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Journal ArticleDOI

Lobar cerebral hemorrhages: Acute clinical syndromes in 26 cases

Allan H. Ropper, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1980 - 
- Vol. 8, Iss: 2, pp 141-147
TLDR
The acute syndromes and CT findings are described in 26 cases of spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage, which caused severe pain around the ipsilateral eye and dense hemianopia, and a distinctive syndrome beginning with severe contralateral arm weakness.
Abstract
The acute syndromes and CT findings are described in 26 cases of spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage. Occipital hemorrhage (11 cases) caused severe pain around the ipsilateral eye and dense hemianopia. Left temporal hemorrhage (7 cases) began with mild pain in or just anterior to the ear, fluent dysphasia with poor auditory comprehension but relatively good repetition, and a visual deficit subtending less than a hemianopia. Frontal hemorrhage (4 cases) caused a distinctive syndrome beginning with severe contralateral arm weakness, minimal leg and face weakness, and frontal headache. Parietal hemorrhage (3 cases) began with anterior temporal ("temple") headache and hemisensory deficit, sometimes involving the trunk to the midline. One patient had a right temporal hemorrhage. Spontaneous lobar hemorrhage and branch artery embolism in the same region produce similar clinical syndromes. Headache is a first and prominent symptom. A rapid but not instantaneous onset over several minutes, when combined with one of the typical syndromes, suggests lobar hemorrhage rather than other types of stroke. Ancillary investigations (including CT scanning, angiography in 11 patients, and autopsy in 4) disclosed 2 patients with bleeding diatheses due to warfarin, 2 with arteriovenous malformations, and 1 with metastatic tumor. Only 8 of the 26 patients had chronic hypertension (blood pressure greater than 130/85 mm Hg), suggesting that hypertension is not an etiological factor in most lobar hemorrhages.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy. A critical review.

Harry V. Vinters
- 01 Mar 1987 - 
TL;DR: The purpose of which is to review the clinicopathologic features of CAA, emphasizing theories of pathogenesis and its importance as a cause of brain hemorrhage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical diagnosis of cerebral amyloid angiopathy: Validation of the Boston Criteria

TL;DR: This small pathologic series indicates that the diagnosis of probable CAA can be made during life with high accuracy, and the validity of the Boston diagnostic criteria for cerebral amyloid angiopathy is upheld.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of warfarin and intensity of anticoagulation on outcome of intracerebral hemorrhage.

TL;DR: Patients taking warfarin had a doubling in the rate of intracerebral hemorrhage mortality in a dose-dependent manner, and the data suggest that careful control of the INR, already known to limit the risk of warFarin-related ICH, may also limit its severity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy without and with cerebral hemorrhages: a comparative histological study.

TL;DR: The features of brains from patients with CAA that are most consistently related to cerebral hemorrhage are a severe degree of CAA and the presence of fibrinoid necrosis, with or without microaneurysms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy in the elderly

TL;DR: The pathophysiology of CAA is discussed and new imaging modalities and laboratory biomarkers that may aid in the clinical diagnosis of individuals with the disease are focused on.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

INTRACEREBRAL HÆMORRHAGE:Accuracy of Computerised Transverse Axial Scanning in Predicting the Underlying Aetiology

R.D. Hayward, +1 more
- 03 Jan 1976 - 
TL;DR: The diagnostic accuracy of computerised transverse axial tomography in predicting the pathology underlying cases of nontraumatic intracerebral haematoma has been reviewed and the scans of one hundred patients whose diagnoses had been confirmed by either angiographic or post-mortem examination were studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Massive Brain Hemorrhage: A Review of 144 Cases and an Examination of Their Causes

TL;DR: The data would indicate the need for a critical study of the causes of intracranial hemorrhages, and re-evaluation of the true relationship of systemic hypertension to such strokes, and the widespread dogma that hypertension is the outstanding cause of nontraumatic brain hemorrhage no longer seems warranted.
Journal ArticleDOI

The decreasing incidence of primary intracerebral hemorrhage: a population study.

TL;DR: There was a steady decrease in the average annual age‐adjusted incidence rate for PIH in each succeeding 8‐year interval since 1945, and the frequency and severity of prehemorrhage hypertension also varied inversely with age in the population with PIH.
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