96 research outputs found
Cerebral white matter disruption in Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Human prion diseases are known to cause gray matter degeneration in specific cerebral structures, but evidence for white matter involvement is scarce. We used DTI to test the hypothesis that white matter integrity is disrupted in human CJD during the early stages of the disease
Sympathetic Activation and Baroreflex Function during Intradialytic Hypertensive Episodes
BACKGROUND: The mechanisms of intradialytic increases in blood pressure are not well defined. The present study was undertaken to assess the role of autonomic nervous system activation during intradialytic hypertensive episodes. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Continuous interbeat intervals (IBI) and systolic blood pressure (SBP) were monitored during hemodialysis in 108 chronic patients. Intradialytic hypertensive episodes defined as a period of at least 10 mmHg increase in SBP between the beginning and the end of a dialysis session or hypertension resistant to ultrafiltration occurring during or immediately after the dialysis procedure, were detected in 62 out of 113 hemodialysis sessions. SBP variability, IBI variability and baroreceptor sensitivity (BRS) in the low (LF) and high (HF) frequency ranges were assessed using the complex demodulation technique (CDM). Intradialytic hypertensive episodes were associated with an increased (n = 45) or decreased (n = 17) heart rate. The maximal blood pressure was similar in both groups. In patients with increased heart rate the increase in blood pressure was associated with marked increases in SBP and IBI variability, with suppressed BRS indices and enhanced sympatho-vagal balance. In contrast, in those with decreased heart rate, there were no significant changes in the above parameters. End-of-dialysis blood pressure in all sessions associated with hypertensive episode was significantly higher than in those without such episodes. In logistic regression analysis, predialysis BRS in the low frequency range was found to be the main predictor of intradialytic hypertension. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Our data point to sympathetic overactivity with feed-forward blood pressure enhancement as an important mechanism of intradialytic hypertension in a significant proportion of patients. The triggers of increased sympathetic activity during hemodialysis remain to be determined. Intradialytic hypertensive episodes are associated with higher end-of-dialysis blood pressure, suggesting that intradialytic hypertension may play a role in generation of interdialytic hypertension
Recommended from our members
Cortical perfusion and gray matter weight in frontal lobe dementia
To evaluate the pathophysiology of frontal lobe dementia (FLD), the authors compared regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in matched groups of FLD, probable Alzheimer's disease (AD), and major depression patients and normal control subjects (n = 7 each). The planar xenon-133 technique allowed full quantification of cortical perfusion and estimates of the relative weight of gray matter (wg). FLD patients showed lower blood flow and wg in the frontal cortex than the other groups. Mean cortical perfusion was correlated with cortical wg in the FLD group only. These findings 1) suggest that matched reductions of frontal gray matter weight and perfusion occur in FLD and 2) support the use of rCBF in distinguishing FLD from AD and severe depression
Recommended from our members
Cerebral blood flow patterns underlying the differential impairment in category vs letter fluency in Alzheimer's disease
Verbal ¯uency tasks are used to assess language functioning in Alzheimer's disease (AD), and performance typically declines as the disease progresses. However, several studies have shown that Category Fluency performance (produce words from a category) declines faster than Letter Fluency performance (produce words beginning with a certain letter), which is not the case for other dementias. The purpose of this study was to determine if each of these two types of ¯uency tasks was associated with di€erent patterns of cerebral blood ¯ow abnormality in AD. A resting, Xenon-inhalation regional cerebral blood ¯ow measurement (133Xe rCBF) and neuropsychological evaluation was administered to 25 patients with probable AD and 24 healthy elderly controls. Stepwise regression using rCBF measures as predictor variables was used to predict Category and Letter Fluency performance, in both a combined group of patients and controls, and in the patient group alone. Correlations were also computed between rCBF variables and the di€erence between normatively corrected scores on each task for each subject, which characterized the extent of the discrepancy between them. In full sample regressions, both Category and Letter Fluency were predicted by education and the decline in left inferior parietal ¯ow, a focal AD-related de®cit. Additional variance in Category ¯uency, however, was predicted by global mean ¯ow, while additional variance in Letter Fluency was predicted by frontal ¯ow. Within the patient sample, in turn, the primary predictor of Category Fluency was mean ¯ow; the primary predictor of Letter Fluency was left-sided frontal ¯ow. Analysis of the ¯uency di€erence score revealed that relatively greater impairment of Category Fluency was associated with more typical, AD-related de®cits in posterior temporal and parietal perfusion. When the two were equivalently impaired, typical AD-related de®cits were accompanied by marked de®cits in frontal perfusion. These ®ndings are consistent with the underlying neuropsychology of these tasks, and suggest that Category Fluency's stronger association to the most typical CBF de®cits of AD account for its greater sensitivity to this disease. Letter Fluency de®cits, on the other hand, carry signi®cant information about the degree to which perfusion de®cits have spread to frontal cortex. # 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved
- …