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Mochizuki Y - - 2001
The effects of cilostazol (Pletaal, Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Tokyo, Japan) on cerebral blood flow, P300 event-related potentials, and serum lipid levels were examined in patients in the chronic stage of cerebral infarction. This study included 20 patients (13 men and 7 women, mean age 67 +/- 11 years) with cerebral ...
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Sugano S - - 2001
BACKGROUND/AIMS: The objective of this study was to determine whether cerebral arterial vasoconstriction occurs in relation to postprandial splanchnic blood pooling in cirrhotic patients. METHODS: The pulsatility and the resistive indexes and blood flow in the middle cerebral artery were measured by magnetic resonance imaging in 21 cirrhotics and 14 ...
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Zwienenberg M - - 2001
Post-traumatic cerebral ischemia is associated with a poor prognosis. Optimization of cerebral perfusion and blood flow thus plays a key role in contemporary head injury management. However, understanding of the pathophysiology of severe head injury is required for optimal patient management. This article explains the relationships between cerebral blood flow ...
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Rosengarten B - - 2001
Neurovascular coupling and cerebral autoregulation are important and fast mechanisms for maintaining an adequate blood supply to the brain. It was suggested that both mechanisms follow a common control system. The aim of our study was to describe neurovascular coupling and cerebral autoregulation in mathematical terms of a control system ...
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Philippart M - - 2001
A 5-year-old boy presented with frequent absences. Speech began to regress. He became ataxic, barely able to walk. Studies with Xe-133 and hexamethylpropylene amine oxime single-photon emission computed tomography revealed sharply decreased cerebral blood flow, especially in the occipital area. Landau-Kleffner syndrome was suspected but a sleep electroencephalogram showed few ...
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Ter Minassian A - - 2001
OBJECTIVE: To explore cerebral hemodynamics in 8 healthy volunteers in a hypobaric chamber up to the altitude of Mount Everest after a progressive stepwise decompression to 8,848 m. METHODS: Physiological, clinical, and transcranial Doppler data were collected after at least 3 days at 5,000, 6,000, and 7,000 m and within ...
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White R P - - 2000
Cerebral blood flow is maintained constant over a range of cerebral perfusion pressures by cerebral autoregulation. Impaired cerebral autoregulation may be important in the pathogenesis of cerebral ischaemia. The mechanisms mediating normal cerebral autoregulation in humans are poorly understood. We used a recently described transcranial Doppler technique, which allows non-invasive ...
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Larsen F S - - 2000
Acute liver failure (ALF) is a devastating disease leading to multiorgan dysfunction. The most dramatic impact of ALF is on the brain, as hepatic encephalopathy and intracranial hypertension (IH) develop. IH is associated with systemic hemodynamic instability, alterations in the regulation of cerebral blood flow and the development of cerebral ...
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Larsen F S - - 2000
The absence of cerebral blood flow autoregulation in patients with fulminant hepatic failure (FHF) implies that changes in arterial pressure directly influence cerebral perfusion. It is assumed that dilatation of cerebral arterioles is responsible for the impaired autoregulation. Recently, frontal blood flow was reported to be lower compared with other ...
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Upton R N - - 2000
BACKGROUND: Thiopental and propofol are highly lipid-soluble, and their entry into the brain often is assumed to be limited by cerebral blood flow rather than by a diffusion barrier. However, there is little direct experimental evidence for this assumption. METHODS: The cerebral kinetics of thiopental and propofol were examined over ...
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St Lawrence K S - - 2000
Arterial spin tagging techniques originally used the one-compartment Kety model to describe the dynamics of tagged water in the brain. The work presented here develops a more realistic model that includes the contribution of tagged water in the capillary bed and accounts for the finite time required for water to ...
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Endoh H - - 2000
We investigated the effects of nicardipine on dynamic cerebral pressure autoregulation in 13 normal adult patients undergoing gynecologic or orthopedic surgery. Anesthesia was induced and maintained with propofol and fentanyl. Hypotension to a mean arterial pressure of 60-65 mm Hg was induced and maintained with a continuous infusion of nicardipine. ...
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Saito S - - 2000
PURPOSE: Several different anti-hypertensive regimens have been introduced for the prevention of systemic hyperdynamic responses after electrically induced seizures. In the present study, the effects of anti-hypertensive medications on cerebral circulation were studied. METHODS: Systemic blood pressure was controlled by several anti-hypertensive medications, nicardipine, prostaglandin EI, alprenolol and nitroglycerin, in ...
