Clinical Prognosis Correlated with Hemispheric Blood Flow in Cerebral Infarction

Author:

MEYER JOHN STIRLING1,KANDA TADASHI1,FUKUUCHI YASUO1,SHIMAZU KUNIO1,DENNIS EDWARD W.1,ERICSSON ARTHUR DALE1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Neurology and Internal Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, and the Baylor-Methodist Center for Cerebrovascular Research and the Weiss Circulatory Dynamics Laboratory, The Methodist Hospital Houston, Texas

Abstract

In 44 patients with acute unilateral cerebral infarction, there was reduction of hemispheric blood flow (HBF) and metabolism in the healthy hemisphere (phenomenon of diaschisis) as well as in the diseased hemisphere in patients in all age groups (30 to 70 years of age). In patients with symptoms present for three weeks or longer, the decrease in HBF in the healthy hemisphere was less than during the acute stage of infarction. The HBF in the healthy hemisphere of the younger patients approached normal values months or years after the stroke but remained reduced in older patients, probably reflecting diffuse as well as focal cerebrovascular disease. When the severity and outcome of the neurological deficit was correlated with the blood flow and metabolism of the diseased hemisphere, it was apparent that HBF in patients with transient ischemic attacks and more prolonged but reversible neurological deficit was greater than in those who had sustained severe, permanent neurological deficit.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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2. Literature;Acta Neurologica Scandinavica;2009-01-29

3. Positron Emission Tomographic Study of Contralateral Hemispheric Hypometabolism in Middle Cerebral Artery Infarction;Cerebrovascular Diseases;1997

4. Microvascular morphometry in primate diaschisis;Microvascular Research;1992-03

5. Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism;Care of the Critically Ill Patient;1992

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