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Congestion of the brain

"Congestion of the brain" and "cerebral congestion" were medical terms used before hypertension was understood. The term was first proposed by Morgagni in 1761 and widely used for the next 150 years, and had a major influence on the treatment of stroke. It was used for what are now known to be cerebral haemorrhage, lacunes, état criblé (widened perivascular spaces throughout the basal ganglia, particularly in the corpus striatum[1]), depression, manic outbursts, headaches, coma, and seizures. It was said to be "more common... than any other affection of the nervous system."[2] The concept fell out of use with advances in medicine.

References

  1. ^ Sutcliffe, Liam; Woods, Kate; Soo, May Jan; Harrison, Thomas (2022). "État criblé: an incidental finding on CT brain in acute COVID-19" (PDF). BMJ Case Reports. 15 (3). BMJ: e246238. doi:10.1136/bcr-2021-246238. ISSN 1757-790X.
  2. ^ Román, Gustavo C. (1 April 1987). "Cerebral Congestion". Archives of Neurology. 44 (4). American Medical Association (AMA): 444. doi:10.1001/archneur.1987.00520160074018. ISSN 0003-9942.
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