Search Results
Results 451 - 500 of 1162
< 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 >
Pellicer A - - 1999
Indomethacin modifies baseline cerebral haemodynamics and metabolism, as well as vasomotor adaptive responses. However, the significance of arachidonic acid metabolites in the regulation of cerebral circulation remains unclear. A study was made of the effect of inhibition of the cyclo-oxygenase pathway on baseline cerebral haemodynamics and CO2-induced vasodilation using the ...
Doering T J - - 1999
The purpose of the study contained herein was to investigate the effects of old traditional physiotherapeutic treatments on cerebral autoregulation. Treatment consisted of complete body immersion in cold or warm water baths. Fifteen volunteers were investigated by means of transcranial Doppler sonography and a servo-controlled noninvasive device for blood pressure ...
Djurberg H G - - 1998
STUDY OBJECTIVE: To establish the quantitative effects on the diameter of cerebral arteries following controlled changes in arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2). DESIGN: Nonrandomized interventional study. SETTING: Angiography suite of a tertiary referral hospital. PATIENTS: 12 anesthetized patients suffering from a cerebral arteriovenous malformation undergoing endovascular treatment. INTERVENTION: Induced hypocapnia ...
Williams K P - - 1998
OBJECTIVE: To determine the variation in the estimated maternal cerebral perfusion and cerebrovascular resistance (the resistance area product) in the puerperium. METHODS: The maternal middle cerebral artery was evaluated by transcranial Doppler ultrasound in ten women 2 days before labor, in 21 women in early labor and at 24 and ...
Suo Z - - 1998
Bilateral temporoparietal hypoperfusion has been frequently observed early in the Alzheimer's disease (AD) process. An increased beta-amyloid (Abeta) peptide is believed to play a central role in the pathogenesis of AD. In vitro experiments have shown that freshly solubilized Abeta enhances constriction of cerebral and peripheral vessels. We propose that ...
Williams K P - - 1998
OBJECTIVE: Our purpose was to compare the estimated maternal cerebral perfusion pressure and an index of vascular resistance, the resistance area product, in nonpregnant women with hypertensive pregnant women. STUDY DESIGN: The maternal middle cerebral artery was evaluated by transcranial Doppler ultrasonography in 17 nonpregnant women, 17 pregnant normotensive patients, ...
Oliver D W - - 1998
Sodium valproate (CAS 1069-66-5, Epilim) has been used in the management of epilepsy during the last three decades. Although important information on the pharmacological actions and efficacy of sodium valproate has accrued to date, limited research has been conducted on its effects on cerebral blood flow. In recent years, with ...
Gunn A J - - 1998
The neuroprotective effects of hypothermia during cerebral ischaemia or asphyxia are well known. Although, in view of this, the possibility of a therapeutic role for hypothermia during or after resuscitation from such insults has been a long standing focus of research, early studies had limited and contradictory results. Clinically and ...
Mahajan R P - - 1998
The transient hyperemic response (THR) in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) after the release of brief compression of the ipsilateral common carotid artery has been used to study cerebral autoregulation. We conducted the present study to evaluate the reliability of THR to detect changes in cerebral autoregulation induced by graded ...
Back T - - 1998
It has been proposed that the reversal of serotonin-mediated vasoconstriction accounts for the neuroprotective effect of serotonin (5-HT2) receptor blockade in focal cerebral ischemia. We investigated the effect of pretreatment with ritanserin, a 5-HT2 receptor antagonist, on cerebral blood flow in a model of photothrombotic middle cerebral artery occlusion in ...
Jordan J - - 1998
Patients with idiopathic orthostatic intolerance (IOI) exhibit symptoms suggestive of cerebral hypoperfusion and an excessive decrease in cerebral blood flow associated with standing despite sustained systemic blood pressure. In 9 patients (8 women and 1 man aged 22 to 48 years) with IOI, we tested the hypothesis that volume loading ...
Krimer L S - - 1998
Functional variations in cerebral cortical activity are accompanied by local changes in blood flow, but the mechanisms underlying this physiological coupling are not well understood. Here we report that dopamine, a neurotransmitter normally associated with neuromodulatory actions, may directly affect local cortical blood flow. Using light and electron-microscopic immunocytochemistry, we ...
