Neurol Med Chir (Tokyo)
January 1992
The authors report two cases of hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) repeated at the same site within 1 or 2 days causing death in a 53-year-old male and a 48-year-old female. In both cases, platelet aggregation was significantly impaired. Acquired platelet dysfunction may be important in the expansion of hemorrhage in patients with repeated hypertensive ICH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo semidwarfism-related proteins, SRP-1 and SRP-2, were detected as major spots in a long-culm rice cultivar, Norin 29 and its semidwarf near-isogenic line, SC-TN1, respectively, by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2D-PAGE). The testcross showed that SRP-1 and SRP-2 are controlled by codominant alleles, Srp-1 and Srp-2, respectively, at a single locus Srp. This locus was considered to be closely linked with the semidwarfing gene locus sd-1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurol Med Chir (Tokyo)
September 1991
The responses of intracranial pressure (ICP) to hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) therapy and arterial gas pressures were investigated. ICP was measured through a ventricular or spinal drainage catheter in patients with brain tumor or cerebrovascular disease. Changes in ICP, heart rate (HR), arterial blood pressure (ABP), and transcutaneous partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PtcCO2) or oxygen (PtcO2) were recorded continuously during air or 100% O2 breathing at 1 and 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biochem Biophys Methods
October 1991
Shifts in mobility caused by binding of Ca2+ to calmodulin and parvalbumin were studied using high-performance capillary electrophoresis in a Tris-glycine buffer, rather than conventional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis which requires larger amounts of sample and longer assay time. A Zn(2+)-binding protein, carbonic anhydrase, also showed a partial shift in mobility following Zn(2+)-binding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to study the morphologic changes after CO2 laser irradiation, 42 rat femoral arteries were irradiated under various conditions at different time intervals from zero to three weeks. The arteries were examined under transmission electron microscope (T.E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of arteriovenous malformation (AVM) associated with a meningioma is reported. A 28-year-old woman was hospitalized for generalized convulsion. CT scan and right carotid angiogram revealed AVM in the right parietal lobe extending to the wall of the lateral ventricle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNihon Kyobu Geka Gakkai Zasshi
January 1991
A forty-two years old male underwent an aortic arch replacement for an emergency treatment of dissecting aortic aneurysm (DeBakey type I). Separate cardiopulmonary bypass was used with main arterial inflow cannula inserted to right femoral artery. After the operation, ischemia of the right lower extremity led to acute renal failure due to myonephropathic-metabolic syndrome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 59-year-old man had developed gradual prominence of the aortic knob in a chest X-ray film after a blunt chest trauma. Two and a half years after trauma, an angiogram revealed the aberrant right subclavian artery and a saccular aneurysm at the thoracic descending aorta just distal to it. It was treated with patch closure of the entrance of the aneurysm under a temporary bypass.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNihon Kyobu Geka Gakkai Zasshi
August 1990
A 24-year-old female with unstable angina due to aortitis syndrome was reported. The coronary-arteriogram in hospital showed 75 percent stenosis of the left coronary ostium. Following two months' steroid therapy for active inflammation, aortocoronary bypass graft was implanted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFrom 1985 to 1987, we examined relationship between the lesion of tricuspid valve and right ventricular function in 31 patients (male: 9, female: 22) with mitral valve disease. The median age at operation was 52 years (range 37-69 years). Group I consisted of 17 patients (MS: 10, MSR: 5, MR: 2) accompanied with tricuspid regurgitation (TR) and Group II 14 patients (MS: 12, MSR: 2) without TR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTen patients with cerebral venous angioma (VA) were followed up for 12 to 106 months. Seven VAs were found as a result of intracerebral hemorrhage and the others were found incidentally. Among three VAs cauterized or partially excised, one disappeared but two were unchanged on follow-up angiography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFrom 1981 to 1987 most of DeBakey III type dissecting aneurysms and a part of descending aortic aneurysms were treated by thromboexclusion technique. The effects of the operation by thromboexclusion technique on the patients were compared with those of the operation by temporary bypass technique. Blood loss during an operation was smaller and blood pressure during an operation was more stable in the thromboexclusion technique group, although the difference was not statistically significant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of cerebral venous angioma which disappeared completely after local irradiation of 3200 cGy is presented. This new method is considered to be beneficial for the treatment of venous angiomas, particularly to prevent rebleeding from them.