Clin Exp Rheumatol
November 1991
Forty-one patients (31 women, 10 men) aged 15-56 (mean age, 38) with Sneddon's syndrome characterised by cerebrovascular disease and widespread livedo reticularis in the absence of typical lupus features were studied. 16 patients (39%) had clinical and/or electrocardiographic signs of ischemic heart disease, with 2 of them having survived myocardial infarction. Cardiac murmurs (usually mitral systolic) were heard in 15 patients (37%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZh Nevropatol Psikhiatr Im S S Korsakova
February 1979
In familial Friedreich's ataxia besides lesions of the nervous system there is also cardiac pathology, which frequently may be the reason of a lethal outcome. As a result of a clinico-morphological study of the heart of a deceased patient, it was demonstrated that the character of morphological changes points to severe dystrophical changes of the myocardium of the "idiopathical" cardiomyopathy type.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZh Nevropatol Psikhiatr Im S S Korsakova
April 1977
The authors conducted a repeated ECG study of 200 patients with atherosclerosis and hypertensive disease in the acute phase of a cerebral stroke (57 patients with intracerebral hemorrhages and 143 with ischemic strokes). It was noted that the frequency and degree of expressed ECG disorders depended upon the character, extensiveness and localization of the focus in cerebral strokes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA dynamic electrocardiographic observation was conducted in 200 patients with cerebral stroke (57 patients had intracerebral haemorrhages, 143--ischaemic strokes). ECG changes as a sequele of cerebral stroke were found to manifest themselves in various cardiac rhythm disorders, disturbances in the conductivity and repolarization phase. "Cerebrogenic" ECG changes were found in 76.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZh Nevropatol Psikhiatr Im S S Korsakova
March 1977
In patients with vascular brain pathology the authors observed cases of temporal epilepsy in the clinical picture of which prevailed (and sometimes were isolated) vegetative-vascular "stenocardia" paroxysms. Such clinical states made it possible to suggest that in this contingent there was stenocardia proper. Stenocardiac paroxysms, due to cerebral pathology, were in combination with affective, mnestic and other psychopathological and neurological symptoms, indicating to an involvement into the vascular process of cortical representations of vegetative functions in the temporal area: hippocamp, amygdalar nucleus and their connections with the diencephalo-stem structures.
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