal-syndromes, one arterial insufficiency of an upper limb, one transient
cerebral ischaemia
, and four asymptomatic cases were also treated by the same procedure. For diagnosis as well as for follow-up, the authors are emphasizing the value of hemodynamic results of Doppler recording. As for the technics itself, it mainly derives from the PTA of the lower limbs arteries. The results in this series appear to be good from an hemodynamic point of view, with neither morbidity nor mortality.
J
Mal
Vasc 1986
PMID:[Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty in atheromatous stenosis of the proximal supra-aortic trunks: the brachiocephalic trunk and the subclavian artery]. 294 6
The major cause of death from carotid artery surgery (1.2% in 1984 in this series) is still coronary disease and myocardial infarct. A series of 50 patients were randomly selected for detailed study of post-operative cardiologic complications and the following sequelae were noted: mortality = 1 myocardial infarct; morbidity = 1 myocardial infarct, 3 documented anginal pains, 8 repolarization disorders, 4 benign ventricular arrhythmias. Analysis of these complications and a literature review demonstrated: the high frequency of combined carotid artery and coronary artery stenosis even in asymptomatic patients (25 to 40% of cases); the elevated percentage of complications in patients with symptomatic coronary disease (mortality risk multiplied by ten), hypertension or arterial disease; the low effect of age taken alone as risk factor. Pre-operative explorations to detect angina, particularly when latent and asymptomatic, should include a questionnaire, strict patient clinical examination and detailed reading of electrocardiogram tracings. An effort test should be performed as a function of results and patients' medical history and when positive should lead to coronarography in patients under 70 in good general condition, and when doubt persists after the effort tests. The indication for surgical treatment is dependent on results of these explorations: Carotid artery surgery (stenosis with high cerebral risk) should be performed under pre- and post-operative myocardial protection in patients with coronary artery disease who are too old or inoperable for cardiac reasons. Simultaneous myocardial and cerebral revascularization in the presence of severe lesions and at equivalent risk of progression. First intention carotid artery surgery for bilateral stable lesions with subsequent simultaneous myocardial and cerebral revascularization. First intention carotid artery surgery in case of
cerebral ischemia
with coronary artery shunt surgery at a later stage. Improved exploration of patients and close cooperation between cardiologists, anaesthetists and surgeons should allow patients at high risk to be operated upon under improved conditions of safety.
J
Mal
Vasc 1987
PMID:[Exploratory hierarchy and surgical indications for carotid surgery in patients with coronary disease]. 355 11
Arterial vasodilatation was obtained by a slow injection of nicardipine (0.1 microgram/20 min) to normotensive Long Evans rats. Reflex tachycardia was a consequence of a sympathetic activation as labetalol injected prior to nicardipine prevented the calcium antagonist-induced heart rate changes. The slope of the mean blood pressure (mmHg) - heart period (msec) curve was reproducible after a 75 min interval. This index of baroreflex sensitivity was calculated before and after a transient
cerebral ischemia
. Hemispheric ischemia was induced by electrocauterization of the vertebral arteries and a transient occlusion of the common carotid arteries for 10 min. Brainstem perfusion was maintained with this protocol. The second dose of nicardipine was injected 15 min after recirculation. The tachycardic response to the vasodilatation was markedly reduced after ischemia (1st slope: 0.48 +/- 0.05 msec/mmHg, 2nd slope: 0.12 +/- 0.05 msec/mmHg, n = 12, p less than 0.001, paired t test). We conclude that nicardipine injection is applicable to the study of baroreflex sensitivity in rats. The impairment of baroreflex sensitivity after a transient hemispheric ischemia could reflect a hemispheric interference with brainstem cardiovascular centres involved in the baroreceptor-heart rate reflex.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1985 Oct
PMID:[Adaptation to hypotension may involve the cerebral hemispheres]. 393 37
The gelatine-resorcine-formol glue (GRF) was used to reinforce the tissues of 25 patients operated for acute dissection of the ascending aorta, between January 1977 and September 1980. The results were compared with those of a control group of 25 patients operated between 1970 and 1976 by "classical techniques". There were no significant differences between the two groups as regards age, anatomical and preoperative clinical states. The ascending aorta was replaced in all patients; the aortic valve was replaced three times (12 p. 100) in the GRF group and twelve times (48 p. 100) in the control group: the coronary arteries were bypassed or reimplanted in 20 p. 100 of patients in both groups. The average peroperative blood loss was 5,800 ml in the control group and 2,100 ml in the GRF group (p less than 0,01). There were four peroperative deaths (16 p. 100) in the control group and no peroperative deaths in the GRF group. Postoperative complications (renal failure,
cerebral ischemia
