37 research outputs found

    A successfully thrombolysed acute inferior myocardial infarction due to type A aortic dissection with lethal consequences: the importance of early cardiac echocardiography

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    Thrombolysis, a standard therapy for ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) in non-PCI-capable hospitals, may be catastrophic for patients with aortic dissection leading to further expansion, rupture and uncontrolled bleeding. Stanford type A aortic dissection, rarely may mimic myocardial infarction. We report a case of a patient with an inferior STEMI thrombolysed with tenecteplase and followed by clinical and electrocardiographic evidence of successful reperfusion, which was found later to be a lethal acute aortic dissection. Prognostic implications of early diagnosis applying transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) are described

    Action immunostimulante specifique et non specifique d'extraits dialysables leucocytaires. Application a la lutte contre les maladies neonatales dues a un deficit de l'immunite cellulaire

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    Action concertee: Liaison Recherche-Enseignement superieur dans les disciplines agronomiques et veterinairesAvailable from Centre de Documentation Scientifique et Technique, CNRS, 26 rue Boyer, 75971 Paris Cedex 20 (France) / INIST-CNRS - Institut de l'Information Scientifique et TechniqueSIGLEFRFranc

    The vascular lesions in vascular and mixed dementia: the weight of functional neuroanatomy

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    Vascular dementia appears rarer than previously thought, but the contribution of vascular lesions to cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease (AD) affected patients (mixed dementias) is now recognized as frequent. The role of strategic areas of the brain involved in the cognitive decline induced by vascular lesions and their relative contributions to the severity of the dementing process remain poorly understood. We determined the relationship between the severity of clinical dementia and the volume of different brain areas affected by infarcts in a prospective clinicopathological study in elderly patients. A volumetric study of the functional zones of Mesulam's human brain map affected by vascular lesions was made and correlations between quantified neuropathological data and the severity of dementia were performed in cases with large vascular lesions only, pure AD, and both lesions. The severity of cognitive impairment was significantly correlated with the total volume of infarcts but in a multi-variate model the volume destroyed in the limbic and heteromodal association areas, including the frontal cortex and in the white matter explained 50% of the variability in MMSE and GDS. The total volume of ischemic lesions explained only 0.1-5% of the variability in MMSE and GDS. Age only explained an extra of 0.1-1.6%. This study confirms that infarcts located in strategic areas have a role in the mechanism of cognitive impairment and brings a key for their quantification. It may be useful for developing neuropathological criteria in multi-infarct and mixed dementias

    Degenerative and vascular lesions of the brain have synergistic effects in dementia of the elderly

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    The relative importance of vascular and Alzheimer's disease (AD) lesions, their interaction in the development of cognitive impairment and the very existence of mixed dementia induced by the potentiation of both mechanisms remain controversial. The aim of this study was to assess whether the patients with infarcts and lacunes have fewer plaques and tangles than those without vascular lesions, for similar severity of clinical dementia. We performed a prospective clinicopathological study in elderly patients of a long-stay care unit. The severity of clinical dementia was assessed by psychometry performed according to standardized methods less than 6 months before death. A volumetric study of cerebral vascular lesions was performed at post-mortem study of the brain. The density of neuritic plaques (SP), Amyloid beta focal deposits (Abeta FD), and neurofibrillary tangles (NFT) in the temporal and frontal isocortex was quantified. According to DSM III criteria, 28 of the 33 patients for whom autopsies were performed had dementia. Twenty-four of the included patients had degenerative or vascular lesions, or both. The volume of infarcts and lacunes was significantly correlated with the severity of cognitive impairment. The density of SP, Abeta FD and NFT in the temporal and frontal isocortex was significantly lower when vascular lesions were present. For similar clinical severity of dementia, there were fewer AD lesions in patients with vascular lesions than in those without vascular lesions

    Neuropathologie des vaisseaux cérébraux des centenaires

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    Neuropathological study of brain and brain vessels was performed in two series of 12 and 20 centenarians, focusing on the prevalence of small vessel lesions, infarction, Alzheimer's changes and mental status. These are discussed as a function of vascular risk factors. In the first series (12 cases), there was no correlation between the severity of small vessel lesions: hyalinosis (12/12), mineralisation (10/12), amyloid angiopathy (9/12), vascular risk factors (high blood pressure or diabetes), Alzheimer's lesions. However, there was a tendency for an association between amyloid angiopathy and high density of neurofibrillary tangles. In the second series (20 cases), small infarcts and lacunes were found in 9/20 cases, neurofibrillary tangles and diffuse deposits of A beta peptide were constant, senile plaques were very frequent (19/20). Five patients were demented (one vascular dementia, one Alzheimer dementia, and 3 mixed dementias). These data indicate that: 1) Lesions of the walls of small cerebral vessels do not seem linked to the vascular risk factors observed at the end of the life of centenarians. 2) Cerebral infarcts and lacunes are frequent in these patients, and are responsible, at least in part, for a high proportion of the cognitive dysfunctions. The study of larger series is needed for a better understanding of relationships between vascular and degenerative lesions in the oldest old
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