Cases reported "Cerebrovascular Disorders"

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1/818. Biofeedback training to overcome poststroke foot-drop.

    The technique has exciting potential for elderly hemiplegic patients, even those who are confined to a nursing home. There are limiting factors, of course; the method is time-consuming and the initial outlay for equipment is high. But the rewards can be well worth the time, effort, and cost involved. The recovery potential of some geriatric patients after a cerebrovascular accident may seem bleak because of multiple disabilities, e.g., paralysis, delayed reflexes, aphasia. Fortunately, these disorders do not necessarily decree failure of biofeedback training. Neither does advanced age. The strongest component in success is motivation. A case in point is the 82 year old woman described here who had been hemiparetic for seven years. With biofeedback training, she gained--and maintained--muscle strength.
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2/818. stroke and seizures as the presenting signs of pediatric hiv infection.

    The authors report two pediatric patients with definite human immunodeficiency virus infection whose initial presentation was stroke and seizure. The first patient was a 3-year-old female who developed acute hemiparesis as the first manifestation. The other, a 2-month-old infant, had focal seizures secondary to cerebral infarction. Investigations revealed ischemic infarction of the thalamus, hypothalamus, and internal capsule in the first patient and cerebral cortex in the second. Further investigations failed to demonstrate any other causes of these cerebral infarctions. Opportunistic infection of the central nervous system was not documented. The authors emphasize that cerebrovascular accident may be the initial presentation in human immunodeficiency virus infection in children. Human immunodeficiency virus infection must be included in the differential diagnosis, and testing for the disease is mandatory in the investigation of stroke in any child who is at risk of having this infection.
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3/818. Intra-arterial rtPA treatment of stroke assessed by diffusion- and perfusion-weighted MRI.

    BACKGROUND: diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI) and perfusion-weighted MRI (PWI) are new techniques that can be used for the evaluation of acute ischemic stroke. However, their potential role in the management of patients treated with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA) has yet to be determined. CASE DESCRIPTION: The authors present the case of a 73-year-old man who was treated with intra-arterial rtPA, and they compare findings on DWI and PWI scans with angiography. PWI revealed decreased cerebral perfusion corresponding to an area that was not successfully recanalized, but revealed no abnormality in regions in which blood flow was restored. DWI was unremarkable in the region that was reperfused early (3 hours) but revealed hyperintensity in an area that was reperfused 3. 5 hours after symptom onset and in the area that was not reperfused. CONCLUSIONS: Findings on PWI correlated well with angiography, and DWI detected injured tissue in the hyperacute stage, whereas conventional MRI findings were negative. This suggests that these techniques may be useful to noninvasively evaluate the success of thrombolytic therapy.
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ranking = 1.25
keywords = stroke
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4/818. Carotid endarterectomy and intracranial thrombolysis: simultaneous and staged procedures in ischemic stroke.

    PURPOSE: The feasibility and safety of combining carotid surgery and thrombolysis for occlusions of the internal carotid artery (ICA) and the middle cerebral artery (MCA), either as a simultaneous or as a staged procedure in acute ischemic strokes, was studied. methods: A nonrandomized clinical pilot study, which included patients who had severe hemispheric carotid-related ischemic strokes and acute occlusions of the MCA, was performed between January 1994 and January 1998. Exclusion criteria were cerebral coma and major infarction established by means of cerebral computed tomography scan. Clinical outcome was assessed with the modified Rankin scale. RESULTS: Carotid reconstruction and thrombolysis was performed in 14 of 845 patients (1.7%). The ICA was occluded in 11 patients; occlusions of the MCA (mainstem/major branches/distal branch) or the anterior cerebral artery (ACA) were found in 14 patients. In three of the 14 patients, thrombolysis was performed first, followed by carotid enarterectomy (CEA) after clinical improvement (6 to 21 days). In 11 of 14 patients, 0.15 to 1 mIU urokinase was administered intraoperatively, ie, emergency CEA for acute ischemic stroke (n = 5) or surgical reexploration after elective CEA complicated by perioperative intracerebral embolism (n = 6). Thirteen of 14 intracranial embolic occlusions and 10 of 11 ICA occlusions were recanalized successfully (confirmed with angiography or transcranial Doppler studies). Four patients recovered completely (Rankin 0), six patients sustained a minor stroke (Rankin 2/3), two patients had a major stroke (Rankin 4/5), and two patients died. In one patient, hemorrhagic transformation of an ischemic infarction was detectable postoperatively. CONCLUSION: Combining carotid surgery with thrombolysis (simultaneous or staged procedure) offers a new therapeutic approach in the emergency management of an acute carotid-related stroke. Its efficacy should be evaluated in interdisciplinary studies.
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ranking = 2.5
keywords = stroke
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5/818. stroke-like episodes in autosomal recessive cytochrome oxidase deficiency.

