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ویرایش: 1 نویسندگان: T. Kawamata, Y. Katayama (auth.), Julian T. Hoff, Richard F. Keep, Guohua Xi, Ya Hua (eds.) سری: Acta Neurochirurgica Supplementum 96 ISBN (شابک) : 9783211307120, 9783211307144 ناشر: Springer-Verlag Wien سال نشر: 2006 تعداد صفحات: 461 زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 12 مگابایت
کلمات کلیدی مربوط به کتاب مغز ادم XIII: مغز و اعصاب، جراحی مغز و اعصاب، آسیب شناسی، علوم اعصاب
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Brain Edema XIII به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب مغز ادم XIII نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
سیزدهمین سمپوزیوم بینالمللی در مورد خونریزی داخل مغزی ادم مغزی، شامل رویداد اولیه و آسیب بافتی، در 1 تا 3 ژوئن 2005، در Ann Ar- برگزار شد و آسیب ثانویه پس از آن، باعث زایمان در میشیگان، ایالات متحده شد. این جلد شامل مقالات کنفرانس ماهواره ای قبل از روز در این زمینه است. کنفرانس ارسال شده در سمپوزیوم و همچنین مقالاتی که بلافاصله پس از سمپوزیوم ادم مغزی در یک کنفرانس ماهواره ای برای خونریزی داخل مغزی ارائه شد، برگزار شد. اکثر شرکت کنندگان در همایش ادم مغزی در 4 ژوئن 2005. با توجه به نتایج برجسته، یک روز اضافی را برای اطلاع از آخرین - دوازدهمین سمپوزیوم که در هاکون، ژاپن در سال 2002 برگزار شد، ماندند. تصمیم گرفت آسیب بافت مغز و همچنین مغز شامل آزمایشات بالینی در حال انجام و تحقیقات پایه - ادم را به عنوان موضوع این جلسه شامل شود. بررسی مغزی که عمدتاً بر روی رویدادهای ثانویه تمرکز دارد، ادم، از بسیاری جهات، نشانگر زمینه ای است که پس از خونریزی ایجاد می شود. فرآیندهای پاتولوژیک که شامل آسیب بافتی می شود، اشتیاق قابل توجهی برای ادامه این بیماری از بسیاری از بیماری ها وجود داشت. مجموعه سمپوزیوم ادم مغز در پایان جلسات علمی شامل سخنرانان دعوت شده، سیزدهمین جلسه بود. هیئت مشورتی ارائههای شفاهی، جلسات پوستر، و بحثهای میزگرد - ورشو، لهستان را به عنوان سایت بعدی برای جلسه تحت جلسات انتخاب کرد.
The XIII International Symposium on Brain Edema intracerebral hemorrhage, including the primary event and Tissue Injury was held June 1–3, 2005, in Ann Ar- and the secondary injury that follows, prompted a o- bor, Michigan, USA. This volume includes papers pre- day satellite conference on the subject. The conference sented at the symposium as well as papers that were was held immediately after the Brain Edema Sym- presented at a satellite Intracerebral Hemorrhage Con- sium. Most participants in the Brain Edema Sym- ference on June 4, 2005. In keeping with the outstand- sium stayed an extra day to learn about the latest - ing XII Symposium held in Hakone, Japan in 2002, we velopments in intracerebral hemorrhage research, chose to include brain tissue injury as well as brain including ongoing clinical trials and basic research - edema as the subject matter for this meeting. Brain vestigation focusing primarily on the secondary events edema, in many respects, is a marker of underlying which develop after the hemorrhage. pathological processes which include tissue injury There was considerable enthusiasm to continue the from many diseases. Brain Edema Symposium series at the conclusion of The scienti?c sessions included invited speakers, the thirteenth meeting. The Advisory Board chose oral presentations, poster sessions, and panel discus- Warsaw, Poland as the next site for the meeting under sions.
