Search results for "Intracranial Embolism"

showing 10 items of 23 documents

Cerebral blood flow velocities after subarachnoid haemorrhage in relation to the amount of blood clots in the initial computed tomography.

1998

In 72 patients with acute subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH) the relationship between the amount of subarachnoid blood clots detected by initial cranial computed tomography (CCT) up to 48 hours after bleeding and the later development of vasospasm, established by blood flow velocity measurement with transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD) was investigated. The serial Doppler examinations started within the first 72 hours after SAH and were carried out every second day up to three weeks. Each Doppler recording was accompanied by a neurological examination. Patients classified as Hunt and Hess grade V were excluded from the study. All patients with remarkable brain oedema in CCT or with intracrania…

AdultMaleAdolescentUltrasonography Doppler TranscranialHemodynamicsmedicineHumanscardiovascular diseasesIntracranial pressureAgedVascular diseasebusiness.industryVasospasmBlood flowLaser Doppler velocimetryIntracranial Embolism and ThrombosisMiddle AgedSubarachnoid Hemorrhagemedicine.diseasenervous system diseasesTranscranial DopplerCerebral blood flowIschemic Attack TransientAnesthesiaCerebrovascular Circulationcardiovascular systemSurgeryFemaleNeurology (clinical)Nuclear medicinebusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedBlood Flow Velocitycirculatory and respiratory physiologyActa neurochirurgica
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Clinical relevance of vegetation localization by transoesophageal echocardiography in infective endocarditis

1992

Infective endocarditis is associated with significant morbidity and mortality, with valvular destruction and congestive heart failure being more common in patients with echocardiographically discernible vegetations. The transoesophageal approach affords consistently high quality images with excellent structural resolution. Two-hundred and eighty-one patients with clinically suspected infective endocarditis were studied, to evaluate the prognostic value of ascertaining the site of vegetations. Among them were 118 patients with vegetations attached to the aortic or mitral valve. These patients were followed for a mean period of 14 months. Mitral valve vegetations were associated with a signif…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAortic Valve InsufficiencyPostoperative ComplicationsSepsisStreptococcal InfectionsMitral valveInternal medicinemedicineHumansEndocarditisProspective StudiesHeart valveProspective cohort studyAbscessbusiness.industryMitral Valve InsufficiencyEndocarditis BacterialIntracranial Embolism and ThrombosisMiddle AgedStaphylococcal InfectionsPrognosismedicine.diseaseAbscessSurgerymedicine.anatomical_structureEmbolismEchocardiographyAortic ValveHeart Valve ProsthesisHeart failureInfective endocarditisCardiologyMitral ValveFemaleCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessEuropean Heart Journal
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Detection of spontaneous echocardiographic contrast within the left atrium by transesophageal echocardiography: spontaneous echocardiographic contrast

1986

Transesophageal echocardiography was performed in 314 patients over a period of 24 months using a 3.5 MHz phased-array system fitted to the distal end of a conventional 12 mm endoscope. In 12 patients (2.6%) transesophageal echocardiography could not be performed because of adverse reaction to the gastroscopic procedure. Side effects were a transient A-V block in one patient and asthmatic attack in another. Mitral valve lesions were found in 99 of 314 patients. In 9 of these 99 patients (11%), including 1 patient with mitral valve stenosis and sinus rhythm, 2 with atrial fibrillation, 3 with disc, and 3 with porcine mitral prosthesis, spontaneous echocardiographic contrast was found within …

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyEndoscopeEsophagusPostoperative ComplicationsMitral valve stenosisInternal medicineMitral valveHumansMitral Valve StenosisMedicineSinus rhythmHeart AtriaEsophagusbusiness.industryMitral Valve InsufficiencyThrombosisAtrial fibrillationGeneral MedicineIntracranial Embolism and ThrombosisMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePeripheralmedicine.anatomical_structureEmbolismEchocardiographyHeart Valve Prosthesiscardiovascular systemCardiologyFemaleRadiologyCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessClinical Cardiology
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Early results of endovascular treatment of patients with bilateral stenoses of the internal carotid arteries using proximal protection systems at 30-…