, persistent peripheral ischemia or infection) were much more common in the control group. They were responsible for eight hospital deaths in the control group and two hospital deaths in the GRF group (p less than 0,01). Therefore, global hospital mortality was reduced from 48 p. 100 (control group) to 8 p. 100 (GRF group) (p less than 0,01). Two late deaths occurred in the control group, but there were none in the GRF one, all survivors being in good clinical condition. Sixteen patients in the GRF group underwent 19 angiographic controls, 2 to 36 months after surgery. These investigations showed two moderate aortic regurgitations (8 p. 100), three persistent dissections of the descending aorta but a stable, good quality repair in the other patients. In conclusion, the use of GRF glue significantly reduced: 1) the number of aortic valve replacements, 2) per- and postoperative blood loss, 3) the incidence and severity of postoperative complications. The long-term survival rate (4 years) has improved from 40 to 91 p. 100.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1983 Jan
PMID:[4-year clinical experience with gelatin-resorcinol-formol glue in acute dissections of the ascending aorta]. 640 19
From January 1985 to October 1992 ten patients were submitted to reconstruction of the external carotid artery (ECA). Nine were males and one female with age that ranged from 64 to 74 years, mean 68. All were symptomatic due to TIAs in seven and amaurosis fugax in four of this group, previous completed stroke plus TIAs in two and chronic low perfusion in one. Associated risk factors were smoking (8 pts: 80%), coronary disease (5 pts: 50%), hypertension (4 pts: 40%), diabetes (4 pts: 40%) and peripheral arterial obstructive disease (2 pts: 20%). All patients were submitted to non invasive (Doppler C. W., Echo-color Doppler) studies as well as angiography. All the patients had an occlusion of the internal carotid artery (ICA) unilateral and homolateral to external carotid stenosis in 8 and bilateral in 2; in addition three patients had a non haemodynamic stenosis of the contralateral ICA. One patient had an occlusion of the common carotid artery with collateral supply to the ECA; nine had severe stenosis of the ECA at the origin. In one case a homolateral vertebral stenosis was detected as well as a prevertebral contralateral subclavian stenosis in another one. Surgery was advised to correct amaurosis fugax, to increase external-internal collateral supply in order to avoid
cerebral ischaemia
and prior to contralateral ICA endarterectomy. All patients were operated upon under general anesthesia; an endarterectomy with a PTFE patch was performed in 9 cases, while in one a subclavian-ECA bypass was carried out using an autologous vein segment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
J
Mal
Vasc 1993
PMID:External carotid artery repair in cerebrovascular insufficiency. 825 54
The presence of a hemorheological disturbance must be considered in the pathophysiological and therapeutical approach to vascular diseases, including cerebral diseases. A reduction of blood fluidity, due either to increase of hematocrit (polycythemic hyperviscosity) or of fibrinogen concentration (plasmatic hyperviscosity) or of red cell rigidity (sclerocythemic hyperviscosity) is commonly considered a condition of high risk for acute or chronic brain ischemia. So many attempts have been made for improving blood fluidity with the purpose to prevent stroke and to delay cerebral deterioration in chronic condition. This paper will present a review of the literature on this subject and the personal experience of our research group with the use of hemodilution, plasmapheresis and pharmacological agents. In our opinion the possible correction of hyperviscosity is very helpful in the prevention of acute ischemic attacks and in the reduction of their incidence in chronic
cerebral ischemia
. During the acute phase of stroke, hemorheological disturbance is only a part of the complex hemodynamic situation: a primary blood hyperviscosity can favor the onset of the disease but, because of its secondary increase after stroke, a vicious circle might be set in motion resulting in a further reduction of blood supply to the brain. Considering this, attempts in improving blood fluidity during stroke could be made, but with the caution that is required in this complicated "circulatory storm".
J
Mal
Vasc 1999 May
PMID:Haemorheological disturbances and possibility of their correction in cerebrovascular diseases. 1039 43
Blood pressure (BP) elevations may correspond to different clinical situations. Hypertensives emergencies are situations that require immediate reduction in BP because of acute or rapidly progressing target organ damage: accelerated malignant hypertension, hypertensive encephalopathy, acute myocardial infarction, acute aortic dissection, acute left ventricular failure, and eclampsia. Hypertensive urgencies are those with marked elevated BP in which it is desirable to reduce BP progressively within few hours, such as severe hypertension, progressive target organ damage, perioperative hypertension. Cerebrovascular accidents have to be individualized. In most patients in the immediate post-stroke period, BP should not be lowered. Caution is advised in lowering BP in these patients because excessive falls may precipitate
cerebral ischemia
. In situations without symptoms or progressive target organ it is necessary to exclude proximate causes of elevated BP such as pain and elevated BP alone rarely requires antihypertensive treatment. Among parenteral antihypertensive (AH) drugs labetalol, nicardipine, urapidil, and nitroprussiate are generally used, and the choice of AH drug depends on the clinical situation. It is not required to normalize BP immediately but to reduce mean BP no more than 25%, then toward 160/100 mmHg as recommended by JNC VI, in order to avoid an impairment of renal, cerebral or coronary ischemia. Oral long-acting dihydropyridines are often subsequently administrated, except in myocardial ischemia. Therapeutic attitudes vary considerably according to the clinical situation: abstention, immediate decrease or progressive decrease in BP have to be decided.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 2000 Nov
PMID:[Acute blood pressure elevations]. 1119 Feb 94
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