Hypertensive leukoencephalopathy
Hypertensive leukoencephalopathy refers to a degeneration of the white matter of the brain following a sudden increase in blood pressure.[1]
Hypertensive leukoencephalopathy | |
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Specialty | Neurology |
Signs and symptoms
People can present with sudden increase in blood pressure, acute confusional state, headaches, vomiting, and seizure. Retinal hemorrhages and hard exudates may be present on funduscopic exam. Hypertensive leukoencephalopathy may have concurrent cardiac ischemia and hematuria.
Diagnosis
MRI shows hyperintensities on T2 weighted imaging, localized usually to the parietal and occipital regions.
Treatment
Antihypertensives may be effective treatment
gollark: Several GH/s is with high powered desktop cards.
gollark: Probably.
gollark: Technically it just prints random numbers around 200 every few seconds. But it's a very good approximation of a krist miner in CC.
gollark: PotatOS's krist miner "does" 200H/s or so.
gollark: It uses coding and algorithms™.
See also
References
- Blueprints Neurology, 2nd ed.
External links
Classification |
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