2017

Abstract Background Although surgical endarterectomy remains the treatment of choice for carotid artery stenosis, carotid artery stenting (CAS) with use of proximal protection systems (PPS) plays an very important role as alternative treatment modality, especially in patients with critical, symptomatic lesions. This study was single-centre study to evaluate the technical and clinical success of proximal protection devices as the first choice for embolic protection in symptomatic and asymptomatic carotid stenosis in patients with bilateral, advanced lesions of carotid arteries (bilateral stenoses or stenosis and occlusion). Methods This was a post hoc analysis, with 30-day follow up. We anal…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatment030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyAsymptomatic03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDiabetes mellitusAngioplastyOcclusionPost-hoc analysismedicineHumansCarotid StenosisAdverse effectAgedRetrospective StudiesCarotidEndarterectomyProtectionbusiness.industryEndovascular ProceduresAngioplastySystemsProximalangioplastyMiddle Agedprotectionmedicine.diseaseSurgerycarotidStenosisproximalIntracranial EmbolismstentssystemsFemaleStentsSurgeryNeurology (clinical)Radiologymedicine.symptombusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeurologia i Neurochirurgia Polska
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The presence of infection-related antiphospholipid antibodies in infective endocarditis determines a major risk factor for embolic events.

1999

Abstract OBJECTIVES The impact of infection-associated antiphospholipid antibodies (APA) on endothelial cell activation, blood coagulation and fibrinolysis was evaluated in patients with infective endocarditis with and without major embolic events. BACKGROUND An embolic event is a common and severe complication of infective endocarditis. Despite the fact that APAs are known to be associated with infectious diseases, their pathogenic role in infective endocarditis has not been clearly defined. METHODS The relationship among the occurrence of major embolic events, echocardiographic vegetation size, endothelial cell activation, thrombin generation, fibrinolysis and APA was examined in 91 patie…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayGastroenterologyVon Willebrand factorRisk FactorsInternal medicinemental disordersFibrinolysisPlasminogen Activator Inhibitor 1medicineEndocarditisHumansRisk factorAgedRetrospective Studiesbiologybusiness.industryVascular diseaseFibrinolysisThrombinUltrasonography DopplerEndocarditis BacterialIntracranial Embolism and ThrombosisMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePrognosisHeart ValvesCerebral AngiographyInfective endocarditisImmunologybiology.proteinAntibodies AntiphospholipidFemaleCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineComplicationbusinessTomography X-Ray Computedpsychological phenomena and processesProtein CBiomarkersEchocardiography Transesophagealmedicine.drugFollow-Up StudiesProtein CJournal of the American College of Cardiology
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Revascularisation of a Giant Coronary Artery Aneurysm in Suspected Incomplete Kawasaki-Disease

2006

Kawasaki disease leads to typical vascular complications in up to 20 % of untreated cases. We describe a 47-year-old patient with coronary vessel disease, involving the right coronary artery with a huge aneurysmatic dilatation, suspicious for an incomplete form of Kawasaki disease. We found little information about the surgical treatment and postoperative course of this disease in adults. Typically, these infrequent patients present with acute myocardial infarction and require interdisciplinary decision-making.

Brain InfarctionPulmonary and Respiratory Medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyMyocardial InfarctionDiseaseMucocutaneous Lymph Node SyndromeCoronary AngiographyPostoperative ComplicationsAneurysmInternal medicinemedicine.arterymedicineHumanscardiovascular diseasesMyocardial infarctionCoronary Artery BypassSurgical treatmentCoronary artery aneurysmbusiness.industryCoronary ThrombosisCoronary AneurysmMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseAortic DissectionIntracranial EmbolismRight coronary arteryCoronary vesselCardiologySurgeryKawasaki diseaseCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessThe Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeon
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Alterations of regional cerebral blood flow and oxygen saturation in a rat sinus-vein thrombosis model.

1996

Background and Purpose The pathophysiology of sinus-vein thrombosis (SVT) in patients and experimental animals is still poorly understood. This study was designed to examine and further elucidate the pathophysiological sequence of events, especially the relationship between local and regional blood flow and hemoglobin oxygen saturation (HbSO 2 ) detected at identical locations. The use of both parameters as outcome indicators should be compared. Methods SVT was induced by ligation of the superior sagittal sinus (SSS) and slow injection of kaolin-cephalin suspension into the SSS in rats. Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was assessed by laser-Doppler flowmetry together with regional HbSO …

Cerebral veinsMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyTime FactorsUltrasonography Doppler TranscranialHemodynamicsMicrocirculationHemoglobinsInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansFluorescein AngiographyRats WistarAdvanced and Specialized NursingCerebral Cortexbusiness.industryBrainBlood flowIntracranial Embolism and Thrombosismedicine.diseaseThrombosisCerebral VeinsRatsSSS*OxygenDisease Models AnimalCerebral blood flowOrgan SpecificityRegional Blood FlowCerebrovascular CirculationCardiologyNeurology (clinical)Cardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessSuperior sagittal sinusStroke
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Isolated non-compaction of the myocardium as a cause of coronary and cerebral embolic events in the same patient.

