6 research outputs found
Aspects of Prosody in the Mentally Retarded Population (Suprasegmentals, Lexical Stress, Deficient Sentence Accent, Contrastive Stress).
The purpose of this research was to examine the use of prosody in a group of mentally retarded (MR) subjects who were impressionistically dysprosodic. Seven adult, institutionalized, severe mentally retarded subjects matched with two groups of normal subjects (matched for chronological age and for language age) were compared in two production experiments. The first experiment was a study of word level stress in which the subjects named pictures of two syllable, morphologically simple, non-derived words. The second experiment was a study of sentence level stress in which the subjects described changing toy locations with three word (subject-preposition-object) utterances, intended to require the use of prosody to distinguish contextually unchanged information from changed information. All subject productions were analyzed perceptually for stress accuracy by three sophisticated judges. Acoustic measurements were made using a Visi-Pitch 6095 interfaced with an Apple IIe computer and an Epson FX 100 printer. This instrument combination enabled extraction of fundamental frequency (F0) peaks, relative intensity (I0) peaks, mean F0, mean I0, and duration data for each subject\u27s productions in each experiment. Comparisons were made of the subject groups\u27 use of the acoustic parameters which might have cued stress. The lexical stress experiment revealed no differences in perceptual judgments of the groups\u27 ability to mark stress on the appropriate syllable. The sentence accent experiment revealed that the MR group performed significantly poorer than two groups of normal subjects. The MR group was perceived to use utterance final stress in a majority of its productions. They did not appear to use prosody to distinguish contextually unchanged information from contextually changed information. No differences in stress cues were found for the first and third stress positions. However, variations in the use of these parameters occurred in the second stress position. The acoustic analyses did not reveal patterns which characterized the dysprosodic nature of the MR subjects\u27 productions. Possible explanations for acoustic variations in the second stress position were discussed along with future research considerations
Abstract Number â 223: Spontaneous Revascularization of Completely Occluded Internal Carotid Artery: Case Report
Introduction Occlusion of the internal carotid artery (ICA), caused by atherosclerotic thrombosis, arterial embolism, or dissection, is associated with high morbidity and mortality of acute stroke. Commonly, these lesions are managed with aggressive medical treatment due to their chronic and usually irreversible nature. Spontaneous recanalization of the occluded ICA has been described in rare instances. Methods We present a report here on three cases with spontaneous recanalization of complete occluded carotid arteries. Results Our first patient was a 62âyearâold male with a history of hypertension, who presented with transient left eye vision loss. CT angiography of the head and neck (CTA HN) demonstrated left ICA complete occlusion while the left middle cerebral artery (MCA) and anterior cerebral arteries (ACA) were patent. He was treated with apixaban. At the twoâmonth followâup, the repeat CTA HN demonstrated complete recanalization of the left ICA. The etiology of the occlusion remained cryptogenic. Our second patient was a 71âyearâold male with a prior history of right carotid endarterectomy, peripheral vascular disease, coronary artery disease, hypertension, and dyslipidemia, who presented with acute right MCA stroke. Workâup with CTA HN demonstrated right ICA complete occlusion. He was treated medically with aspirin and clopidogrel. Six months later, he presented with a twoâweek history of intermittent confusion and leftâsided weakness. His MRI brain was negative foracute stroke. Interestingly, CTA HN demonstrated that the right ICA had complete recanalization. The cause of carotid thrombosis remained cryptogenic. Our third patient was a 46âyearâold female with a history of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, remote lowâspeed vehicle collision, and cervical spine chiropractic treatment (the last neck manipulation was about two years prior), presenting with sudden onset dizziness, rightâsided neck pain, and left homonymous hemianopia. Brain MRI showed acute right posterior cerebral artery (PCA) stroke. CTA HN revealed occlusion of the right ICA with a flareâup appearance suggestive of a carotid dissection. She also had a right fetal PCA. She was treated medically with rivaroxaban. Four months later, a followâup MR angiogramof the neck showed a fully revascularized right ICA. Her hypercoagulable workup revealed that she had a rare form of breast cancer. Conclusions Although ICA occlusion is generally considered chronic and irreversible, our case series suggests that the lesion can have spontaneous recanalization with medical treatment. Further studies of characterizing carotid occlusion to predict recanalization are warranted
Abstract Number â 148: Emergent Carotid Artery Stenting On Acute Stroke Patients With Carotid Occlusion: Benefit Or Harm?
