This article describes a combined electrophysiological and mechanical method used to measure laryngeal movements and related submental EMG activity during swallowing. The mechanical upward and downward movements of the larynx were detected using a piezoelectric sensor while the submental integrated EMG (SM-EMG) was recorded. Measurements were performed in 29 human subjects. The interval between the onsets of the two sensor signal deflections was used as a measure of the time the larynx remained in its superior position during swallowing. In 10 subjects, the cricopharyngeus muscle (CP) of the upper esophageal spinchter showed a continuous tonic EMG activity except during swallowing. All the parameters measured were influenced by the type and volume of the bolus material. The method presented in this study proved its usefulness in the study of the physiology of deglutition as well as in its objective clinical evaluation in patients with dysphagia.
We present the profile of risk factors, etiologic and clinical data of 2,000 consecutive patients with first-ever-in-a-lifetime stroke (cerebral infarction, cerebral hemorrhage and subarachnoid hemorrhage), admitted to the Ege University Hospital between January 1, 1991, and September 31, 1995. This hospital-based registry is the first systematic epidemiologic report on the stroke profile of Turkish people. The Ege University Stroke Unit is the only tertiary medical care facility which is organized for patients with different stroke subtypes in İzmir, Turkey. A prospective hospital-based registry using systematic computer coding of data of all stroke patients has been used since January 1991. All patients were evaluated by clinical examination, CT and/or MRI, color duplex and specific cardiac investigations. They were followed up for at least 6 months. The mean age was 62.3 ± 12 years, and 44.4% were females. Ischemic stroke was found in 77%, primary intracerebral hemorrhage in 19% and subarachnoid hemorrhage in 4%. The major risk factor of ischemic stroke was hypertension (63%), followed by hypercholesterolemia (37%), diabetes mellitus (35%), ischemic heart disease (23%), atrial fibrillation (20%) and smoking (17%). The main cause of primary intracerebral hemorrhage was hypertension (88%), and the principal localization was the thalamus (38%), followed by putamen (28%), lobar (16%), pons (6%), cerebellar (4%), primary intraventricular hemorrhage (4%) and multiple hemorrhages (2%). The overall 30-day case-fatality rate was 19.7% and the higher mortality rate was found in patients with primary intracerebral hemorrhage (29%) than in those with ischemic stroke (17%). The Ege Stroke Registry allows to estimate the stroke-related problems in patients admitted to a stroke unit and to evaluate the risk factors, etiology and clinical manifestations of stroke in Turkey.
Background and Purpose-The purposes of this study were to evaluate and review the risk factors and clinical features of patients with posterior circulation stroke involving mesencephalon and neighboring structures and to describe the clinical syndromes according to the mesencephalic arterial territory involved. Methods-We studied all patients with acute posterior circulation stroke involving mesencephalon who were admitted consecutively to our stroke unit over a 6-year period. We selected these patients (3%) from 1296 patients with posterior circulation infarct. Neurological and radiological investigations, including MRI and angiography, were performed in all cases. We classified patients into 4 groups on the basis of MRI findings: (1) isolated mesencephalic infarcts (9 patients); (2) distal territory infarcts (19 patients), including mesencephalon, thalamus, medial temporal and occipital lobes, and cerebellum; (3) middle territory infarcts (12 patients), including the pons and anterior inferior cerebellar artery territory; and (4) proximal territory infarcts (1 patient), including the medulla and posterior inferior cerebellar artery territory. Results-Middle mesencephalon involvement was the most common in all groups, and the anteromedial territory was frequently affected, depending on the direct perforators of basilar artery. In patients with isolated mesencephalic infarct, the clinical picture was dominated by nuclear or fascicular third-nerve palsy and contralateral motor deficits. The distal territory involvement was the most common and associated with consciousness disturbances, gait ataxia, ocular motor disturbances, and visual field deficits. The neurological picture of middle territory infarcts was dominated by consciousness disturbances with dysarthria, horizontal ocular motor disorders, and hemiparesis. Proximal territory involvement was rare and associated with acute unsteadiness, vertigo, dysphagia, dysphonia, tetra-ataxia, and motor weakness. The most common cause of stroke was large-artery disease in 16 patients (39%), cardioembolism in 8 (20%), and small-artery disease with lacunar mesencephalic infarct in 10 (24%). Bilateral mesencephalic infarcts were not uncommon (27%), mainly in patients with multiple and extended infarcts in the posterior circulation, and were associated with poor outcome compared with unilateral infarct. Conclusions-Our study highlights the topographic and clinical heterogeneity of the acute posterior circulation infarcts involving mesencephalon. The variety of the underlying potential causes of stroke requires detailed investigations of the extra and intracranial arteries and the heart.
We retrospectively reviewed the clinical course of 66 patients treated for generalized tonic-clonic status epilepticus at the Ege University neurological intensive care unit from 1988 to 1997. Seventy-two per cent of the study group had a pre-existing seizure disorder, and antiepileptic drug withdrawal was the most prominent cause of status epilepticus. The other causes included drug toxicity, central nervous system infection, cerebrovascular disease, tumour and trauma. Seventy-three per cent of all patients responded to the first-line therapy (diazepam and/or phenytoin), and the remainder were considered to have refractory status epilepticus and required pentobarbital anaesthesia. Overall case fatality was 21%, but death could be attributed directly to status epilepticus and/or treatment complication in 10% of the study group. Major determinants of fatal outcomes were: increasing age, longer duration of status epilepticus before initiation of therapy and central nervous system infection as a causal factor.
Computerized tomography, conventional MRI and diffusion-weighted imaging showing ischemic and/or hemorrhagic lesion that does not follow the boundary of classical arterial boundaries without signs of sinus thrombosis, and partial or generalized seizures followed by focal neurologic signs may predict CDVT. The outcome of patients with cortical venous stroke was good, but not in those with cortical plus deep venous infarction.
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