Cases reported "Hypertension"

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1/160. Fatal cerebral reperfusion hemorrhage after carotid stenting.

    BACKGROUND: The hyperperfusion syndrome is a recognized complication of carotid endarterectomy. Reports of cerebral hyperperfusion injury following internal carotid artery (ICA) angioplasty are few, and this complication has never been reported following internal carotid stenting. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 68-year-old normotensive man was referred to our hospital for assessment 5 months after experiencing a left hemispheric ischemic stroke. angiography confirmed 95% stenosis of the left ICA. Left carotid percutaneous transluminal stenting was performed without any initial complications. color Doppler ultrasound of the ICA immediately after stenting revealed an elevated peak systolic velocity of 2.3 m/s, in the absence of significant vessel stenosis or spasm on angiography. Seven hours after the procedure, the patient suddenly deteriorated. CT of the brain revealed extensive intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), and he subsequently died 18 days later. There was no history of headache or seizure activity, and his blood pressure was only mildly elevated at the time of the deterioration. This is the first report of ICH after internal carotid stenting. CONCLUSIONS: ICH may occur as a hyperperfusion phenomenon after internal carotid stenting, in the presence of mild to moderate arterial hypertension, without being heralded by any of the typical symptoms of the hyperperfusion syndrome. patients with increased velocities on color Doppler ultrasound of the ICA after angioplasty should be monitored closely for features of cerebral hyperperfusion injury. Further studies are warranted to determine whether more aggressive treatment of mild to moderate hypertension after carotid stenting would reduce the likelihood of this potentially fatal complication.
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2/160. Stress-related primary intracerebral hemorrhage: autopsy clues to underlying mechanism.

    BACKGROUND: research into the causes of small-vessel stroke has been hindered by technical constraints. Cases of intracerebral hemorrhage occurring in unusual clinical contexts suggest a causal role for sudden increases in blood pressure and/or cerebral blood flow. CASE DESCRIPTION: We describe a fatal primary thalamic/brain stem hemorrhage occurring in the context of sudden emotional upset. At autopsy, the brain harbored several perforating artery fibrinoid lesions adjacent to and remote from the hematoma as well as old lacunar infarcts and healed destructive small-vessel lesions. CONCLUSIONS: We postulate that the emotional upset caused a sudden rise in blood pressure/cerebral blood flow, mediating small-vessel fibrinoid necrosis and rupture. This or a related mechanism may underlie many small-vessel strokes.
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keywords = brain
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3/160. brain stem stroke causing baroreflex failure and paroxysmal hypertension.

    BACKGROUND: Paroxysmal neurogenic hypertension has been associated with a variety of diseases affecting the brain stem but has only rarely been reported after brain stem stroke. The mechanism is thought to involve increased sympathetic activity and baroreflex dysfunction. We undertook microneurographic recordings of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MNSA) during beat-to-beat blood pressure (BP) monitoring to investigate this hypothesis. CASE DESCRIPTION: We investigated a 75-year-old woman who developed paroxysmal hypertension (BP 220/110 mm Hg) after a large left-sided medullary infarct. The paroxysms were triggered by changes in posture and were accompanied by tachycardia, diaphoresis, and headache. serum catecholamines were substantially increased (norepinephrine level, 23.9 nmol/L 9 days after stroke; normal level, <3.8 nmol/L), and heart rate variability, measured by spectral analysis, was decreased in both low- and high-frequency domains (0.04 and 0.06 ms(2), respectively; normal level, 0.14 /-0.02 ms(2)). MNSA was increased in frequency (61 bursts per minute; normal level, 34 /-18 bursts per minute), and the burst amplitude was not inversely related to diastolic BP. BP and MNSA responses to cold pressor and isometric handgrip stimuli were intact. CONCLUSIONS: Extensive unilateral infarction of the brain stem in the region of the nucleus tractus solitarius may result in partial baroreflex dysfunction, increased sympathetic activity, and neurogenic paroxysmal hypertension.
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keywords = brain
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4/160. Simultaneous hypertensive intracerebral hematomas: two case reports.

    We describe two patients (76- and 54-year-old females) with multiple hypertensive intracerebral hematomas occurring simultaneously. One patient had a right thalamic hematoma extending into the internal capsule and basal ganglia together with an other one in the left putamen. The other patient had two hematomas located ipsilaterally in the left putamen and thalamus. Their neurological examinations showed only unilateral deficits. Their magnetic resonance angiograms revealed no vascular malformations. Neuroradiological procedures are essential for the diagnosis of these multiple brain events.
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5/160. Adverse cardiovascular and central nervous system events associated with dietary supplements containing ephedra alkaloids.

