Results 251 to 260 of about 198,458 (304)
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Electroencephalogram in Brain Stem Infarction

Archives of Neurology, 1961
Alterations of the electroencephalogram due to circulatory disturbances of the cerebral hemispheres are well established, but when the vascular disease causes brain stem dysfunction there is little agreement as to the resulting electroencephalographic pattern.
J, POTES, F, McDOWELL, C E, WELLS
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Morphometrical Evaluation of Triflusal in Brain Infarction

1993
MCA occlusion in animals is a common model for experimental stroke. In previous studies we have shown that one of the factors, which influence evolution of an infarct is microthrombosis in the area of infarction and in the surrounding brain tissue. The present study was undertaken for assessment of the number of microthrombi and of the size of brain ...
HEYE N   +3 more
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Silent Brain Infarcts

Cerebrovascular Diseases, 1994
Silent brain infarcts are infarcts found by neuroimaging or necropsy without a history of stroke. The symptoms may have been unrecognized, forgotten by the patient, or ischemic symptoms may have been only transient. Silent infarcts are common. Infarcts are found on computed tomography (CT) in about 15% of patients with asymptomatic carotid artery ...
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[Postoperative brain infarction in a patient with the previous asymptomatic brain infarction].

Masui. The Japanese journal of anesthesiology, 1997
We report a case of a postoperative brain infarction, in which an asymptomatic preoperative brain infarction was also revealed postoperatively. A 63-year-old man with bladder carcinoma was scheduled for the cystoplasty. The patient had no prominent preoperative abnormality.
I, Sugita   +5 more
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Brain Haemorrhage and Infarction - Stroke

2009
Stroke is devastating and a common cause of death. Early recognition and treatment of stroke reduces the risk of death and disability. The initial screening CT initiates the pathway of care for the patient hence it is important for frontline doctors to appreciate the subtle changes that occur in a brain CT scan in stroke.
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The coincidence of infarcts of the heart and brain an analysis

Irish Journal of Medical Science, 1982
A STATISTICAL analysis of consecutive routine autopsy reports was carried out in an attempt to clarify the epidemiological and clinical importance of coincident cerebral and cardiac infarction. Three thousand five hundred and thirty two autopsies fulfilled our basic criteria, being performed on subjects over 20 years of age and dying from natural ...
K W, Moles, A P, Grant, J D, Biggart
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An Evaluation of the Epidemiology of Atherothrombotic Brain Infarction

The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. Health and Society, 1975
Review of the epidemiology of atherothrombotic brain infarction (ABI) based largely on 18 years of prospective data from the Framingham cohort reveals that stroke is a potent force in morbidity and mortality, that hypertension is its dominant precursor, that it can be predicted and suggests that only a preventive approach can substantially reduce ...
W B, Kannel, P A, Wolf, T R, Dawber
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Brain and Heart Infarct

1977
Epidemiology of Coronary Heart Disease.- Pathogenesis of the Lesions of Atherosclerosis.- Local Factors Contributing to the Pathogenesis of Atherosclerosis.- Quantitation of Coronary Arterial Luminal Narrowing in Coronary Heart Disease.- Predilection of Cerebral Atherosclerotic Stenosis: a Morphologic and Radiologic Demonstration.- Development and ...
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[Silent brain infarcts].

Der Nervenarzt, 2012
Silent brain infarctions are frequently found by modern cerebral imaging. Up to 30% of persons without a clinical history of stroke were found to have silent brain infarction in epidemiological studies. "Silent" refers to ischemic brain lesions for which no matching clinical syndrome can be found based on history or clinical investigation.
M A, Ritter   +2 more
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Neovasculature and blood-brain barrier in ischemic brain infarct

Acta Neuropathologica, 1988
The cellular events occurring in ischemic brain infarcts of 1 day to 8 weeks duration were investigated. The material consisted of 17 human postmortem brains with anemic infarcts caused by occlusive vascular diseases. Using antiserum against human plasma albumin as a marker for the breakdown of blood-brain barrier and ammoniacal silver nitrate stain to
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