Stroke; a journal of cerebral circulation
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Comparative Study
Identifying thresholds for penumbra and irreversible tissue damage.
Diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI) in combination with perfusion-weighted MRI (PWI) has become a widely accepted modality for the selection of patients amenable for acute therapy, if a mismatch between these procedures suggests viable penumbral tissue. However, DWI as well as PWI yields semiquantitative measures limiting the definitions of irreversible damage and of potentially viable penumbral tissue. These limitations of PWI/DWI may be better understood if findings in individual patients are compared with the results from measurements of blood flow, oxygen metabolism, and benzodiazepine receptor binding obtained with positron emission tomography (PET). ⋯ DWI correlates with FMZ results and, with a few exceptions, yields a good estimate of acute tissue damage and final infarct volume. PWI measures seem to be less reliable; the TTP prolongation of >4 seconds assessed only 83% of the volume of hypoperfusion <20 mL/100 g per minute. The mismatch volume imprecisely depicts increased oxygen extraction fraction, and, despite its clinical role for selection of patients for eventual therapy, it does not to seem to be a reliable correlate of penumbra.
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Review Meta Analysis
Effects of augmented exercise therapy time after stroke: a meta-analysis.
To present a systematic review of studies that addresses the effects of intensity of augmented exercise therapy time (AETT) on activities of daily living (ADL), walking, and dexterity in patients with stroke. ⋯ The results of the present research synthesis support the hypothesis that augmented exercise therapy has a small but favorable effect on ADL, particularly if therapy input is augmented at least 16 hours within the first 6 months after stroke. This meta-analysis also suggests that clinically relevant treatment effects may be achieved on instrumental ADL and gait speed.
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We evaluated the impact of admission hyperglycemia (HG) on stroke outcome in relation to the timing of reperfusion in patients treated with tissue plasminogen activator (tPA). ⋯ The impact of admission HG on stroke outcome varies depending on the time to tPA-induced reperfusion. The detrimental effect of acute HG is higher after early than after delayed or no reperfusion. Ultra-early glycemic control before reperfusion may improve the efficacy of thrombolytic therapy.
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Early vasospasm (EVSP), defined here as arterial narrowing seen on diagnostic angiography within the first 48 hours of aneurysmal rupture, is a rarely reported and poorly defined phenomenon in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). The purpose of this study was to characterize EVSP in a large database of such patients. ⋯ EVSP was seen in 10% of SAH patients and was predictive of cerebral infarction and neurological worsening as well as unfavorable outcome at 3 months. EVSP was not associated with late vasospasm. EVSP may be as important as delayed vasospasm in predicting complications and long-term morbidity in SAH patients.