Panerai R B - - 1998
Assessment of cerebral autoregulation is an important adjunct to measurement of cerebral blood flow for diagnosis, monitoring or prognosis of cerebrovascular disease. The most common approach tests the effects of changes in mean arterial blood pressure on cerebral blood flow, known as pressure autoregulation. A 'gold standard' for this purpose ...
Endres M - - 1998
The treatment of ischemic strokes is limited to prophylactic agents that block the coagulation cascade. Here, we show that cholesterol-lowering agents, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl (HMG)-CoA reductase inhibitors, protect against cerebral injury by a previously unidentified mechanism involving the selective up-regulation of endothelial NO synthase (eNOS). Prophylactic treatment with HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors augments ...
Régrigny O - - 1998
Because melatonin is a cerebral vasoconstrictor agent, we tested whether it could shift the lower limit of cerebral blood flow autoregulation to a lower pressure level, by improving the cerebrovascular dilatory reserve, and thus widen the security margin. Cerebral blood flow and cerebrovascular resistance were measured by hydrogen clearance in ...
Matsunami K - - 1998
Sustained hyper-gravity acceleration, particularly along the long axis of the body of animals or man (Gz), produces significant mal-effects on subjects, and hence it has been well studied, The most common syndromes of Gz application were cardio-vascular de-conditioning, and black-out, red-out, and loss of consciousness, which finally lead subjects into ...
Manohar M - - 1998
OBJECTIVE: To examine regional distribution of blood flow in the brain of horses at rest and during exercise. ANIMALS: 9 clinically normal horses. PROCEDURE: Regional brain blood flow was measured using radionuclide-labeled 15-microns-diameter microspheres injected into the left ventricle, while reference blood samples were obtained from the aorta. RESULTS: At ...
Takeuchi K - - 1998
BACKGROUND: Clear evidence of cerebral blood circulation has not been shown after axillo-axillary bypass surgery in patients with subclavian steal syndrome. METHODS: We investigated the cerebral circulation and blood flow in 3 patients receiving axillo-axillary bypass by RI angiography using 99mTc-dl hexamethyl propylene amine oxime (99mTc-HMPAO). Two patients had vertebral ...
Sudikoff S - - 1998
Pathologic alterations in cerebral blood flow and metabolism commonly occur following a variety of insults to the brain. An understanding of blood flow and metabolic abnormalities and the ability to monitor and manipulate cerebral blood flow and metabolism may improve outcome following brain injury. Multiple methods have been developed in ...
Mawera G - - 1998
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of lateral rotational head and neck movements on the afferent cerebral blood flow in healthy adult humans so as to increase our knowledge of the relationship between arterial resistance and blood flow in the afferent cerebral arteries and in the arterial segments of the circle ...
Kurumatani T - - 1998
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: An animal model of chronic cerebral hypoperfusion was developed with coiled clips applied to both carotid arteries of adult Mongolian gerbils for between 1 week and 2 months. In the brain of this animal model, rarefaction of white matter with dilatation of the ventricles was frequently observed. ...
Barbelivien A - - 1998
In order to analyze the precise cerebrovascular effects of a specific cholinergic stimulation of the rat substantia innominata and their modulation by galanin, cerebral blood flow was measured by the [14C]-iodoantipyrine autoradiographic method in anesthetized (urethane and alpha-chloralose), artificially ventilated male Sprague-Dawley rats that received a microinjection into the substantia ...
Sliwka U - - 1998
Cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFv) was measured by insonating the middle cerebral arteries of four subjects using a 2 Mhz transcranial Doppler. Ambient CO2 was elevated to 0.7% for 23 d in the first study and to 1.2% for 23 d in the same subjects in the second study. By ...
Strauss G - - 1998
BACKGROUND/AIMS: In patients with acute liver failure loss of cerebral blood flow autoregulation may result from cerebral vasodilatation. Since arterial hypocapnia induces cerebral vasoconstriction, we investigated whether cerebral blood flow autoregulation could be reestablished by mechanical hyperventilation. METHODS: Seven consecutive patients (median age 45, range 30-50 years) with acute liver ...
Cai H - - 1998
The objective of the present study was to examine the effects of a long-acting angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, imidapril ((4S)-1-methyl-3-¿(2S)-2-[N-(1S)-1-ethoxycarbonyl-3-phenylpropyl) amino] propionyl¿-2-oxoimidazolidine-4-carboxylic acid hydrochloride), for 7 days on the cerebral blood flow autoregulatory response to hypotension in hypertensive rats. We measured the cerebral blood flow at rest and during hemorrhagic ...
