In a spontaneously bursting neuronal network in vitro, chaos can be demonstrated by the presence of unstable fixed-point behaviour. Chaos control techniques can increase the periodicity of such neuronal population bursting behaviour. Periodic pacing is also effective in entraining such systems, although in a qualitatively different fashion. Using a strategy of anticontrol such systems can be made less periodic. These techniques may be applicable to in vivo epileptic foci.
Hemorrhage from cerebral AVMs appears to have a lower morbidity than currently assumed. This finding encourages a reevaluation of the risks and benefits of invasive AVM treatment.
Purpose-The purpose of this study was to define the influence of feeding mean arterial pressure (FMAP) in conjunction with other morphological or clinical risk factors in determining the probability of hemorrhagic presentation in patients with cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs). Methods-Clinical and angiographic data from 340 patients with cerebral AVMs from a prospective database were reviewed. Patients were identified in whom FMAP was measured during superselective angiography. Additional variables analyzed included AVM size, location, nidus border, presence of aneurysms, and arterial supply and venous drainage patterns. The presence of arterial aneurysms was also correlated with site of bleeding on imaging studies. Results-By univariate analysis, exclusively deep venous drainage, periventricular venous drainage, posterior fossa location, and FMAP predicted hemorrhagic presentation. When we used stepwise multiple logistic regression analysis in the cohort that had FMAP measurements (nϭ129), only exclusively deep venous drainage (odds ratio [OR], 3.7; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.4 to 9.8) and FMAP (OR, 1.4 per 10 mm Hg increase; 95% CI, 1.1 to 1.8) were independent predictors (PϽ0.01) of hemorrhagic presentation; size, location, and the presence of aneurysms were not independent predictors. There was also no association (Pϭ0.23) between the presence of arterial aneurysms and subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Conclusions-High arterial input pressure (FMAP) and venous outflow restriction (exclusively deep venous drainage)were the most powerful risk predictors for hemorrhagic AVM presentation. Our findings suggest that high intranidal pressure is more important than factors such as size, location, and the presence of arterial aneurysms in the pathophysiology of AVM hemorrhage.
We used the setting of clinically indicated internal carotid artery balloon test occlusions in 44 patients with inoperable carotid cavernous aneurysms or head and neck tumours to examine real-time changes in higher cerebral function that correlate with specific levels of cerebral blood flow. By making detailed haemodynamic and neurobehavioural measurements during the 30 min the carotid artery was occluded, we were able to quantify higher cerebral function patterns in relation to absolute cerebral blood flow (CBF) levels. We found that once the carotid artery was occluded, patients whose CBF averaged 47 ml/100 g/min (no different from baseline) maintained consistent performance on a sustained attention task; those whose CBF dropped to an average 37 ml/100 g/min had a reversible deterioration of sustained attention, and those whose CBF fell to 27 ml/100 g/min had impaired sustained attention that persisted until the carotid occlusion was reversed. The relevance of these results to the pathological state of clinical stroke is discussed with respect to the haemodynamic and physiological mechanisms that may determine how brain function is lost and regained in the setting of acute cerebral hypoperfusion.
The results suggest that intracarotid L-NMMA modestly decreases CBF, and the background tone of cerebral resistance vessels may be relatively insensitive to NOS inhibition by the intraarterial route.
Among patients with vesicular stage cysticercosis, placement of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt followed by a course of antihelminthic medication seems to promote shunt longevity.
Proximal obstruction is reported to be the most common cause of ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt failure, suggesting that imperfect ventricular catheter placement and inadequate valve mechanisms are major causes. This study retrospectively examined patterns of shunt failure in 128 consecutive patients with symptoms of shunt malfunction over a 2-year period. Factors analyzed included site of failure, time from shunt placement or last revision to failure, age of patient at time of failure, infections, and primary etiology of the hydrocephalus. One hundred of these patients required revisions; 14 revisions were due to infections. In this series there was a higher incidence of distal (43%) than of proximal (35%) failure. The difference was not statistically significant when the overall series was considered; however, when factoring time to failure as a variable, marked differences were noted regardless of the underlying cause of hydrocephalus or the age of the patient. Of the 49 patients needing a shunt revision or replacement within 2 years of the previous operation, 50% had proximal malfunction, 14% distal, and 10% had malfunctions attributable directly to the valve itself. Also, 12 of the 14 infections occurred during this time interval. In sharp contrast, of the 51 patients having shunt failure from 2 to more than 12 years after the previous procedure, 72% had distal malfunction, 21% proximal, and only 6% had a faulty valve or infection. This difference between time to failure for proximal versus distal failures was statistically significant (P < 0.00001 for both Student's t-test and non-parametric Mann-Whitney U-test).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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