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChanges in intracranial pressure (ICP) during sleep were investigated in 37 patients with chronic intracranial hypertension or chronic hydrocephalus, in whom episodic pressure waves characterized by A-waves or episodic B-waves were seen in Part I of this paper. The patients were conscious, and sleep stages including REM sleep were observed in all of them. During non-REM sleep, ICP significantly rose in Stage II on many occasions, and was always lower in Stage IV than in other sleep stages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSimultaneous overnight recordings of intracranial pressure (ICP) and electroencephalography (EEG) were conducted on 85 neurosurgical patients with intracranial hypertension and/or ventriculomegaly. Intracranial pressure waves were classified into five types according to the pattern of appearance, and their correlation with sleep cycles and clinical conditions of patients were investigated. A-waves appeared exclusively in patients with long-standing intracranial hypertension, and episodic B-waves appeared in patients with chronic hydrocephalus or a postoperative tumor-free condition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA false aneurysm that developed at the nidus of the cerebellar AVM in a 5-year-old boy is reported. A review of previous reports indicated that non-traumatic false aneurysms occur exclusively in the intraparenchymal brain tissue in association with vascular anomalies. Because the development of a false aneurysm at the nidus of AVM is extremely rare, its possible pathogenesis is discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 21-year-old male with ruptured aneurysm of sinus of Valsalva caused by bacterial endocarditis is presented. The patient complained of palpitation and a attack of fever. Continuous murmur was heard with a thrill at the third intercostal space of the left sternal border.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNihon Kyobu Geka Gakkai Zasshi
January 1989
A 44-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with complaint of weakness in his left upper extremity, vertigo, and diplopia. After aortic root injection of contrast medium, a right aortic arch was visualized. The left brachiocephalic artery was not found, however.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study of atretic cephaloceles, the authors have considered the pedunculated or sessile type of cephalocele and also small nonpedunculated scalp defects developing in the vertex midline. Parietal cephaloceles were found in 15 infants (10 boys and five girls), and accounted for 37.5% of all cephaloceles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 47 cases with intracranial lesions, auditory brainstem responses (ABRS) were studied. From a detailed analysis of these data, the following results were concluded: In some cases, the intramedullary and extramedullary pontine tumor could be differentiated by ABR, A very small cerebello-pontine angle tumor was detected by ABR, ABR monitering was useful to evaluate brainstem function during the surgical operation, and ABRS were clinically very useful methods for predicting the outcome of a severe head injury and diagnosis of brain death. These results indicate that ABRS contribute to functional diagnosis of various diseases of the central nervous system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects and indications of barbiturate therapy for brain protection, and prevention and reduction of the intracranial hypertension were investigated using an ultrashort acting barbiturate, thiamylal, in sixteen cases with intracranial lesions. Final outcome of the treatment revealed 8 good recoveries which were actively administered thiamylal during operation or immediately after. On the other hand, four cases, whose intracranial pressures (ICPS) of over 40 mmHg could not be controlled suffered brain death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSix children are reported in whom subarachnoid hemorrhage was an initial symptom of brain tumor. In our neurosurgical clinics, this represented 3.6% of pediatric brain tumors and showed a frequency equal to aneurysmal rupture among nontraumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage of children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of leukemic mastocytoma terminating in metamorphosis is reported. Three types of mastocytoma cells appeared in the peripheral blood and bone marrow, each differing in cytochemical staining and maturation ability in both in vitro and in vivo cultures. Most immature mastocytoma cells, which contained no granules and were lymphoblast-like cells, differentiated to have basophilic and metachromatically positive granules in the cytoplasm after culture in the diffusion chamber, resembling more mature cells (type II).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree cases of sacrococcygeal dermal sinus are reported, all of which terminated in the filum terminale and two of which caused meningitis. Because of the frequent incidence of sacrococcygeal dermal sinus and the rarity of an intraspinal communication, the embryogenesis of sacrococcygeal dermal sinus is discussed in regard to caudal development of the dural sac and the filum terminale. Contrary to contemporary opinion, sacrococcygeal sinuses cannot be disregarded as a route for intraspinal infection.
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