Crawford J G - - 1998
In a previous report, Alzheimer's disease risk factors, including alcohol abuse, depression, Down's syndrome, cerebral glucose metabolism defect, head trauma, old age, Parkinson's disease, sleep disturbance, and underactivity, were shown to have an association with reduced cerebral blood flow. In this report an attempt is made to strengthen a hypothesis ...
Meek J H - - 1998
AIM: To measure changes in cerebral haemodynamics over the first three days of life in very preterm infants with normal brains. METHODS: Eleven mechanically ventilated infants (median gestational age 26 weeks) without evidence of major abnormalities on cranial ultrasound examination were studied. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral blood volume ...
Piechnik S - - 1998
Time-dependent interactions between pressure, flow and volume of cerebral blood and cerebrospinal fluid were mathematically modelled. The model was designed to simulate blood inflow and storage, arteriolar and capillary blood circulation controlled by cerebral autoregulation, venous blood outflow and storage modulated by intracranial pressure, and cerebrospinal fluid production, storage and ...
Richards H K - - 1998
INTRODUCTION: Transcranial Doppler pulsatility index was reported clinically to increase when cerebral perfusion pressure decreased, hypothetically marking the lower limit of cerebral autoregulation. We sought to investigate the relationship between pulsatility index, cerenbrovascular resistance, and cerebral perfusion pressure in various states of autoregulation in an animal model of moderate intracranial ...
Rise I R - - 1998
Reports studying the combination of low blood pressure and cerebral ischaemia are few, and it remains to be determined how cerebral circulatory insufficiency modifies the cerebral perfusion and the central haemodynamic response to blood loss. We hypothesised that occlusion of arteries to the brain modifies the cerebrovascular and cardiovascular responses ...
You D L - - 1998
Severe cerebral involvement may occur in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. Methylprednisolone pulse therapy is a management choice for those with severe cerebral involvement. However, its effectiveness is uncertain. This article describes Tc-99m HMPAO cerebral perfusion single-photon emission computerized tomography to document the restoration of cerebral perfusion after methylprednisolone pulse ...
Nakamura T - - 1998
The therapeutic significance of moderate hypothermia and cerebral monitorings was assessed in the 10 patients with severe head injury. Cooling was begun as soon as possible after admission, using water blankets under general anesthesia. Jugular venous or tympanic temperature of patients was maintained at 32 degrees C for 3 to ...
Yamauchi H - - 1998
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: This study investigated whether in patients with internal carotid artery occlusion the regional cerebral hematocrit correlates with cerebral hemodynamics or metabolic state and, if so, how the regional cerebral hematocrit changes in the hemodynamically compromised region. METHODS: We used positron emission tomography to study seven patients with ...
Burrows P E - - 1998
Central nervous system vascular disorders in the neonate comprise structural anomalies or malformations of arteries and veins and physiologic alterations of cerebral blood flow, which can mimic structural vascular disease. Clinical , imaging, and transcatheter therapeutic aspects of neonatal cerebral vascular malformations are described. Symptomatic high-flow vascular malformations characteristically present ...
Berthezene Y - - 1998
The acetazolamide (ACZ) test is performed to evaluate the decrease in cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) by investigation of vasomotor reactivity (VMR). Our aim was to study cerebral blood flow and blood volume changes induced by the ACZ test in healthy control subjects using dynamic susceptibility contrast-enhanced gradient-echo MRI (DSC-MRI). A ...
Lasjaunias P - - 1997
Summary: Cerebral arteriovenous lesions are in general considered to be congenital in nature despite the fact that there is no evidence that the AV shunts diagnosed in adults are present at birth in a similar format. Construction of a vascular structure is the result of complex biological influences starting in ...
Czosnyka M - - 1997
OBJECTIVES: Cerebral haemodynamic responses to short and longlasting episodes of decreased cerebral perfusion pressure contain information about the state of autoregulation of cerebral blood flow. Mathematical simulation may help to elucidate which of the indices, that can be derived using transcranial Doppler ultrasonography and trends of intracranial pressure and blood ...
Gehron J - - 1997
Currently the most used perfusion techniques during aortic arch surgery to prevent cerebral damage include hypothermic circulatory arrest, retrograde cerebral perfusion and selective cerebral perfusion (SCP). The application of simplified SCP, which does not require deep hypothermia, has become an alternative procedure for brain protection. Including the physiological principle of ...