    stroke-like episodes, defined as periods of acute localized neurological dysfunction during which brain imagery suggests cerebral ischemia but vascular anatomy is normal, occurred in 3 patients with autosomal recessive Saguenay-Lac St-Jean (SLSJ) cytochrome oxidase (COX) deficiency. The patients developed focal neurological deterioration and frontal hypodensities on cerebral computerized tomography (CT). Arteriography, performed in 1 patient during an acute episode, showed normal vascular anatomy. Nevertheless, capillary shunting was evident both in regions that appeared abnormal on the initial cerebral CT study and in regions that appeared normal but subsequently developed leigh disease. stroke-like episodes did not exacerbate systemic acidosis, and acidotic decompensations occurred independently of stroke-like episodes. In conclusion, stroke-like episodes occur in autosomal recessively inherited congenital lactic acidoses as well as in those caused by mitochondrial dna mutations. In some cases, acute localized neurovascular changes occur in regions that subsequently develop Leigh disease.
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6/818. Does vestibular stimulation activate thalamocortical mechanisms that reintegrate impaired cortical regions?

    Caloric stimulation induced a transient reversal of multimodal hemispatial cognitive deficits in an 81-year-old woman with an acute left cerebral hemisphere stroke. The patient had unawareness of her right hand (asomatognosia), right-sided visual unawareness (hemineglect), aphasia and right-sided weakness (hemiplegia) prior to the stimulation. Transient improvements in impaired sensory, motor, linguistic and cognitive function developed within 30 s following application of the caloric stimulus and onset of horizontal nystagmus. The effect persisted for 3 min and ceased completely after 5 min. While several recent reports have described the capacity of caloric stimulation to transiently improve or reverse a wide range of attentional, cognitive and motor impairments, most examples are in right-hemisphere-damaged patients with long-standing brain injury. Typically, patients have been tested several months or years after the onset of the deficit. A possible mechanism for the temporary reintegration of multiple cognitive functions in this patient is discussed.
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ranking = 0.25
keywords = stroke
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7/818. Cerebral vascular complication and hyperhomocysteinemia in a cystinotic uremic child.

    We report a 13-year-old girl with nephropathic cystinosis on chronic peritoneal dialysis who presented with two episodes of stroke. Laboratory evaluation showed severe hyperhomocysteinemia (108 mumol/l). Further testing revealed that she was homozygous for the thermolabile variant of the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) gene. Treatment with folic acid and vitamin B12 lowered plasma homocysteine to less than 20 mumol/l. No further episodes of stroke occurred over a follow-up of 12 months. Homocysteine levels should be measured in patients with chronic renal failure, since simple and safe treatment with folic acid and vitamin B12 is effective in lowering the plasma homocysteine level in patients with the thermolabile MTHFR allele.
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ranking = 0.5
keywords = stroke
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8/818. Emergency department presentations of cerebrovascular disease in children.

    Five cases of children with cerebrovascular disease presentations to the emergency department (ED) were selected as a series to illustrate the variety of presentation of cerebrovascular disease in children. This series shows that although cerebrovascular disease in children is uncommon, it is likely that cases will occasionally present acutely to an ED. The emergency physician's role in the management of suspected acute strokes in children is that of immediate stabilization, imaging to rule out hemorrhage, other studies to rule out emergent acute disease, and timely consultation for further management. Computed tomography (CT) is useful to detect an acute hemorrhage or old ischemic lesion. magnetic resonance imaging has superior image resolution over CT, but CT may be more practical initially. magnetic resonance angiography is a useful part of the stroke workup in children.
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ranking = 0.5
keywords = stroke
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9/818. Intra-arterial thrombolysis for perioperative stroke after open heart surgery.

    Recent major surgery is an exclusion criterion for thrombolysis. Six patients with acute ischemic stroke underwent intra-arterial thrombolysis after recent open heart surgery without clinically significant bleeding complications, although one patient developed a small, asymptomatic cerebellar hemorrhage. Intra-arterial thrombolysis may be an option for patients with cerebral embolism in the perioperative period.
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ranking = 1.25
keywords = stroke
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10/818. The case: voices.

    Six caregivers comment on the aftermath of a patient's disabling stroke. Their remarks about the patient and his family situation reveal much about the dynamics of the hospital hierarchy--and, incidentally, the difficulty of uncovering the "facts."
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keywords = stroke
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