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Shemagonov A V - - 2000
The purpose of this investigation was to study the effects of Medical Resonance Therapy Music (MRT-Music) upon autonomous innervation of cerebral arteries by examining slow spontaneous oscillations of cerebral blood flow (SSO) using transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD). TCD detects SSO with 3-9 cycles per minute (M-waves) and 0.5-2 cycles per ...
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Sokol D K - - 2000
Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) is a noninvasive method for bedside measurement of cerebral oxygenation (SaO(2)). The purpose of this study was to establish differences in SaO(2)for complex partial seizures (CPS) and rapidly secondarily generalized CPS (RCPS). We studied eight adults with medically refractory epilepsy undergoing evaluation for temporal lobectomy. We ...
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Bedforth N M - - 2000
Rapid increases in the inspired concentration of desflurane cause transient increases in heart rate and blood pressure. Desflurane also impairs cerebral autoregulation at clinical concentrations. Sevoflurane does not share these hemodynamic side effects. We compared the cerebral and systemic hemodynamic responses to the introduction of desflurane or sevoflurane after the ...
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Takahara Y - - 2000
BACKGROUND: Some reports have observed the response of cerebral blood flow to PaCO2 during hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass. We studied the effect of PaCO2 on the cerebral circulation during hypothermic selective cerebral perfusion. METHODS: Between June 1992 and January 1998, 35 patients underwent aortic arch grafting using hypothermic selective cerebral perfusion ...
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Cerebral blood flow velocity by transcranial Doppler during a vertical-rotating table simulation ...
Zhang W X - - 2000
BACKGROUND: The push-pull effect (PPE) has been suspected of causing many aircraft accidents. The perfusion and then withdrawal of cerebral blood during the PPE may change the state of the cerebral blood vessel. HYPOTHESIS: During head-down tilt (HDT) cerebral vasoconstriction occurs in response to the elevated perfusion pressure to maintain ...
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Terborg C - - 2000
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Reduction of cerebral blood flow and vasomotor reactivity (VMR) are thought to play an important role in the pathogenesis of cerebral microangiopathy. The aim of our study was to determine whether near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) can detect a reduced VMR in patients with microangiopathy, whether NIRS reactivities correlate ...
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Suo Z - - 2000
Bilateral temporoparietal hypoperfusion has been frequently observed early in the Alzheimer's disease (AD) process. The beta-amyloid (A beta) peptide is believed to play a central role in the pathogenesis of AD. In vitro experiments have shown that freshly solubilized A beta enhances constriction of cerebral and peripheral vessels. We proposed ...
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Mochizuki Y - - 2000
BACKGROUND: We investigated the cerebral blood flow in mild to moderately hypertensive patients with chronic cerebral infarction before and after the administration of bunazosin hydrochloride sustained-release formulation, a selective sympathetic alpha1 receptor blocker. METHODS: Eleven mild to moderately hypertensive patients (mean age 65.6 years) with chronic cerebral infarction were studied. ...
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Watson N A - - 2000
A small decrease in cerebral blood flow (approximately 10%) in response to 100% oxygen (O2) administration is well recognized. This observation was based on human volunteer studies, which employed a nitrous oxide washout method for the measurement of cerebral blood flow. Because this method is now appreciated to be subject ...
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Bakker S L - - 2000
Cholesterol and its subfractions play a role in the development of atherosclerosis. Cerebral CO2 reactivity reflects the compensatory capacity of cerebral arterioles. The authors investigated the relationship between total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL), their ratio, and cerebral CO2 reactivity in 826 participants from the Rotterdam Study. Cerebral CO2 reactivity increased ...
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Merzeau S - - 2000
Autoregulation in the brain is essential to the maintenance of perfusion and hence to the normal functioning of the organism in the face of various hemodynamic challenges. The existence of prodromal symptoms preceding fainting suggests that cerebellar autoregulation could be altered earlier than cerebral autoregulation during the development of hypotension. ...
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Oishi M - - 2000
In order to find out the difference between cilostazol and ticlopidine hydrochloride in the cerebral vasodilating effect in the chronic stage of cerebral infarction, cerebral blood flows were measured while the patients were on ticlopidine hydrochloride and after ticlopidine hydrochloride was switched to cilostazol. Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) ...
