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Gong C - - 2000
Previous studies on intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) indicate that brain edema increases progressively in the first 24 h and remains elevated for several days. The cause of secondary brain injury and edema formation is uncertain. We hypothesized that inflammatory mediators released from the blood after cerebral hemorrhage might cause secondary brain ...
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Ide K - - 2000
During exercise regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), as blood velocity in major cerebral arteries and also blood flow in the internal carotid artery increase, suggesting an increase in blood flow to a large part of the brain. Such an increase in CBF is independent of the concomitant increase in blood ...
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Yablonskiy D A - - 2000
A fundamental discovery of modern human brain imaging with positron-emission tomography that the blood flow to activated regions of the normal human brain increases substantially more than the oxygen consumption has led to a broad discussion in the literature concerning possible mechanisms responsible for this phenomenon. Presently no consensus exists. ...
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Demeurisse G - - 2000
The mechanisms accounting for clinical improvement after brain injury are still a matter of debate. Better knowledge of the recovery process is important for it might be influenced by therapy. This article reviews a number of studies devoted to the physiopathology of recovery from aphasia and visuo-spatial neglect after the ...
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Metz C - - 2000
BACKGROUND: The pharmacodynamic differences in time to onset and dissipation of effect of sufentanil, fentanyl, and alfentanil probably result from different rates of blood-brain equilibration. The authors investigated this hypothesis in humans. METHODS: After simultaneous central venous bolus application of sufentanil (10 microg), fentanyl (100 microg), and alfentanil (1,000 microg), ...
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Alexander B - - 2000
The integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) was measured in male Sprague Dawley rats subjected to 16 weeks of portacaval shunting (PCS), the optimal time required for the cerebral changes to develop, by using an in situ brain perfusion technique. The penetration of a vascular space marker 14C mannitol, and ...
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Cirovic S - - 2000
BACKGROUND: When the human body is exposed to a high gravitational load, the blood supply to the brain is reduced and loss of consciousness may occur. Our goal is to identify the principal mechanical causes of reduced blood supply to the brain during high +Gz. METHODS: We have developed a ...
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Wong C - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: Reversal of brain blood flow is necessary for retrograde cerebral perfusion (RCP) to have any metabolic benefit, but RCP is commonly used with little clinical evidence of the true incidence of reverse brain blood flow and impact. S-100B is exclusive to the brain and spinal cord and released during ...
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Harder D R - - 2000
This short review summarizes the potential role of cytochrome P450 (P450) in regulating blood flow in the brain tissue and in the skeletal muscle. We provide data showing that pressure-induced myogenic activity in the brain is largely responsible for autoregulation of CBF. This myogenic response to pressure is maintained, in ...
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de la Torre J C - - 2000
After nearly a century of inquiry, the cause of sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) remains to be found. On the subject of AD pathogenesis, recent basic and clinical evidence strongly argues in favor of the concept that AD is linked to brain circulatory pathology. This concept, when viewed from many different ...
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Flowers W M WM - - 2000
Persistent cerebral blood flow occasionally confounds confirmatory tests for brain death and results in the anguish of delayed diagnosis, unnecessary use of expensive resources, and loss of transplant opportunities. We reviewed the literature to examine the reasons, frequency, and meaning of this problem. We found that this phenomenon occurs: (1) ...
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Bauer R - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: To study the effect of mild hypothermia on cerebral oxygen metabolism and brain function in piglets during reduced cerebral blood flow because of gradual reduction of the effective cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP). DESIGN: Comparison of two randomized treatment groups: normothermic group (NT; n = 7) and hypothermic group (HT; ...
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Park W S - - 2000
In this study, we tested the hypothesis that decreased cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) induces cerebral ischemia and worsen brain damage in neonatal bacterial meningitis. Meningitis was induced by intracisternal injection of 10(9) colony forming units of Escherichia coli in 21 newborn piglets. Although CPP decreased significantly at 8 hr after ...