    BACKGROUND: dietary supplements that contain ephedra alkaloids (sometimes called ma huang) are widely promoted and used in the united states as a means of losing weight and increasing energy. In the light of recently reported adverse events related to use of these products, the food and Drug Administration (FDA) has proposed limits on the dose and duration of use of such supplements. The FDA requested an independent review of reports of adverse events related to the use of supplements that contained ephedra alkaloids to assess causation and to estimate the level of risk the use of these supplements poses to consumers. methods: We reviewed 140 reports of adverse events related to the use of dietary supplements containing ephedra alkaloids that were submitted to the FDA between June 1, 1997, and March 31, 1999. A standardized rating system for assessing causation was applied to each adverse event. RESULTS: Thirty-one percent of cases were considered to be definitely or probably related to the use of supplements containing ephedra alkaloids, and 31 percent were deemed to be possibly related. Among the adverse events that were deemed definitely, probably, or possibly related to the use of supplements containing ephedra alkaloids, 47 percent involved cardiovascular symptoms and 18 percent involved the central nervous system. hypertension was the single most frequent adverse effect (17 reports), followed by palpitations, tachycardia, or both (13); stroke (10); and seizures (7). Ten events resulted in death, and 13 events produced permanent disability, representing 26 percent of the definite, probable, and possible cases. CONCLUSIONS: The use of dietary supplements that contain ephedra alkaloids may pose a health risk to some persons. These findings indicate the need for a better understanding of individual susceptibility to the adverse effects of such dietary supplements.
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ranking = 8.9283523260454
keywords = nervous system, central nervous system
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6/160. Parietal cheiro-oral syndrome.

    Cheiro-oral syndrome due to a parietal lesion has been reported in conjuction with a brain tumor, infarction and migraine. Only six reports of cheiro-oral syndrome due to a parietal infarction have been reported to date. We treated a 45-year-old woman with cheiro-oral syndrome due to a parietal infarction. Her sensory disturbance was characterized by paresthesia in the lower face and hand on the left side, and severe involvement of stereognosis and graphesthesia in the left hand. The pathogenesis of parietal cheiro-oral syndrome is discussed.
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keywords = brain
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7/160. hypotension following the initiation of tizanidine in a patient treated with an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor for chronic hypertension.

    Centrally acting alpha-2 adrenergic agonists are one of several pharmacologic agents used in the treatment of spasticity related to disorders of the central nervous system. In addition to their effects on spasticity, certain adverse cardiorespiratory effects have been reported. Adults chronically treated with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors may have a limited ability to respond to hypotension when the sympathetic response is simultaneously blocked. The authors present a 10-year-old boy chronically treated with lisinopril, an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, to control hypertension who developed hypotension following the addition of tizanidine, an alpha-2 agonist, for the treatment of spasticity. The possible interaction of tizanidine and other antihypertensive agents should be kept in mind when prescribing therapy to treat either hypertension or spasticity in such patients.
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ranking = 1.7856704652091
keywords = nervous system, central nervous system
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8/160. Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy in a patient with minimal-change nephrotic syndrome.

    A 9-year-old boy with nephrotic syndrome was transferred to our hospital because of acute renal failure and disturbance of consciousness after high-dose methylprednisolone therapy. He developed severe headache, visual disturbance, and generalized seizures. Brain computed tomography (CT) scan revealed multiple, bilateral, low-density areas in the parieto-occipital lobes. magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) disclosed a high signal intensity area on T2-weighted images and a low signal intensity area on T1-weighted images in the same lesion. Follow-up brain CT scan and MRI, 2 weeks after the first studies, showed complete resolution of the abnormal lesions, which suggested the diagnosis of reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLS). hypertension and high-dose methylprednisolone administration to the patient in the nephrotic state may be causes of this uncommon syndrome in this case. This is the first report of RPLS in nephrotic syndrome with hypertension not associated with cyclosporine administration.
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keywords = brain
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9/160. Reversible posterior leucoencephalopathy syndrome in systemic lupus and vasculitis.

    OBJECTIVES: Reversible posterior leucoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLS) may develop in patients with renal insufficiency, hypertension, and immunosuppression, and is managed by prompt antihypertensive and anticonvulsant treatment. Four patients with renal insufficiency and fluid overload associated with Wegener's granulomatosis (one patient) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) (three patients) are described, whose clinical picture and neuroimaging indicated RPLS. case reports: All patients had headache, seizures, visual abnormalities, and transient motor deficit, and were hypertensive at the onset of the symptoms. Head computed tomography (CT) scan and magnetic resonance imaging showed predominantly posterior signal abnormalities, which were more conspicuous on T(2) weighted spin echo images than on CT scan. All patients had some form of cytotoxic treatment shortly before the syndrome developed, and dramatically responded to blood pressure control and anticonvulsant treatment. In two patients with SLE, dialysis was required for renal insufficiency. DISCUSSION: Follow up neuroimaging studies showed almost complete resolution of signal abnormalities, and suggested that RPLS was associated with cerebral oedema without concomitant infarction. The treatment of hypertension and neurotoxic condition such as uraemia appears of primary importance, while immunosuppressive treatment may cause further damage of the blood-brain barrier.
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ranking = 1
keywords = brain
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10/160. Recurrent neurovascular hypertension: MR findings before and after surgical treatments.

    A case of recurrent brain stem edema after surgical vascular decompression in a patient with neurogenic hypertension is presented. The surgical treatment resulted in occlusion of the left vertebral artery, stable blood pressure values, and no recurrence of the brain stem edema. MR imaging and MR angiography are excellent methods with which to assess patients suspected of having neurovascular hypertension, both before and after surgical treatment.
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keywords = brain
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