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Heim C - - 2000
Sixty minutes of cerebral oligaemic hypoxia, induced by bilateral clamping of the carotid arteries (BCCA) in pentobarbital-anaesthetized normotensive rats, induces a late progressive cognitive decline when compared with sham-operated controls. Analysis at BCCA of hippocampal metabolism using microdialysis showed increased release of glutamate, aspartate and gamma-aminobutyric acid, followed by a ...
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Wardle S P - - 2000
Cerebral fractional oxygen extraction (FOE) represents the balance between cerebral oxygen delivery and consumption. This study aimed to determine cerebral FOE in preterm infants during hypotension, during moderate anemia, and with changes in the PaCO2. Three groups of neonates were studied: stable control neonates (n = 43), anemic neonates (n ...
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Yamashita T - - 2000
Cerebral blood flow changes by argatroban in the acute stage of cerebral thrombosis have been investigated with the use of stable xenon computed tomography (Xe/CT). The study group consisted of 14 cases (7 males, 7 females) with the average age of 59 years old (ranging from 21 to 79 years ...
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Niwa K - - 2000
The prostanoid-synthesizing enzyme cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) is expressed in selected cerebral cortical neurons and is involved in synaptic signaling. We sought to determine whether COX-2 participates in the increase in cerebral blood flow produced by synaptic activity in the somatosensory cortex. In anesthetized mice, the vibrissae were stimulated mechanically, and cerebral ...
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Wolff C B - - 2000
During acclimatization to moderate altitudes, a simple calculation from data of others shows that the rise in cerebral blood flow (CBF) is sufficient that oxygen delivery to brain (DaO2) is constant as arterial oxygen content (CaO2) falls. This balance occurs on average even though the hypocapnia caused by hypoxic hyperventilation ...
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Koskinen L O - - 2000
The goal of the study was to assess whether TRH analogues possess cerebrovascular effects similar to the native peptide. The neuropeptide thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) elicits cerebrovasodilation in several species under various conditions. The laser-Doppler method was employed to study the effects of TRH and the analogues pGlu-3-methyl-His-Pro amid (M-TRH) ...
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Williams K P - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: To compare the effect of epidural anesthesia on cerebral perfusion pressure in laboring women. STUDY DESIGN: Maternal cerebral blood flow velocity was assessed in seven laboring patients with continuous epidural anesthesia and 15 without, using transcranial Doppler. Maternal cerebral blood flow velocity was assessed during the first stage at ...
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Oliviero A - - 1999
We evaluated cerebral variation in oxyhemoglobin, deoxyhemoglobin, and cytochrome oxidase before and after transcranial magnetic and electrical stimulation in ten healthy volunteers using near-infrared spectroscopy. Immediately after magnetic but not after electric stimulation a significant increase in oxyhemoglobin and a decrease in cytochrome oxidase were observed (P < 0.05). Our ...
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Ma J Y - - 1999
Shao-Yin-Ren Shi-Quang-Da-Bu-Tang (SDT) has been used traditionally to improve the systemic blood circulation and biological energy production in the body. The object of this study is to determine the effect of SDT extract on the decline of cerebral adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and choline content associated with learning and memory impairments ...
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McBean D E - - 1999
The effects of the potent selective 5-HT reuptake blocking agent, citalopram (10 mg/kg, i.v.), on local cerebral blood flow (lCBF) and local cerebral metabolic rate of glucose (lCMRglu) were measured using [14C]iodoantipyrine (IAP) and [14C]2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) autoradiography, respectively. Significant decreases in lCBF were observed in nine of the 27 brain ...
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Williams K P - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: This study was undertaken to compare the persistence of changes in estimated cerebral perfusion pressure and the resistance area product, an index of cerebrovascular resistance, in women with preeclampsia and women with eclampsia. STUDY DESIGN: The maternal middle cerebral artery was evaluated by transcranial Doppler ultrasonography in 6 patients ...
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Hopton P - - 1999
Methods for measuring cerebral blood volume (CBV) have traditionally used radioisotopes. More recently, near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) has been used to measure CBV by using a technique involving O(2) desaturation of cerebral tissue, where the observed change in the concentration of oxygenated hemoglobin is a marker of the volume of blood ...
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Meyer P - - 1999
Secondary brain lesions resulting from cerebral metabolic and hemodynamic reactions can be prevented by neurocritical care management. It must be initiated as soon as possible, ideally in a prehospital setting. Tracheal intubation, controlled ventilation and hemodynamic stabilization are the prerequisites. Beside intracranial and cerebral perfusion pressure, monitoring must evaluate the ...