Introduction Almost one out of four patients with acute middle cerebral artery occlusion also have ipsilateral internal carotid artery occlusion (ICAO). The interventions for acute stroke due to extracranial ICAO with or without intracranial occlusions are still a challenge. Case series reported early revascularization reduced stroke recurrence and improved outcomes. The benefits of this intervention on hyperacute ischemic strokes (within 6 hours) were much less known. We reported here two hyperacute stroke patients who emergent CAS on ICAO. Methods Electronic medical charts were reviewed, assessing intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) in two hyperacute stroke patients resulting from emergent carotid artery stenting (CAS) on the occluded internal carotid artery (ICA). Results Case description:The first patient was a 60âyearâold male who had acute right hemiparesis, aphasia, and left gaze deviation with NIHSS12. The last known normal was five hours ago. Head and neck CT angiography (CTA) showed left anterior M2 branch artery occlusion and left ICAO. Head CT perfusion (CTP) showed a small core infarct with a large perfusion mismatch. Emergent CAS was performed without distal embolic protection (DEP) and followed by distal mechanical thrombectomy (MT). TICI 2B recanalization was achieved. After CAS, aspirin and clopidogrel were administrated. He had a large left MCA and PCA stroke from fetal PCA. A few days later, the patient developed large intraparenchymal hemorrhage (IPH) and intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH). He expired shortly. The second was a 52âyearâold male had acute right facial droop, aphasia, dysarthria, and decreased consciousness (NIHSS 8). CTA showed left ICAO but patent intracranial arteries. CT perfusion showed a large mismatch without core infarction. He received intravenous tPA and had emergent CAS with a DEP. Aspirin 600 mg was administrated afterward. A few hours later, he had worsened weakness. Head CT showed left IPH, IVH, and subarachnoid hemorrhages with cerebral edema, and midline shift. He was medically managed for a prolonged stay and was discharged to a rehabilitation facility. Conclusions We presented two consecutive cases of emergent revascularization of ICAO in hyperacute stroke carried a high risk of ICH with poor outcome. Our online database search found that only a few case series of emergent CAS on ICAO were reported. Overall, emergent CAS carried about 20% risk of ICH and high mortality. Other series reported angioplasty on stenotic or occluded cervical ICA lesions with MT on distal occlusions had less hemorrhagic risk because there was no need fordual antiplatelet treatment. Most emergent CAS cases were performed on tandem occlusions for faster direct access and better efficacy of distal recanalization. A futurestudy comparing hemorrhagic risk betweenemergent CAS versus angioplasty of ICAO in patients with tandem occlusions can help to establish a standard MT protocol. For isolated ICAO with patent intracranial arteries from good collaterals, CTP may not be a good guidance tool for decisionâmaking of emergent CAS as it can falsely show mismatch from existing collaterals due to occlusion. A randomized clinical trial of comparison of medical management versus emergent CAS on those patients is warranted
Right-Sided Pleural Effusion in a Critically Ill Stroke Patient
Pleural fluid collections are common in those critically ill. We report the case of a left middle cerebral artery stroke patient who developed respiratory distress and required intubation and mechanical ventilation. Although the patientâs clinical status and oxygenation improved, there was persistence of right-sided opacity in the chest radiograph. Further workup proved a right-sided pleural effusion, which was drained and managed. Following extubation, a swallow study was ordered, which led to a fluoroscopic examination that demonstrated esophageal perforation. Thoracic surgery was consulted and did a primary repair of perforation and noted nonâsmall cell carcinoma on the perforated site