N.pdf......Page 1
Front Matter.pdf......Page 2
01. Surgical management of early massive edema caused by cerebral contusion in head trauma patients.pdf......Page 15
02. BrainIT- a trans-national head injury monitoring research network.pdf......Page 19
03. Decompressive craniectomy in traumatic brain injury- outcome following protocol-driven therapy.pdf......Page 23
04. Decompressive craniectomy in traumatic brain injury- the randomized multicenter RESCUEicp study (www.RESCUEicp.com).pdf......Page 29
05. Cerebral hemisphere asymmetry in cerebrovascular regulation in ventilated traumatic brain injury.pdf......Page 33
06. Traumatic brain edema in diffuse and focal injury- cellular or vasogenic.pdf......Page 36
07. CT prediction of contusion evolution after closed head injury- the role of pericontusional edema.pdf......Page 42
08. Organ dysfunction assessment score for severe head injury patients during brain hypothermia.pdf......Page 45
09. Importance of cerebral perfusion pressure management using cerebrospinal drainage in severe traumatic brain injury.pdf......Page 49
10. Acute hemispheric swelling associated with thin subdural hematomas- pathophysiology of repetitive head injury in sports.pdf......Page 52
11. Rewarming following accidental hypothermia in patients with acute subdural hematoma- case report.pdf......Page 56
12. Clinical characteristics of postoperative contralateral intracranial hematoma after traumatic brain injury.pdf......Page 60
13. Diagnostic impact of the spectrum of ischemic cerebral blood flow thresholds in sedated subarachnoid hemorrhage patients.pdf......Page 63
14. Pharmacological brain cooling with indomethacin in acute hemorrhagic stroke- antiinflammatory cytokines and antioxidative effects.pdf......Page 67
15. The significance of crossovers after randomization in the STICH trial.pdf......Page 71
16. Intraventricular hemorrhage and hydrocephalus after spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage- results from the STICH trial.pdf......Page 75
17. Changes in coagulative and fibrinolytic activities in patients with intracranial hemorrhage.pdf......Page 79
18. The effect of hematoma removal for reducing the development of brain edema in cases of putaminal hemorrhage.pdf......Page 84
19. Spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage in humans- hematoma enlargement, clot lysis, and brain edema.pdf......Page 88
20. Evaluation of acute perihematomal regional apparent diffusion coefficient abnormalities by diffusion-weighted imaging.pdf......Page 91
21. Reperfusion of low attenuation areas complicating subarachnoid hemorrhage.pdf......Page 95
22. Stroke in the young- relationship of active cocaine use with stroke mechanism and outcome.pdf......Page 98
23. Brain oxygen metabolism may relate to the temperature gradient between the jugular vein and pulmonary artery after cardiopulmonary resuscitation.pdf......Page 104
24. Intracranial pressure monitoring- modeling cerebrovascular pressure transmission.pdf......Page 107
25. Use of ICM+ software for on-line analysis of intracranial and arterial pressures in head-injured patients.pdf......Page 112
26. Monitoring and interpretation of intracranial pressure after head injury.pdf......Page 118
27. The temporal profile of edema formation differs between male and female rats following diffuse traumatic brain injury.pdf......Page 123
28. The effect of intravenous fluid replacement on the response to mannitol in experimental cerebral edema- an analysis of intracranial pressure, serum osmolality, serum electrolytes, and brain water content.pdf......Page 127
29. Matrix metalloproteinase-9 is associated with blood-brain barrier opening and brain edema formation after cortical contusion in rats.pdf......Page 132
30. Delayed precursor cell marker response in hippocampus following cold injury-induced brain edema.pdf......Page 136
31. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor does not affect contusion size, brain edema or cerebrospinal fluid glutamate concentrations in rats following controlled cortical impact.pdf......Page 141
32. Unilateral spatial neglect and memory deficit associated with abnormal β-amyloid precursor protein accumulation after lateral fluid percussion injury in Mongolian gerbils.pdf......Page 146
33. Alteration of gap junction proteins (connexins) following lateral fluid percussion injury in rats.pdf......Page 150
34. Zinc protoporphyrin IX attenuates closed head injury-induced edema formation, blood-brain barrier disruption, and serotonin levels in the rat.pdf......Page 153
35. A novel neuroprotective compound FR901459 with dual inhibition of calcineurin and cyclophilins.pdf......Page 159
36. Search for novel gene markers of traumatic brain injury by time differential microarray analysis.pdf......Page 165
37. Diffusion tensor feature in vasogenic brain edema in cats.pdf......Page 170
38. Bolus tracer delivery measured by MRI confirms edema without blood-brain barrier permeability in diffuse traumatic brain injury.pdf......Page 173
39. Delayed profound local brain hypothermia markedly reduces interleukin-1β gene expression and vasogenic edema development in a porcine model of intracerebral hemorrhage.pdf......Page 177
40. Alterations in intracerebral hemorrhage-induced brain injury in the iron deficient rat.pdf......Page 183
41. Neuroprotective effect of hyperbaric oxygen in a rat model of subarachnoid hemorrhage.pdf......Page 188
42. Iron-induced oxidative brain injury after experimental intracerebral hemorrhage.pdf......Page 194
43. Deferoxamine reduces CSF free iron levels following intracerebral hemorrhage.pdf......Page 199
44. Up-regulation of brain ceruloplasmin in thrombin preconditioning.pdf......Page 203
45. Hydrocephalus in a rat model of intraventricular hemorrhage.pdf......Page 207
46. Early hemostatic therapy using recombinant factor VIIa in a collagenase-induced intracerebral hemorrhage model in rats.pdf......Page 212
47. Effects of endogenous and exogenous estrogen on intracerebral hemorrhage-induced brain damage in rats.pdf......Page 218
48. Dopamine changes in a rat model of intracerebral hemorrhage.pdf......Page 222
