Articles: subarachnoid-hemorrhage.
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Dtsch. Med. Wochenschr. · May 1984
[Incidence of ventricular arrhythmia relative to the QT interval in spontaneous intracranial hemorrhages].
A prospective study was done in 54 patients with acute spontaneous intracranial haemorrhage, 27 of them with subarachnoid bleeding and 27 with primary intracerebral haemorrhage. The frequency of ventricular arrhythmias was registered by continuous long-term ECG and the incidence of QT prolongation by daily standard ECG registration. Prolongation of frequency-corrected QT-interval (QTc) developed in 9 patients with subarachnoid haemorrhage and in 10 with intracerebral haemorrhage. ⋯ Persistent ventricular tachycardias occur almost only in cases of QTc-prolongation. Pronounced QTc prolongation of more than 550 ms is rare. However, it can give rise to torsade de pointes and ventricular fibrillation.
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Journal of neurosurgery · May 1984
Serial measurement of regional cerebral blood flow in patients with SAH using 133Xe inhalation and emission computerized tomography.
A noninvasive three-dimensional method for measuring cerebral blood flow (CBF), xenon-133 inhalation and emission computerized tomography, was used to investigate the CBF changes accompanying delayed neurological deterioration following subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). A total of 67 measurements were performed on 20 patients in Hunt and Hess' clinical Grades I to III in the first 21 days post SAH. ⋯ Severe vasospasm was noted in three of these patients in whom arteriography was performed in the 2nd week post SAH. Diffuse bihemispheric CBF decreases were noted later in the course of delayed neurological deficits; however, measurements obtained soon after the onset of focal symptoms suggest that the only CBF decreases directly produced by vasospasm in Grade III patients are regional changes.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Feb 1984
Significance of contrast enhancement in cranial computerized tomography after subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Eighty patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage underwent computerized tomography (CT) scanning before and after administration of Conray contrast medium. Abnormal enhancement was seen in visual evaluation of the CT scans in 26 cases, in the regions bordering the subarachnoid spaces. ⋯ Measurements of absorption values in the thalamus revealed significant increases in density after contrast enhancement in those patients whose scans showed abnormal enhancement in the regions bordering the subarachnoid spaces on visual evaluation. The authors suggest that the abnormal enhancement is parenchymal, in the gyri, and is not "subarachnoid." They suggest that it is due to gyral hyperemia or extravasation of contrast material into the cortex resulting from breakdown of the blood-brain barrier, or a combination of both factors.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Feb 1984
Case ReportsSubarachnoid hemorrhage from intracranial dissecting aneurysm.
Rupture of an intracranial dissecting aneurysm is a rare but dangerous event. The authors' experience with 14 cases of these lesions on the vertebrobasilar circulation suggests that these aneurysms have typical angiographic silhouettes and that, at least in the vertebral artery, they are treatable by proximal arterial occlusion.