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Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy

Radiologic Clinics of North America, 2023
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is associated with deposition of amyloid proteins within the intracranial vessels. It is most frequently sporadic and risk increases with advancing age. Amyloid deposition is associated with increased risk of peripheral microhemorrhage, lobar hemorrhage, and/or repetitive subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Laszlo, Szidonya, Joshua P, Nickerson
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Diabetic angiopathy in children

Diabetic Medicine, 1997
Among the secondary complications of diabetes, early stages of retinopathy and nephropathy are of foremost importance in paediatrics. Regular examinations of retinal status and of urinary albumin excretion therefore become necessary with the onset of puberty or after 5 years of diabetes duration.
B. Weber   +3 more
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Cerebral amyloid angiopathy

Neurology, 1985
We studied 24 patients with autopsy-proven cerebral amyloid angiopathy. Eight patients were demented or had some other medical problem and died of pneumonia or systemic disease. Sixteen patients died of intracranial hemorrhage. Amyloid was found in cortical arteries and arterioles of all patients.
G. R. Cosgrove   +3 more
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Cerebral proliferative angiopathy

Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery, 2011
Cerebral proliferative angiopathy is a rare lesion marked by diffuse intravascular shunting, which should be differentiated from brain arteriovenous malformations. A patient is presented with cerebral proliferative angiopathy and documented progressive development of hypervascular shunting involving extensive portions of the left hemisphere.
Gary K. Steinberg, Michael P. Marks
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Moyamoya angiopathy in Europe

2005
Over the past 6 years we at the Neurosurgery Department in Zürich have had the opportunity to manage increasing numbers of patients, especially children, with Moyamoya angiopathy. With increasing awareness of presence of this angiopathy in Europe the number of referrals from all across Europe is constantly on the increase.
Nadia Khan, Yasuhiro Yonekawa
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CEREBRAL AMYLOID ANGIOPATHIES

2008
Cerebral amyloid angiopathies are defined by the presence of amyloid deposits on the walls of cerebral vessels. These amyloid deposits are found in the media of arterioles of the leptomeninges and the cortex. They are sometimes associated with Alzheimer-type lesions.
Didier Leys, Luc Buée, Masson C
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Cerebral amyloid angiopathies

Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology, 1996
The cerebral amyloid angiopathies comprise a heterogeneous group of disorders that are characterized clinically by ischaemic and/or haemorrhagic strokes, and histologically by deposition of amyloid in the wall of leptomeningeal and cerebral cortical blood vessels. On the basis of the molecular composition of the amyloid, two forms can be distinguished.
F. Coria, I. Rubio
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Pathogenesis of angiopathy in diabetes

Acta Diabetologica, 2003
Hyperglycaemia as a common feature of diabetes mellitus is a cause of different pathogenic mechanisms influencing endothelial function. Oxidative stress is one of the main causative factors inducing endothelial dysfunction and changes in plasma protein or platelet function.
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Cerebral amyloid angiopathy

Human Pathology, 1981
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy is nonspecific disease entity that has been associated with a number of neuropathologic conditions, the most prominent being dementia and cerebral hemorrhage. It occurs more commonly than is generally appreciated, with implications that may be overlooked.
Michael D. Lagios   +3 more
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Benign cerebral angiopathy; postpartum cerebral angiopathy: Characteristics and treatment

Current Treatment Options in Cardiovascular Medicine, 2006
Benign cerebral angiopathy and postpartum cerebral angiopathy are reversible cerebral arterial vasoconstriction syndromes. Presentation includes recurrent severe headaches, altered consciousness, and focal neurologic deficits; ischemic and/or hemorrhagic strokes can occur.
Miguel Viana-Baptista, Sofia Calado
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