Cases reported "Puerperal Disorders"

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1/98. Severe cardiac dysrhythmia in patients using bromocriptine postpartum.

    Used worldwide since 1980 for the prevention of breast engorgement in the puerperium, in 1994 bromocriptine mesylate was withdrawn from the American market as an agent suitable for ablactation. The relevant recommendation of the food and Drug Administration rested on case reports that described severe vasospastic reactions among users of the drug. Some patients so affected suffered stroke, intracranial bleeding, cerebral edema, convulsions, myocardial infarction, and puerperal psychosis. More recently, it has been suggested that the side effects of the drug may also include circulatory collapse secondary to cardiac dysrhythmia. This report describes two additional cases in this category. The antepartum clinical evaluation of these women suggested that they were predisposed to arrhythmias.
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ranking = 1
keywords = cerebral
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2/98. Postpartum haemolytic-uraemic syndrome.

    In a young woman a twin pregnancy and uneventful labour were complicated by the development of the postpartum haemolytic-uraemic syndrome. A number of unusual features of this syndrome were present, including early onset, accompanying hepatocellular necrosis, hepatic encephalopathy and bleeding diathesis. Early institution of heparin therapy combined with coagulation factor replacement was followed by cessation of haemorrhage and complete recovery from acute renal failure.
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ranking = 1.0165599024965
keywords = haemorrhage
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3/98. Postpartum hypertension and convulsion after oxytocic drugs.

    An 18-year-old primipara developed acute hypertension leading to cerebral edema and convulsions following the IV injection of a bolus of 10 units of oxytocin with 0.2 mg methylergonovine maleate. oxytocin in a dose of more than 2 units should not be administered IV in a single injection, as severe hypotension may result. If oxytocin is required, it can be injected either IM, or by IV pump or drip. The use of ergot in obstetrics should be limited to the treatment of life-threatening postpartum hemorrhage and be given only by the IM route. Ergot should not be administered to patients with cardiac, renal, or hypertensive disease, or in association with a vasoconstrictor.
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ranking = 1
keywords = cerebral
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4/98. Postpartum cerebral angiopathy associated with the administration of sumatriptan and dihydroergotamine--a case report.

    Cerebral angiopathy of the postpartum period is a rare entity, sometimes promoted by vasoconstrictives drug prescription. Its clinical presentation includes headaches, seizures and focal neurological deficits, which develop shortly after a normal pregnancy. The diagnosis is based on clinical findings and angiography, showing multiple narrowing of the intracranial cerebral arteries. This neurological feature is reversible and the clinical outcome is good. We report a case of benign cerebral angiopathy in a 20-year-old woman in the postpartum period, occurring after administration of sumatriptan and ergot derivates.
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ranking = 6
keywords = cerebral
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5/98. Endovascular thrombolysis for symptomatic cerebral venous thrombosis.

    OBJECT: The authors sought to treat potentially catastrophic intracranial dural and deep cerebral venous thrombosis by using a multimodality endovascular approach. methods: Six patients aged 14 to 75 years presented with progressive symptoms of thrombotic intracranial venous occlusion. Five presented with neurological deficits, and one patient had a progressive and intractable headache. All six had known risk factors for venous thrombosis: inflammatory bowel disease (two patients), nephrotic syndrome (one), cancer (one), use of oral contraceptive pills (one), and puerperium (one). Four had combined dural and deep venous thrombosis, whereas clot formation was limited to the dural venous sinuses in two patients. All patients underwent diagnostic cerebral arteriograms followed by transvenous catheterization and selective sinus and deep venous microcatheterization. Urokinase was delivered at the proximal aspect of the thrombus in dosages of 200,000 to 1,000,000 IU. In two patients with thrombus refractory to pharmacological thrombolytic treatment, mechanical wire microsnare maceration of the thrombus resulted in sinus patency. Radiological studies obtained 24 hours after thrombolysis reconfirmed sinus/vein patency in all patients. All patients' symptoms and neurological deficits improved, and no procedural complications ensued. Follow-up periods ranged from 12 to 35 months, and all six patients remain free of any symptomatic venous reocclusion. Factors including patients' age, preexisting medical conditions, and duration of symptoms had no statistical bearing on the outcome. CONCLUSIONS: patients with both dural and deep cerebral venous thrombosis often have a variable clinical course and an unpredictable neurological outcome. With recent improvements in interventional techniques, endovascular therapy is warranted in symptomatic patients early in the disease course, prior to morbid and potentially fatal neurological deterioration.
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ranking = 7
keywords = cerebral
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6/98. Late postpartum eclampsia 16 days after delivery: case report with clinical, radiologic, and pathophysiologic correlations.

