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  • 1
    ISSN: 1437-2320
    Keywords: Hemodynamic infarctions ; Magnet Resonance Imaging ; Moyamoya disease ; transcranial Doppler sonography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract An 31-year-old female and a 32-year-old male had clinical signs and angiographical confirmation of adult Moyamoya disease (MMD). Bilateral carotid siphon (C1), middle cerebral artery (M1), and anterior cerebral artery (A1) stenoses were diagnosed by means of transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD) and visualized during angio Magnetic Resonance Imaging (angio-MRI). In the woman, a “rete mirabile’ of dilated and tortuous lenticulostriate arteries could be visualized during proton weighted and T1-weighted MRI sequences. CO2-dependent vasomotor reactivity was bilaterally reduced and completely exhausted in the territory of right middle cerebral artery in both patients. Cerebral perfusion reserve, defined as the ratio of cerebral blood flow (CBF) to cerebral blood volume (CBV) was assessed by SPECT, and was found to be dramatically reduced in the anterior region of the male patient. Both patients had bilateral small subcortical infarctions in the corona radiata. TCD and MRI are important noninvasive techniques for a preliminary diagnosis of Moyamoya disease. Infarctions in Moyamoya disease may be hemodynamically produced low-flow infarctions.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1437-2320
    Keywords: Computed tomography ; dissections ; hemodynamic infarctions ; internal carotid artery
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In 15 patients with internal carotid artery (ICA) dissections, patterns of brain infarctions visible on CT were categorized according to a pathogenetically oriented classification system. This differentiated ischemic brain damage due to low flow from thromboembolic infarctions. Simultaneously, cerebral hemodynamic reserve was evaluated by means of both CO2-dependent vasomotor reactivity and HMPAO- and 99 mTc-RBC-SPECT. Six out of 11 patients with ischemic infarctions had the territorial type of brain lesion, suggesting distal embolism. Five patients revealed the pattern of hemodynamically induced low-flow infarctions. Cerebral hemodynamic reserve was significantly decreased only in these latter patients. In ICA dissections the frequencies of hemodynamically and thromboembolically induced brain infarctions is approximately equal. This finding suggests that only half of the patients with symptoms of symptomatic dissections had brain emboli, whereas in the other half the dissections lead to a low-flow effect in terminal supply areas which is so severe that non-embolic brain infarctions occur. This differentiation can help decide whether antithrombotic or hemodynamic treatment should be given.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1619-1560
    Keywords: Guillain-Barré syndrome ; autonomic dysfunction ; bradyarrhythmia ; heart rate variability ; power spectrum analysis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract This study was undertaken to determine the nature of brady-arrhythmic events and their relationship to motor disability, disease stages and tachycardia in patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome, and to investigate the potential of the 24-hour heart rate power spectrum (HRPS) for the detection of serious bradyarrhythmias in individual patients. Thirty-five consecutive patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome who were admitted to the authors' intensive care unit were studied. In all patients, the heart rate was continuously recorded during the early stages of the disease, averaged at 1-minute intervals, and stored for 1 to 87 days. The HRPS (n=556, 16±19 per patient; median, 9) was calculated by Fourier analysis of 24-hour recordings and logarithmically transformed. The slope was estimated by regression analysis of log (power) on log (frequency) between 10−4 and 4×10−3 Hz, showing an inverse power law behavior in all 556 HRPSs. Eleven patients (31%) had serious bradyarrhythmias. Most of these patients were not dependent on mechanical ventilation, with 3 of 11 patients (27%) still being able to walk more than 5 meters. Sustained tachycardia occurred less frequently in patients with than in those without bradyarrhythmias. The combination of the slope of the power law regression line and the log (power) at 10−4 Hz (log P4) of the 24-hour HRPS correctly identified 8 of 11 bradyarrhythmic patients (sensitivity 73%) and 16 of 22 patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome who did not have bradyarrhythmias (specificity 73%). All bradyarrhythmic patients could be detected in the subgroup of patients without sustained tachycardia. The 24-hour HRPS is a powerful predictor of serious autonomic complications in patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome and may help to identify patients at risk of potentially life-threatening arrhythmias.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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