Progress in cardiovascular diseases
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This article describes the important role of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in noninvasively assessing human focal ischemic stroke. Conventional MRI, diffusion-weighted and/or perfusion-weighted imaging have been used to facilitate both the qualitative and quantitative evaluation of heterogeneity of ischemic brain tissue. ⋯ Dynamic changes in the evolution of ischemic tissue to infarction are also discussed. Recovery from acute stroke was studied with blood oxygenation level-dependent functional MRI to investigate the neural mechanisms for recovery from aphasia after stroke.
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The average age of patients undergoing cardiac surgery and the number of comorbidities they possess will continue to increase as surgical technology advances. Toxic/metabolic encephalopathy, hemispheric strokes, hypoxic injury, and peripheral nerve lesions all can occur as a result of cardiac surgery. Therefore, an understanding of the neurologic risk, recognizable syndromes, and preventative measures will continue to be important. Careful preoperative assessment, operative risk factor reduction, and careful postoperative assessments and management may reduce the neurologic risk for cardiac surgery.