    BACKGROUND: Postpartum eclampsia is a rare, frightening, and potentially tragic complication of hypertensive pregnancies, usually developing within 48 hours of delivery. seizures occurring days to weeks after parturition are exceedingly uncommon and require rapid, precise clinical evaluation by multiple specialists. methods: A case presentation of delayed postpartum eclampsia illustrates unique features of the syndrome. Extensive review of the literature highlights pathogenesis, controversies, and dilemmas surrounding this enigmatic hypertensive disorder. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: A 39-year-old hypertensive patient had an uneventful full-term delivery by her family physician only to develop headache, double vision, and recurrent tonic-clonic seizures 16 days later. Initial evaluation showed severe hypertension, diplopia, hyperreflexia, proteinuria, and hyperuricemia. She was given a magnesium sulfate infusion. magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) documented asymmetric ischemic foci within gray matter in the distribution of the posterior cerebral arteries. All symptoms, signs, and abnormal laboratory values resolved within 4 days. A follow-up MRI showed complete resolution of all cytotoxic cortical lesions. Based on human autopsy data, radiologic investigations, and animal studies, eclampsia is believed to result from explosive vasospasm, endothelial dysfunction, and cytotoxic edema of cerebral cortex. This central nervous system vasculopathy is most prominent in the posterior cerebral vasculature and is often rapidly reversible. Difficulties in differential diagnosis, typical findings on neuroimaging, and urgent management strategies are discussed. The time limit for postpartum eclampsia probably should be lengthened to 4 weeks, as indicated by our case and other clinical series.
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ranking = 3
keywords = cerebral
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7/98. basilar artery vasospasm in postpartum cerebral angiopathy.

    The reason cerebral edema in postpartum cerebral angiopathy (PPCA) occurs preferentially in the posterior brain is poorly understood. The authors present two patients with PPCA who showed vasospasm occurring earlier and more severely in the basilar artery than in the middle cerebral artery. Our patients demonstrate the difference in vascular change between the anterior and posterior cerebral vessels, explaining the susceptibility of the posterior brain to PPCA.
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ranking = 8.0020566614851
keywords = cerebral, brain
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8/98. case reports: postpartum cerebral angiopathy in a patient with chronic migraine with aura.

    A 25-year-old woman with a history of chronic severe migraine with aura presented in an apoplectic state 1 week after the delivery of her third child. She developed a severe headache and within hours lapsed into a coma. A CT scan of the brain showed cerebral edema and an occipital hemorrhage. A four-vessel angiogram showed diffuse arterial narrowing of all the intracranial vessels with segmental narrowing of the suprasellar portion of the internal carotid arteries bilaterally. She had no risk factors for stroke or vasculitis. Her pregnancy and delivery were uneventful with no preeclampsia or eclampsia. Apart from ergometrine at the time of the delivery, no vasoconstrictor drugs were used. She recovered spontaneously. Serial CT scans of the brain demonstrated resolution of the edema and hemorrhage with the development of cortical and watershed infarcts. A repeat cerebral angiogram was normal. She was, therefore, diagnosed as having suffered from postpartum cerebral angiopathy, a form of reversible cerebral vasoconstriction, called the Call or Call-Fleming syndrome. The relationship between migraine and postpartum angiopathy in the development of reversible cerebral vasoconstriction is discussed.
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ranking = 9.0020566614851
keywords = cerebral, brain
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9/98. Serial transcranial color-coded sonography in postpartum cerebral angiopathy.

    Reversible vasospasm in the bilateral middle cerebral artery in a patient with postpartum cerebral angiopathy was evaluated with serial transcranial color-coded sonography (TCCS). The authors propose TCCS as the method of choice for assessing the time course of vascular changes in postpartum cerebral angiopathy because it allows for precise placement of the sample volume and adjustment of the incident angle.
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ranking = 7
keywords = cerebral
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10/98. Severe postpartum hypertension and reversible cerebral angiopathy associated with ergot derivative (methergoline) administration.

    A 36-year-old woman (gravida 2, para 2) delivered a healthy child by cesarean section at the 37th week of an unremarkable gestation. blood pressure remained within normal range throughout the pregnancy, surgery, and for the 9 following days. On day 10, about 36 hours after the initiation of oral methergoline to suppress lactation, the patient complained of severe posterior headache, flashing scotomata, hypertension, tonico-clonic seizures and then homonymous left hemianopsia and hemiparesis. blood pressure monitoring confirmed intermittent and severe hypertension. angiography demonstrated diffuse narrowing of the small and medium cerebral arteries. Transcranial Doppler ultrasound examination disclosed a bilateral increase in mean flow velocity. Progressive normalization of blood pressure, obtained with labetalol and oral clonidine, was accompanied by amelioration of the neurological deficits until a complete recovery and normalization of transcranial Doppler flow velocity occurred. This case provides further evidences that hypertension might play a major pathogenetic role in reversible cerebral angiopathy. Some ergot derivatives (including methergoline) might trigger the initial rise in blood pressure.
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ranking = 6
keywords = cerebral
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