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Oliver D W - - 1999
Nitroglycerin (CAS 55-63-0, Nitrocene) has successfully been used in the management of angina during the last several decades. Although important information on the pharmacological actions and efficacy of nitroglycerin have been extracted, to date, limited research has been conducted on its effects on cerebral blood flow. In recent years, with ...
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Baezner H - - 1999
According to the trigeminovascular model of pain in migraine, sterile neurogenic inflammation of dural vessels stimulates nociceptive fibres of the trigeminal nerve. Sumatriptan, a 5-HT1 receptor agonist, blocks this reaction and mediates vasoconstriction of meningeal arteries. However, it is uncertain, whether sumatriptan also has a vasoconstrictive effect on cerebral arteries, ...
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Torregrosa G - - 1999
The effects of dotarizine (1-(diphenylmethyl)-4-[3-(2-phenyl-1,3- dioxolan-2-yl)propyl]-piperazine, CAS 84625-59-2) on the cerebral circulation of goats were assessed in vivo by recording continuously global cerebral blood flow (gCBF) and cortical perfusion (CP), and in vitro by recording isometric tension in goat isolated middle cerebral artery (MCA). Administration of dotarizine (1 microgram-5 mg) ...
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Mucke H - - 1999
This meeting, which for the first time included BrainPET, was held in close cooperation with the International Society for Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism and was presided over by Dr Olaf B Paulson (Neuroscience Center, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark). It attracted approximately 750 registered participants from over 30 countries, with a ...
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Meek J H - - 1999
AIMS: To investigate the relation between cerebral blood flow on the first day of postnatal life and the severity of any subsequent germinal matrix haemorrhage-intraventricular haemorrhage (GMH-IVH). METHODS: Cerebral blood flow was measured in 24 babies during the first 24 hours of life using near infrared spectroscopy. Repeated cerebral ultrasound ...
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McCullough J N - - 1999
BACKGROUND: Hypothermic circulatory arrest (HCA) is used in surgery for aortic and congenital cardiac diseases. Although studies of the safety of HCA in animals have been carried out, the degree to which metabolism is suppressed in patients during hypothermia has been difficult to determine because of problems with serial measurements ...
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Puls I - - 1999
Transcranial color-coded sonography (TCCS) has been used to investigate major brain-supplying arteries, draining veins and brain parenchyma. Here, we describe a contrast-enhanced TCCS analysis of cerebral arteriovenous transit time (cTT) as a measure of cerebral microcirculation. We evaluate its reproducibility and its correlation with clinical impairment of brain function and ...
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Oishi M - - 1999
Cerebral blood flow and cerebrovascular acetazolamide reactivity were investigated in patients with periventricular hyperintensity and in patients with leuko-araiosis in centrum semiovale. Fifteen patients with periventricular hyperintensity, 15 patients with leuko-araiosis in centrum semiovale and 15 age-matched controls without leuko-araiosis were studied. The regional cerebral blood flow was measured using ...
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O'Brien T P - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that cocaine-induced cerebral vasodilation in newborn sheep is mediated via beta-adrenergic receptor activation. DESIGN: The cerebral effects of a single intravenous injection of cocaine (4 mg/kg) given 30 mins after pretreatment with propranolol (1 mg/kg) were studied and compared ...
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Söderström V - - 1999
The key to surviving hypoxia is to protect the brain from energy depletion. The epaulette shark (Hemiscyllium ocellatum) is an elasmobranch able to resist energy depletion and to survive hypoxia. Using epi-illumination microscopy in vivo to observe cerebral blood flow velocity on the brain surface, we show that cerebral blood ...
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Tanoue Y - - 1999
BACKGROUND: Retrograde cerebral perfusion (RCP) is a simple technique and is expected to provide cerebral protection. However, its optimum management and limitations remain unclear. Transcranial Doppler has been used to monitor cerebral perfusion. Using this Doppler technique, we compared cerebral blood flow for RCP with that for selective cerebral perfusion. ...
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Lynch C D - - 1999
The present study was designed to assess the impact of moderate caloric restriction (60% of ad libitum fed animals) on cerebral vascular density and local cerebral blood flow. Vascular density was assessed in male Brown-Norway rats from 7-35 months of age using a cranial window technique. Arteriolar density, arteriole-arteriole anastomoses, ...
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