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Block R I - - 2000
It is uncertain whether frequent marijuana use adversely affects human brain function. Using PET, regional cerebral blood flow was compared in frequent marijuana users and comparable, non-using controls after at least 26 h of monitored abstention by all subjects. Marijuana users showed substantially lower brain blood flow than controls in ...
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Stankovic M R - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: Inability of continuous wave (CW) optical spectroscopy to measure changes in scattering, and the use of an arbitrary rather than an actual baseline, makes the CW method highly susceptible to errors that can lead to a false-positive or false-negative diagnosis. Our objective was to assess whether, and to what ...
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Ibayashi S - - 2000
To investigate the effect of selective hypothermia of the brain (brain cooling) on regional cerebral blood flow and tissue metabolism, we have developed a brain thermo-regulator. Brain temperature was modulated by a water-cooled metallic plate placed on the surface of the rats' scalp to get the appropriate brain temperature precisely ...
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Rausch R N - - 2000
Effects of hypoxia, anoxia, and endogenous ethanol (EtOH) on selected temperature (T(sel)) and activity in goldfish were evaluated. Blood and brain EtOH concentrations ([EtOH]) and brain oxygen partial pressure (PO(2)) were quantified at crucial ambient oxygen pressures. Below a threshold value near 31 Torr, T(sel) decreased as a function of ...
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Tsai T H - - 2000
To characterize the pharmacokinetics of protein-free camptothecin in blood and brain we implanted microdialysis probes into the jugular vein and striatum of rats for unbound drug sampling and determination. Camptothecin (2 or 5 mg/kg, i.v., n=6) was then administered from the femoral vein, and microdialysates were collected from blood and ...
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Moats R A - - 2000
Diagnosis by newborn screening and the implementation of a phenylalanine-restricted diet have resulted in normal neurological development in approximately 10,000 persons with phenylketonuria (PKU) in the United States. While it is accepted that a phenylalanine-restricted diet is necessary in childhood, the recommended concentration of phenylalanine in the blood varies. Clinicians ...
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Flowers W M WM - - 2000
BACKGROUND: The accuracy of the clinical diagnosis of brain death has never been established. METHODS: Seventy-one consecutive clinically brain dead patients were studied retrospectively. Inclusion criteria were complete cessation of brain function with profound coma of known cause, complete absence of brain stem reflexes, and apnea, all persisting for a ...
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Bauer R - - 2000
Perinatal hypoxic-ischemic cerebral injury is a major determinant of neurologic morbidity and mortality in the neonatal period and later in childhood. There is evidence that the dopaminergic system is sensitive to oxygen deprivation. However, the respective enzyme activities have yet not been measured in the living neonatal brain. In this ...
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de la Torre J C - - 2000
Considerable clinical and experimental data have shown that cerebral perfusion is progressively decreased during increased aging and that this decrease in brain blood flow is significantly greater in Alzheimer disease (AD). The authors propose that advanced aging with a comorbid condition, such as a vascular risk factor, which further decreases ...
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Anttila V - - 2000
Previous studies have shown that although retrograde cerebral perfusion (RCP) improves cerebral outcome during hypothermic circulatory arrest (HCA), RCP exposes the brain to subsequent edema. In this study, we have compared intermittent RCP (I-RCP) with continuous RCP (C-RCP) and HCA alone to determine whether the rate of fluid sequestration can ...
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Einer-Jensen N - - 2000
Local cooling of the brain by respiration has been found in several animal species with a rete mirabile in the carotid artery/cavernous sinus complex. The present experiment was made to investigate whether a similar cooling could be found in the rat, which does not have a rete. Eleven rats were ...
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Amato M - - 2000
Cerebral hypoxia-ischaemia in the neonate can produce irreversible tissue injury and is always associated with major perturbations in the energy status of the brain. The major neurological manifestations of brain injury in these babies are spastic motor deficits. Different pathogenetic mechanisms may underlie hypoxic-ischaemic injury of the brain such as ...
