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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (
asymmetrical
)
12,197
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To determine the effect of inhaled carbon dioxide on acute ischemic cerebral injury, we have compared occipital visual evoked responses (VER) at baseline and during hypercapnia in 20 patients with acute unilateral
cerebral infarction
(ten with and ten without homonymous hemianopsia) and in ten normal controls. Visual evoked responses were judged on the basis of interhemispheral symmetry. In eight of ten controls and six of 20 patients, baseline VERs were symmetrical and remained unchanged during hypercapnia. In 14 patients with
asymmetrical
baseline VERs, hypercapnia caused improvement of symmetry in five, worsening in three, and no change in six. Hypercapnic vasodilation may be either beneficial or deleterious to cerebral function in patients with acute
cerebral infarction
.
...
PMID:Hypercapnic alteration of visual evoked responses in acute cerebral infarction. 48 92
Computed mapping of the electroencephalogram (CME) is a newly developed method using a microcomputer system that displays the scalp topograph as the square roots of the average power spectra over each EEG frequency band on a color television screen. This new device has been employed in an examination of functional lesions in 20 patients with aphasia due to
cerebral infarction
. The results were compared with those of computer tomography (CT) and regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) studies using intracarotid 133Xe. A high-voltage focus of slow components and an
asymmetrical
distribution of alpha activity were regarded as signs of functional lesions on CME. Twelve patients showed high-voltage foci and six showed
asymmetrical
alpha activity on CME, which correlated well with the lesions on CT and/or rCBF studies. Especially in patients with motor aphasia, CME demonstrated the abnormality in advance of the appearance of a low-density area on CT. Compared with conventional EEG interpretation, CME is very useful in topographic and objective diagnosis of functional lesions, although the source of the data is the same as for the conventional EEG.
...
PMID:Topographic electroencephalographic study of cerebral infarction using computed mapping of the EEG. 706 5
Following right middle cerebral artery ligation in rats, there is a 2-3 week period of spontaneous hyperactivity. Concomitant with this hyperactivity catecholamine concentrations decrease in several areas of the brain including both cortical and subcortical regions. In marked contrast, there are no demonstrable effects of left hemispheric infarction on either spontaneous activity or brain catecholamine concentrations. This asymmetry of behavioral and biochemical response to
cerebral infarction
cannot be attributed to differences in the lesion size produced in either hemisphere. Feeding and drinking are not affected but the
asymmetrical
effect on activity can be demonstrated in either a home cage running wheel or an open field environment. It is uncertain whether these findings are the result of hemispheric asymmetries in either catecholaminergic or non-catecholaminergic neurons.
...
PMID:The differential effect of right versus left hemispheric cerebral infarction on catecholamines and behavior in the rat. 718 31
This report concerns a 51-year-old right-handed man with Japanese encephalitis, showing left hemiplegia and left hemispatial neglect. On admission, he had a slight fever, mild consciousness disturbance, left hemiplegia, and left hemispatial neglect but no neck stiffness, headache nor nausea. He was treated on the basis of
cerebral infarction
, but his fever and consciousness disturbance worsened. We found pleocytosis (145/mm3) in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and right thalamic edema on a brain CT scan obtained 4 days later. He was finally diagnosed as having Japanese encephalitis on the basis of an increase in anti-viral antibodies observed in paired CSF and serum samples. In the exacerbation phase, 123I-IMP single photon emission CT (SPECT) demonstrated a marked decrease in cerebral perfusion in the right hemisphere, while a brain MRI revealed irregular lesions localized the right thalamus (mainly posterior and medial parts), showing low intensity on T1-weighted and high intensity on T2-weighted images. In the recovery phase,
asymmetrical
perfusion was no longer observed on SPECT and the symptoms including the left hemispatial neglect had improved. These findings suggest that the left hemispatial neglect in this patient might been caused by the right thalamic lesion resulting in damage to the activating system of the right hemisphere. This case thus shows that acute onset of hemispatial neglect could be caused by cerebral encephalitis.
...
PMID:[Japanese encephalitis presenting with left hemiplegia and thalamic neglect--a case report]. 1125 92
Chronic systemic melatonin treatment attenuates abnormalities produced by occlusion of middle cerebral artery (MCA) in adult rats. Because the pineal gland secretes high levels of melatonin, we examined in the present study whether transplantation of pineal gland exerted similar protective effects in MCA-occluded adult rats. Animals underwent same-day MCA occlusion and either intrastriatal transplantation of pineal gland (harvested from 2-month-old rats) or vehicle infusion. Behavioral tests (from day of surgery to 3 days posttransplantation) revealed that transplanted stroke rats displayed significantly less motor
asymmetrical
behaviors than vehicle-infused stroke rats. Histological analysis at 3 days posttransplantation revealed that transplanted stroke rats had significantly smaller
cerebral infarction
than vehicle-infused rats. Additional experiments showed that pinealectomy affected transplantation outcome, in that transplantation of pineal gland only protected against stroke-induced deficits in stroke animals with intact pineal gland, but not in pinealectomized stroke rats. Interestingly, nonpinealectomized vehicle-infused stroke rats, as well as pinealectomized transplanted stroke rats, had significantly lower melatonin levels in the cerebrospinal fluid than nonpinealectomized transplanted stroke rats. We conclude that intracerebral transplantation of pineal gland, in the presence of host intact pineal gland, protected against stroke, possibly through secretion of melatonin.
...
PMID:Melatonin-secreting pineal gland: a novel tissue source for neural transplantation therapy in stroke. 1279 77
Cerebral infarction
is an uncommon complication in multiple myeloma with hyperviscosity. Serum hyperviscosity may cause a variety of clinical manifestations including bleeding from mucosal membranes, congestive heart failure, retinopathy, and various neurologic deficits. These manifestations have been attributed to the presence of large quantities of
asymmetrical
molecules of high molecular weight in the serum. We recently experienced a case of multiple myeloma with acute
cerebral infarction
, which caused by hyperviscosity, as an initial manifestation in IgG multiple myeloma, and reviewed the relevant literature of myeloma presenting with the stroke. A 68-yr-old woman abruptly developed hypesthesia and monoplegia in the left leg. The stroke confirmed by the brain MRI and MR angiography, which revealed acute infarction at the right anterior cerebral artery territory. On admission, routine blood tests showed a slight decrease in hemoglobin and a marked increase in erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Peripheral blood smear, serum protein electrophoresis, serum visocity, and bone marrow aspiration showed that she had IgG multiple myeloma with hyperviscosity. She was treated by chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide and discharged with the improved clinical condition.
...
PMID:Cerebral infarction in IgG multiple myeloma with hyperviscosity. 1610 Apr 71