2009

A 44-year-old woman with a history of smoking and previous cerebral thrombo-embolism presented to the emergency department with prolonged chest pain and ECG changes showing an acute anterior myocardial infarction. She was referred to the cath-lab for primary angioplasty. Coronary angiography showed a thrombotic occlusion at the origin of first diagonal …

Coronary angiographyAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyPrimary angioplastyChest painNecrosisVentricular Dysfunction LeftThrombotic occlusionInternal medicineMedicineHumansbusiness.industryCoronary ThrombosisMyocardiumEmergency departmentAcute anterior myocardial infarctionCardiomyopathy HypertrophicCoronary heart diseaseCoronary OcclusionIntracranial EmbolismCirculatory systemCardiologyFemalemedicine.symptomCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessCardiomyopathiesMagnetic Resonance AngiographyEuropean heart journal
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Paradoxical embolism after a femoral fracture

1998

The foramen ovale is anatomically open in 25 % of individuals, but functionally closed by the higher pressure in the left antrum. Right-to-left shunt and subsequent paradoxical embolism may occur when pressure in the left antrum rises, for example, as a result of pulmonary embolism. In the present case we demonstrate a patient who presented 20 days after osteosynthetic treatment of a femoral fracture with word-finding deficits. Cerebral MRT revealed a fresh ischemic insult. Duplex ultrasound of the legs showed a fresh thrombosis of the superficial femoral vein and scintigraphy of the lungs detected pulmonary embolism. Transesophageal contrast echocardiography trapped a hemodynamically spont…

Diagnostic Imagingmedicine.medical_specialtyDeep veinIschemiaFemoral veinHeart Septal Defects AtrialFracture Fixation InternalPostoperative ComplicationsParadoxical embolismRisk FactorsmedicineHumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineAgedHip Fracturesbusiness.industryFemoral fractureIntracranial Embolism and ThrombosisThrombophlebitismedicine.diseaseThrombosisPulmonary embolismmedicine.anatomical_structureEmbolismEmergency MedicineFemaleSurgeryRadiologyPulmonary EmbolismbusinessEmbolism ParadoxicalDer Unfallchirurg
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Epidural hematoma after cochlear implantation in a 2.5-year-old boy.

2005

OBJECTIVE Report a case of an epidural hematoma after cochlear implantation in a 2.5-year-old boy, the diagnostic and therapeutical emergency management, as well as the postinterventional course and rehabilitation of the child. STUDY DESIGN Retrospective case review. PATIENT Two and a half-year-old boy, suffering from early onset, profound sensorineural hearing loss had been diagnosed at an age of 1.5 years, which had been more severe on the right side initially, but had progressed to bilateral deafness. INTERVENTION AND COMPLICATION: Cochlear implantation on the left side, followed up by an extensive epidural hematoma, causing intracranial compression with a midline shift of 15 mm to the r…

Hematoma Epidural CranialMaleReoperationmedicine.medical_specialtyCritical CareInfarctionBilateral DeafnessAudiologyDeafnessDiagnosis DifferentialInfarction Posterior Cerebral ArteryEpidural hematomaPostoperative ComplicationsMidline shiftmedicine.arteryAnterior cerebral arterymedicineElectrocoagulationHumansDominance CerebralNeurologic Examinationbusiness.industryInfarction Middle Cerebral Arterymedicine.diseaseCochlear ImplantationMagnetic Resonance ImagingMeningeal ArteriesSensory SystemsTentoriumTemporal LobeSurgeryEpistaxisOtorhinolaryngologyIntracranial EmbolismChild PreschoolNeurology (clinical)ImplantOccipital LobeComplicationbusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedFollow-Up StudiesOtologyneurotology : official publication of the American Otological Society, American Neurotology Society [and] European Academy of Otology and Neurotology
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