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Marmarou A - - 2000
Having determined that edema and not vascular engorgement is the major factor leading to traumatic brain swelling, the objective of this study was to determine which type of edema, cellular or vasogenic, is responsible for increased tissue water in patients with focal lesions. Severely head injured patients (GCS 8 or ...
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Maneerat Y - - 1999
Cytoadherence of Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes to the brain microvascular endothelial cells is believed to be an important cause of circulatory blockage in cerebral malaria. Cytokines released during acute infection may activate brain endothelial cells leading to increased binding of infected erythrocytes in the brain and reduced cerebral blood flow. This ...
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Pan W - - 1999
Transforming growth factor alpha (TGFalpha) is a cytokine that belongs to the epidermal growth factor (EGF) family of growth factors. EGF has a fast and saturable entry from blood to brain that is inhibitable by TGFalpha (18). In this report, we studied the passage of TGFalpha from blood to brain ...
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Epstein H T - - 1999
Stages of increased cerebral blood flow accompany stages of rapid brain growth The existence of stages of rapid brain growth implies the existence of associated stages of increased cerebral blood flow (CBF) to supply the substances and energy needed for the added brain weight. Studies in the literature give developmental ...
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Master S - - 1999
Two mechanisms may account for brain edema in fulminant hepatic failure: the osmotic effects of brain glutamine, a product of ammonia detoxification, and a change of cerebral blood flow (CBF). We have shown brain edema, a marked increase in brain glutamine, and a selective rise in CBF in rats after ...
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Martinez-Tica J F - - 1999
Brain ischemia and hypoxia are of concern when they occur following traumatic brain injury because they frequently result in potentially preventable secondary brain damage. In this study, we examined the ability of an implantable catheter (Paratrend 7; Diametrics Medical, St. Paul, MN) to continuously measure brain tissue pH, PCO2, and ...
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Greenberg J H - - 1999
The heterogeneity of blood flow in the brain under normo- and pathophysiological conditions, as well as during functional activation, has stimulated an interest in the use of autoradiography as a technique for the measurement of local cerebral blood flow. [14C]iodoantipyrine is the most prevalent tracer for the autoradiographic measurement of ...
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Zink B J - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: Previous studies of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and hemorrhagic shock (HS) models, have shown cardiorespiratory depression in ethanol-treated animals. This study investigated the effects of ethanol (ET) on brain lactate concentrations and acidosis in a TBI/HS model. METHODS: Anesthetized swine were instrumented and subjected to injury (INJ) consisting of ...
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Rex A - - 1999
The nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) is one of the main means for energy transfer in the mitochondrial respiratory chain and is an important parameter of cellular metabolism. NADH can be measured by its fluorescence and various fluorometric methods have been developed. In this study, a pulsed nitrogen laser combined with ...
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Katircioglu S F - - 1999
BACKGROUND: Protection of the brain is of vital importance during aortic arch aneurysms. In this study efficiency of retrograde cerebral perfusion was evaluated with the use of single photon emission computed tomography technique (SPECT) by using 99mTc hexamethylpropylene amine oxime (HMPAO). METHODS: Four animals were used. The internal maxillary vein ...
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van de Bor M - - 1999
Blood gas and blood pressure disturbances do influence cerebral blood flow in newborns. To what extent cerebral blood flow changes affect electrocortical brain activity remains uncertain. We studied the effect of severe hypoxia and hemorrhagic hypotension on carotid artery blood flow and electrocortical brain activity in newborn anesthetized lambs. During ...
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Bartels R H - - 1999
BACKGROUND: At present, it is not exactly clear which vein is allocated for drainage of blood to a particular area of the human brain. Knowledge of these draining areas is very important for the understanding of occlusive venous diseases. A method was developed that offers the possibility to investigate the ...
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Barfield C P - - 1999
Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) is a technique that is increasingly being used for the noninvasive measurement of cerebral blood volume (CBV) in newborn infants, but it has not been fully validated against established methods. These experiments in immature lambs (gestation 92+/-1 d, mean+/-SEM) compared CBV measured using NIRS-derived estimates of oxygenated ...
