رکورد قبلیرکورد بعدی

" Brain Hypoxia : "


Document Type : BL
Record Number : 752313
Doc. No : b572272
Main Entry : by M. Klinger, O. Spoerri ; edited by H. Penzholz, M. Brock, J. Hamer.
Title & Author : Brain Hypoxia : : Pain\ by M. Klinger, O. Spoerri ; edited by H. Penzholz, M. Brock, J. Hamer.
Publication Statement : Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1975
Series Statement : Advances in neurosurgery, 3.
Page. NO : (xix, 462 pages)
ISBN : 3642662390
: : 9783642662393
Contents : Brain Hypoxia --; Neuropathology of Cerebral Hypoxia --; Effects of Different Hemodynamic Condititions on Brain Capillaries: Alveolar Hypoxia, Hypovolemic Hypotension, and Oubain Edema --; Pathophysiological Aspects of Cerebral Hypoxia --; Activation of a Cortical Seizure Focus Under Hypoxia: O2-Deficiency Effect or Result of Tissue Acidosis? --; Cerebral Oxygen Consumption in Profound Arterial Hypoxemia and Hypocapnia --; Development and Time Course of Blood Brain Barrier Disturbances Caused by Hypoxia --; The Influence of Ventricular Perfusion on Normal Brain --; Biochemical Aspects of Cerebral Hypoxia --; Cerebral Metabolic Rates as Determinants of Hypoxic Survival of Adult Mice --; The Arterio-Venous Lactate and Pyruvate Difference of the Injured Human Brain and Reactions During Different Inspiratory Oxygen Pressures --; CSF-Electrolytes in Two Different Types of Metabolic Brain Edema --; The Clinical Significance of CSF Acid-Base Determination --; Clinical Aspects of Cerebral Hypoxia --; Restitution of Vasomotor Autoregulation by Hypocapnia in Brain Tumors --; Cerebral Metabolic Behaviour in Relation to Oxygen in Comas During the Acute Neurosurgical Phase --; Influence of CSF-Resorption Pathways on Intracranial Capacitance --; Five Year Follow-Up of 65 Patients Treated With Extra-Intracranial Arterial Bypass for Cerebral Ischemia --; The Response of Human Cerebral Blood Flow to Anaesthesia With Thiopentone, Methohexitone, Propanidid, Ketamine, and Etomidate --; The Value of Routine Respirator Treatment in Severe Brain Trauma --; Pain --; Central Interactions of the Systems of Rapidly and Slowly Conducted Pain --; Open Spinal Surgery for (Intractable) Pain --; Anterolateral Cordotomy in Cases of Phantom Limb Pain --; Results After Open Cordotomy --; Percutaneous Cordotomy --; Pain Treatment of Advanced Malignant Diseases by High Cervical Percutaneous Cordotomy --; Experience With Percutaneous Cordotomy --; Potentials and Limits of Percutaneous Cervical Cordotomy --; Neurophysiological Models for Nociception, Pain, and Pain Therapy --; Electrical Stimulation of the Spinal Cord for the Relief of Pain --; Control of Pain by Electrical Stimulation: A Clinical Follow-Up Review --; The Clinical Value of Dorsal Column Stimulation (DCS) --; Central Stereotactic Interventions for Intractable Pain --; Long-Term Results of Central Stereotactic Interventions for Pain --; Intermittent Thalamic Stimulation in the Management of Intractable Pain --; Results of Stereotaxic Operations in Patients With Intractable Pain --; Cerebral Stereotaxic Operations for Pain --; Intrathecal Application of Phenol in the Treatment of Intractable Pain --; Place of Hypophysectomy in the Neurosurgical Treatment of Pain --; Percutaneous Differential Thermal Trigeminal Rhizotomy for the Management of Facial Pain --; Results of Percutaneous Controlled Thermocoagulation of the Gasserian Ganglion in 300 Cases of Trigeminal Pain --; Thermorhizotomy in Trigeminal Neuralgia: Preliminary Considerations on 46 Cases --; Controlled and Partial Percutaneous Electrocoagulation of the Gasserian Ganglion in Facial Pain --; Remarks on the Techniques of Electrocoagulation of the Gasserian Ganglion for Trigeminal Neuralgia. Experience With More than 900 Operations Performed in over 600 Patients from 1952 to 1974 --; Results of Treatment of Trigeminal Neuralgia by the Operation of Dandy --; Results of Surgical Treatment of Idiopathic Trigeminal Neuralgia Using Different Operative Techniques --; Free Communications --; Complications from Surgery on a Vulnerable Spinal Cord --; Spinal Cord Injuries --; Evoked Potential Studies for the Evaluation of Spinal Function After Experimental Spinal Trauma --; x201C; Dumb-Bell'-Shaped Echinococcus in the Spinal Canal --; Atypical Localizations of Pachymeningitis Cervicalis Hypertrophicans --; First Experiences With the Anterior Discectomy Without Fusion of the Cervical Spine in Cases of Acute Disc Rupture --; Computerized Tomography Using the High Definition Matrix (160x160). An Early Evaluation --; Informational Value and the Therapeutical Application of Selective Angiography --; The Meningeal Branch of the Occipital Artery --; Pediatric Head Injuries --; Cerebral Artery Occulsion Due to Trauma --; Concentrations of Glycogen, Glucose, Lactate and Amino Acids in Brain Tumors --; CBF-Studies from Three Sides in Patients With Intracranial Tumours --; Tumour Diagnosis by Cytology of Cerebrospinal Fluid --; Vascular Neoplasms of the Brainstern: A Place for Profound Hypothermia and Circulatory Arrest. --; Coagulation Changes Following Intracranial Operations --; Report on One Hundred Pituitary Adenomas --; Gelastic Epilepsy in Tumours of the Hypothalamic Region.
Abstract : This volume contains the papers presented at the 26th Annual Meeting of the Deutsche Gesellschaft fUr Neurochirurgie, held in Heidelberg, Western Germany, on May 1-3,1975. Since at recent meetings of the German Neurosurgical Society central pathophysiological problems such as "central dysregulation" and "brain edema" had been discussed extensively, it seemed appropriate to choose another major area of cerebral patho physiology for the meeting in Heidelberg. CEREBRAL HYPOXIA is, as LANGFITT once emphasized, "the final common denominator" of various cerebral lesions with which the neurosurgeon is confronted every day. Raised intracranial pressure, respiratory disorders and disturbances in systemic arterial blood pressure, etc. may lead, if not treated, to a focal or global lack of oxygen in the brain tissue. Anoxia finally results in cell death and thus in irreversible cerebral damage or even death. Main interest has therefore been focussed on disturbances in cerebral perfusion pressure ("ischemic hypoxia") and in arterial oxygenation ("hypoxic hypoxia"). The importance of cerebral autoregulatory mechanisms protecting the brain against tissue hypoxia, of patho morphological alterations of the cerebral vessels (e. g. the "no-reflow-phenomenon") in the course of severe hypoxia, and of changes in brain metabolism have been discussed on a large scale. The organizing committee was particularly happy to have obtained internationally well-known scientists who presented their work in the field of cerebral hypoxia.
Subject : Medicine.
LC Classification : ‭RC388.5‬‭B965 1975‬
Added Entry : H Penzholz
: J Hamer
: M Brock
: M Klinger
: O Spoerri
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