Cerebrovascular diseases
-
Cerebrovascular diseases · Jan 2001
Case ReportsNeurometabolic changes during treatment with moderate hypothermia in a patient suffering from severe middle cerebral artery infarction.
Microdialysis is a means of measuring neurochemical changes in the extracellular space and has been applied in acute brain trauma, subarachnoid hemorrhage and stroke patients. In this study, we monitored neurochemical changes in the extracellular space using microdialysis in a patient with left-sided hemispheric infarction treated with moderate hypothermia (33 degrees C). ⋯ Concentrations of these substances in the noninfarcted hemisphere remained at normal levels. Microdialysis monitoring of therapeutic hypothermia in severe hemispheric infarction might be a useful additional monitoring tool to assess the status of the brain and to predict further deterioration.
-
Cerebrovascular diseases · Jan 2001
Clinical TrialAcetylsalicylic acid and microembolic events detected by transcranial Doppler in symptomatic arterial stenoses.
In patients with symptomatic carotid artery stenosis, high-intensity transient signals detected by transcranial Doppler (TCD) have been related to particulate microemboli originating at the stenotic lesion. The occurrence of these microembolic events within the Doppler spectrum should be influenced by antithrombotic agents of proven efficacy in these patients mainly by reducing cerebral embolism. ⋯ In patients with symptomatic arterial stenosis, the absence of an ASA medication is associated with the occurrence of TCD-detected microembolic events, suggesting a relation between these events and ASA-sensitive microemboli from the stenotic lesion.
-
Cerebrovascular diseases · Jan 2001
Historical ArticlePerfusion thresholds in human cerebral ischemia: historical perspective and therapeutic implications.
After middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) in the laboratory animal, the ischemic penumbra has been documented as a severely hypoperfused, functionally impaired, but still viable cortex which can regain its function and escape infarction if it is reperfused before a certain time has elapsed. The penumbra surrounds the ischemic core of already irreversibly damaged tissue, and is progressively recruited into the core with increasing MCAO duration. In the animal, the threshold of cerebral blood flow (CBF) below which neuronal function is impaired and the tissue is at risk of infarction is around 22 ml/100 g/min (approximately 40% of normal) in the awake or lightly anesthetized monkey, and around 30--35 ml/100 g/min in the cat and the rat. ⋯ In the remaining patients, there was evidence of early extensive damage or early spontaneous reperfusion, which would make them inappropriate candidates for neuroprotective therapy. Recent evidence from PET studies of relative perfusion performed within 3 h of onset suggests that early thrombolysis indeed saves the tissue with CBF below a critical threshold of 12 ml/ 100 g/min, with a correlation between the volume of such tissue escaping infarction and subsequent neurological recovery. Thus, mapping the penumbra in the individual patient with physiologic imaging should allow to formulate a pathophysiological diagnosis, and in turn to design a rational management of the stroke patient and to increase the sensitivity of drug trials by appropriate patient selection.
-
Cerebrovascular diseases · Jan 2001
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical TrialAnticoagulant (fluindione)-aspirin combination in patients with high-risk atrial fibrillation. A randomized trial (Fluindione, Fibrillation Auriculaire, Aspirin et Contraste Spontané; FFAACS).
A combination of low-dose aspirin with anticoagulants may provide better protection against thromboembolic events compared to anticoagulants alone in high-risk patients with atrial fibrillation. ⋯ The combination of aspirin with anticoagulant is associated with increased bleeding in elderly atrial fibrillation patients. The effect on thromboembolism and the overall balance of benefit to risk could not be accurately assessed in this study due to the limited number of ischemic events.
-
Cerebrovascular diseases · Jan 2001
Validity and reliability of simple questions in assessing short- and long-term outcome in Norwegian stroke patients.
The utility of simple questions for the assessment of stroke outcome in large-scale international studies has generally been approved, but their validity and reliability have not been evaluated in different cultures or at different intervals after a stroke. The study comprised 150 stroke patients who had been admitted consecutively to a stroke unit 6 weeks or 6 months earlier. Two weeks before the visit the patient received a postal questionnaire containing the simple 'dependency' question: 'In the last 2 weeks, did you require help from another person for everyday activities?' and the simple 'recovery' question: 'Do you feel that you have made a complete recovery from your stroke?'. ⋯ There was no difference in accuracy of the simple questions at 6 weeks compared with 6 months, and there was no clinically important difference between responses from patients and carers. The agreement between the responses to the questionnaire and the interview was good to moderate (kappa = 0.62 for the dependency question, and 0.55 for the recovery question). We conclude that the simple questions seem to be valid and reliable measures of stroke outcome when tested in Norwegian patients after 6 weeks or 6 months, which supports their continued use in large-scale multinational stroke studies at different intervals after stroke.