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de la Torre J C - - 1999
After nearly a century of inquiry, the cause of Alzheimer's disease (AD) remains to be found. In this review, basic and clinical evidence is presented that assembles and hypothetically explains most of the key pathologic events associated with the development of AD. These pathologic events are triggered in AD by ...
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Ichord R N - - 1999
Hypoglycemic injury in the mature brain is mediated by excitotoxicity, which is worsened by disordered cellular energy metabolism. The role of excitotoxicity in relation to brain energy metabolism during hypoglycemia has not been studied in the immature brain. Brain oxygen consumption (CMRO2) increases during hypoglycemia in piglets, whereas CMRO2 decreases ...
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Shadid M - - 1999
OBJECTIVES: Validation of near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS)-measured changes in cerebral blood volume (deltaCBV) and cytochrome aa3 (deltaCytaa3) as estimators of changes in brain perfusion and oxygenation in the newborn lamb during hypoxia and hypercarbia, and additional hypotension. METHODS AND MATERIALS: In 33 newborn lambs brain perfusion assessed by carotid artery ...
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Patel T R - - 1999
Subdural hematomas (SDH) can induce ischemia and neuronal damage in the underlying cortex. However, the extent to which intracerebral hematomas (ICH) produce reductions in cerebral blood flow (CBF) sufficient to cause ischemic damage is uncertain. Intracranial hemorrhage was induced by the injection of 100 or 200 microl of blood into ...
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Traykov L - - 1999
It is unclear whether the palliative effects of tetrahydroaminoacridine (THA) (tacrine, Cognex) on the clinical symptoms of patients affected by Alzheimer's disease (AD) are the result of its inhibitory activity on acetylcholinesterase or on other complex sites of action. In order to investigate the cerebral distribution and kinetics of THA ...
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Golding E M - - 1999
In this decade, the brain argueably stands as one of the most exciting and challenging organs to study. Exciting in as far as that it remains an area of research vastly unknown and challenging due to the very nature of its anatomical design: the skull provides a formidable barrier and ...
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Ritter A M - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: Acute pupillary dilation in a head-injured patient is a neurological emergency. Pupil dilation is thought to be the result of uncal herniation causing mechanical compression of the IIIrd cranial nerve and subsequent brain stem compromise. However, not all patients with herniation have fixed and dilated pupils, and not all ...
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Fantini S - - 1999
We have performed non-invasive, real-time optical mapping of the piglet brain during a subcortical injection of autologous blood. The time resolution of the optical maps is 192 ms, thus allowing us to generate a real-time video of the growing subcortical hematoma. The increased absorption at the site of blood injection ...
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Lee E J - - 1999
To determine the influence of anemic hypoxia on cerebral hemodynamics and brain metabolism during pathological conditions of the brain, moderate-sized intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) was created in canines with and without preoperatively inducing chronic anemia. The changes in cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) and cerebral blood flow velocities (CBFv) were evaluated as ...
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Brust P - - 1999
Perinatal hypoxic-ischemic cerebral injury is a major determinant of neurologic morbidity and mortality in the neonatal period and later in childhood. There is evidence that the dopaminergic system is sensitive to asphyxia. However, the respective enzyme activities have not yet been measured in the living neonatal brain. In this study, ...
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Cutler C S - - 1999
Previous research into development of a gallium-radiolabeled agent that crosses the blood-brain barrier has met with limited success. In this study, we focused our attention on a Ga(III) complex of a 4-coordinate amine trithiolate tripod ligand, tris(2-mercaptobenzyl) amine (S3N). The Ga(III) S3N complex is small, neutral, and lipophilic, meeting the ...
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Myburgh J A - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: To consider the evidence for the beneficial effects of the current management guidelines in traumatic brain injury, and to highlight the important issues. DATA SOURCES: Articles and published peer-review abstracts about the mechanisms and management of traumatic brain injury. SUMMARY OF REVIEW: Guidelines for the management of traumatic brain ...
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