49. Intracerebral hemorrhage in complement C3-deficient mice.pdf......Page 227
50. Systemic zinc protoporphyrin administration reduces intracerebral hemorrhage-induced brain injury.pdf......Page 232
51. Restitution of ischemic injuries in penumbra of cerebral cortex after temporary ischemia.pdf......Page 237
52. Inhibition of Na+ H+ exchanger isoform 1 attenuates mitochondrial cytochrome C release in cortical neurons following in vitro ischemia.pdf......Page 242
53. Controlled normothermia during ischemia is important for the induction of neuronal cell death after global ischemia in mouse.pdf......Page 247
54. Ex vivo measurement of brain tissue viscoelasticity in postischemic brain edema.pdf......Page 252
55. Effect of dimethyl sulfoxide on blood-brain barrier integrity following middle cerebral artery occlusion in the rat.pdf......Page 256
56. Increased substance P immunoreactivity and edema formation following reversible ischemic stroke.pdf......Page 261
57. Micro-blood-brain barrier openings and cytotoxic fragments of amyloid precursor protein accumulation in white matter after ischemic brain injury in long-lived rats.pdf......Page 265
58. Time profile of eosinophilic neurons in the cortical layers and cortical atrophy.pdf......Page 270
59. Forebrain ischemia and the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier.pdf......Page 274
60. Neurological dysfunctions versus apparent diffusion coefficient and T2 abnormality after transient focal cerebral ischemia in Mongolian gerbils.pdf......Page 277
61. Progressive expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and angiogenesis after chronic ischemic hypoperfusion in rat.pdf......Page 281
62. Intracerebral administration of neuronal nitric oxide synthase antiserum attenuates traumatic brain injury-induced blood-brain barrier permeability, brain edema formation,.pdf......Page 286
63. Effects of 2,4-dinitrophenol on ischemia-induced blood-brain barrier disruption.pdf......Page 293
64. Long-term cognitive and neuropsychological symptoms after global cerebral ischemia in Mongolian gerbils.pdf......Page 297
65. Protective effect of the V1a receptor antagonist SR49059 on brain edema formation following middle cerebral artery occlusion in the rat.pdf......Page 301
66. Topical application of dynorphin A (1-17) antibodies attenuates neuronal nitric oxide synthase up-regulation, edema formation, and cell injury following focal trauma to the rat spinal cord.pdf......Page 305
67. Histamine receptors influence blood-spinal cord barrier permeability, edema formation, and spinal cord blood flow following trauma to the rat spinal cord.pdf......Page 312
68. Post-injury treatment with a new antioxidant compound H-290-51 attenuates spinal cord trauma-induced c-fos expression, motor dysfunction, edema formation, and cell injury in the rat.pdf......Page 318
69. Post-traumatic application of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and glia-derived neurotrophic factor on the rat spinal cord enhances neuroprotection and improves motor function.pdf......Page 325
70. Chronic spinal nerve ligation induces microvascular permeability disturbances, astrocytic reaction, and structural changes in the rat spinal cord.pdf......Page 331
71. Gravitational valves- relevant differences with different technical solutions to counteract hydrostatic pressure.pdf......Page 337
72. Brain tissue water content in patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus.pdf......Page 342
73. Predictors of outcome in patients with normal-pressure hydrocephalus.pdf......Page 346
74. On the optimal opening pressure of hydrostatic valves in cases of idiopathic normal-pressure hydrocephalus- a prospective randomized study with 123 patients.pdf......Page 352
75. Outcome predictors for normal-pressure hydrocephalus.pdf......Page 358
76. First clinical experiences in patients with idiopathic normal-pressure hydrocephalus with the adjustable gravity valve manufactured by Aesculap (proGAVAesculap®).pdf......Page 362
77. Decompressive craniectomy for severe head injury in patients with major extracranial injuries.pdf......Page 367
78. Clinical outcome of patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus three years after shunt implantation.pdf......Page 371
79. Is it possible to optimize treatment of patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus by implanting an adjustable Medos Hakim valve in combination with a Miethke shunt assistant.pdf......Page 375
80. Increased seizure duration in mice lacking aquaporin-4 water channels.pdf......Page 380
81. Modulation of AQP4 expression by the protein kinase C activator, phorbol myristate acetate, decreases ischemia-induced brain edema.pdf......Page 384
82. Astrocytes co-express aquaporin-1, -4, and vascular endothelial growth factor in brain edema tissue associated with brain contusion.pdf......Page 389
83. Magnesium restores altered aquaporin-4 immunoreactivity following traumatic brain injury to a pre-injury state.pdf......Page 393
84. Positive selective brain cooling method- a novel, simple, and selective nasopharyngeal brain cooling method.pdf......Page 398
85. Mechanism of neuroprotective effect induced by QingKaiLing as an adjuvant drug in rabbits with E. coli bacterial meningitis.pdf......Page 402
86. Acceleration of chemokine production from endothelial cells in response to lipopolysaccharide in hyperglycemic condition.pdf......Page 408
87. Photodynamic therapy increases brain edema and intracranial pressure in a rabbit brain tumor model.pdf......Page 411
88. Whole-body hyperthermia in the rat disrupts the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier and induces brain edema.pdf......Page 415
89. Dynamics of cerebral venous and intracranial pressures.pdf......Page 421
90. Effects of angiopoietin-1 on vascular endothelial growth factor-induced angiogenesis in the mouse brain.pdf......Page 424
91. Inflammation and brain edema- new insights into the role of chemokines and their receptors.pdf......Page 430
92. Atrial natriuretic peptide- its putative role in modulating the choroid plexus-CSF system for intracranial pressure regulation.pdf......Page 437
Back Matter.pdf......Page 443