Lockwood G G - - 1997
We describe the first experiments to relate the cerebral kinetics of isoflurane (determined by fluorine magnetic resonance spectroscopy) to cerebral function. Using a surface receive coil we found two-compartment kinetics within the head with equilibrium half-times of 3.5 min and approximately 1 h with respect to expired isoflurane concentrations. Using ...
Mosca F - - 1997
OBJECTIVE: To compare the effects on cerebral perfusion and oxygenation of intravenous ibuprofen and indomethacin as treatment for patent ductus arteriosus in preterm infants. STUDY DESIGN: Sixteen infants receiving mechanical ventilation (< 31 weeks gestation) with patent ductus arteriosus received either 0.2 mg/kg indomethacin (n = 8) or 10 mg/kg ...
Pollard V - - 1997
OBJECTIVE: To measure cerebral blood flow, cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen, cerebral oxygen delivery, and cerebral vascular resistance during experimental endotoxemia in volunteers. DESIGN: Experimental, prospective study. SETTING: University general clinical research center. SUBJECTS: Healthy volunteers (six male, four female, 30.1 +/- 1.9 yrs of age). INTERVENTIONS: Volunteers had radial, ...
Dijk P H - - 1997
OBJECTIVE: Surfactant replacement therapy for the neonatal respiratory distress syndrome has shown beneficial effects on lung function and survival. Recently, rapid fluctuations of haemodynamics and cerebral perfusion following surfactant instillation have been described and an association with the development of intraventricular haemorrhage has been proposed. Therefore, alternative methods of surfactant ...
Knecht S - - 1997
Preparing for and processing of sensory stimuli are energy-requiring processes. We attempted to assess the relative contributions of these processes to increases in regional cerebral perfusion. Nineteen healthy right-handed subjects were examined while they were engaged in detecting tactile stimuli to the index finger 5 s after a cueing tone. ...
Perales A J - - 1997
OBJECTIVE: To examine the ability of magnesium sulphate to counteract the noradrenaline-induced cerebral vasoconstrictor and pressor responses in goats by using both in vivo and in vitro techniques. DESIGN: Cerebral blood flow was measured in vivo by means of an electromagnetic flow probe around the internal maxillary artery. Isometric tension ...
Skippen P - - 1997
OBJECTIVES: To study cerebral blood flow and cerebral oxygen consumption in severe head-injured children and also to assess the effect of hyperventilation on regional cerebral blood flow. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: Pediatric intensive care unit at a tertiary-level university children's hospital. PATIENTS: Twenty-three children with isolated severe brain injury, ...
Ye F Q - - 1997
Steady-state arterial spin tagging MRI approaches were used to quantitate regional cerebral blood flow increases during finger tapping tasks in seven normal subjects. Statistically significant increases in cerebral blood flow were observed in the contralateral primary sensorimotor cortex in all seven subjects and in the supplementary motor area in five ...
Orlin J R - - 1997
PURPOSE: To evaluate morphological and physiological changes during acute lethal subdural bleeding in 2 models of anaesthetized dogs. MATERIAL AND METHODS: In model I, blood from the aorta was led into a collapsed subdural rubber balloon while in model II, the blood was directed into the subdural compartment over the ...
Iyo M - - 1997
1. Cerebral blood flow of nine methamphetamine abusers with technetium-99m-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime (HMPAO) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) as well as morphological examination with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were investigated. 2. Six of these subjects exhibited multiple focal perfusion deficits in cerebral cortices without abnormalities in MRI including cerebral ...
Chieregato A - - 1997
We report a case of acute head injury with severe diffuse brain swelling in which early global cerebral ischemia was followed by brain death. Global cerebral ischemia was detected by cerebral arteriovenous lactate content difference, cerebral arteriovenous carbon dioxide tension (PCO2) difference, and cerebral arteriovenous hydrogen ion content difference. Physiopathological ...
Wyatt J S - - 1997
Quantitative techniques have been derived for the measurement of global cerebral blood flow, cerebral blood volume, its response to changing arterial carbon dioxide tension and mixed cerebral venous saturation in the human newborn undergoing intensive care. Normal ranges have been established and significant disturbances of cerebral oxygenation and perfusion have ...
< 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 >