Stroke; a journal of cerebral circulation
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Although crossed cerebellar diaschisis is well recognized after stroke, there is controversy concerning its clinical correlations and serial changes, and little is known about its prognostic value. ⋯ This study shows that crossed cerebellar diaschisis is a functional phenomenon that correlates with both stroke severity and infarct hypoperfusion volume and persists despite neurological recovery. Although acute-stage crossed cerebellar diaschisis has no prognostic value independent of acute-stage hypoperfusion volume, it might indicate the proportion of nutritional to nonnutritional perfusion at the infarct site and hence be useful in the evaluation of reperfusion therapies in the acute stage.
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Comparative Study
Assessment of cerebral vasomotor reactivity by transcranial Doppler ultrasound and breath-holding. A comparison with acetazolamide as vasodilatory stimulus.
Evaluating cerebrovascular vasomotor reactivity seems to be of prognostic relevance for patients with occlusive internal carotid artery disease. To evaluate its clinical usefulness, the recently introduced breath-holding maneuver as a carbon dioxide-dependent vasodilatory stimulus was compared with the acetazolamide challenge by means of transcranial Doppler ultrasound and stable xenon-enhanced computed tomography. ⋯ The assessment of vasomotor reactivity by transcranial Doppler ultrasound correlates with cerebral blood flow changes even when different vasodilatory stimuli are used. In cooperative patients the breath-holding maneuver as vasodilatory stimulus seems clinically useful for a first estimation of cerebral vasomotor reactivity.
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Autoregulation of cerebral blood flow is easily disrupted, and loss of this normal physiological reflex may worsen the neurological outcome for patients undergoing intensive care. We studied the response of cerebral blood flow velocity to changes in mean arterial blood pressure. ⋯ Computerized coherent averaging of the cerebral blood flow velocity response to spontaneous blood pressure transients offers a promising new method for noninvasive bedside assessment of autoregulation in patients undergoing intensive care. The time course for autoregulation, when present, is in agreement with that reported in adults.