J Syrjänen

University of Tampere, Tampere, Western Finland, Finland

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Publications (31)125.74 Total impact

  • Article: Central nervous system complications in patients with bacteremia.
    J Syrjänen
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    ABSTRACT: The occurrence of central nervous system (CNS) complications was studied retrospectively in 150 patients with bacteremia caused by Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae, beta-hemolytic streptococci or Escherichia coli. The incidence and clinical manifestations of different CNS complications were noted during 1 month after the bacteremia. Special attention was paid to vascular complications (infarction or hemorrhage), infections (meningitis or brain abscess) and mental changes when they were the only signs of CNS origin (lowered level of consciousness, confusion or delirium). The risk of cerebral infarction was elevated in the patients with bacteremia during the first month after the positive blood culture as compared with the overall risk of stroke in the general population. 10/150 patients (7%) developed cerebral infarction during that month. Two of these cases were associated with bacterial meningitis and 1 with endocarditis. Mental changes as a main symptom of CNS origin occurred in 27% of patients with bacteremia. Increasing patient age predisposed to this complication. Mental changes were not associated with any bacterial species studied. Altogether 40% of the patients developed CNS complications, which were a significant risk factor for death during the first month after the bacteremia.
    Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases 02/1989; 21(3):285-96. · 1.72 Impact Factor
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    Article: Acute phase response in cerebral infarction.
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    ABSTRACT: The serum concentrations of the acute phase proteins, C-reactive protein, serum amyloid A protein, and alpha-1-antichymotrypsin were determined in 50 young and middle aged patients with cerebral infarction and in sex and age matched community controls. Of 46 case control pairs, 11 cases but only one control had raised acute phase protein concentrations simultaneously (p less than 0.01); four case control pairs were excluded because of an infectious complication following infarction and an acute phase response. Seven of the 11 patients (64%) with raised acute phase protein concentrations had a history of bacterial infection in the preceding month but of the remaining 35 patients without raised concentrations only four (11%) had such a history (p less than 0.01). In general, the acute phase response was less pronounced and occurred less often than has been reported in patients after acute myocardial infarction. The results suggest that a positive acute phase response is associated with a preceding bacterial infection or with an infectious complication after cerebral infarction. Measurement of acute phase proteins, therefore, could be used to evaluate the possible role of preceding bacterial infection in the development of cerebral infarction and also in the management of these patients as an early indicator of possible infectious complications.
    Journal of Clinical Pathology 02/1989; 42(1):63-8. · 2.31 Impact Factor
  • Article: Anticardiolipin response and its association with infections in young and middle-aged patients with cerebral infarction.
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    ABSTRACT: Antibodies binding to solid-phase cardiolipin (anticardiolipin antibodies, ACA), which are closely associated with lupus anticoagulant activity, have been found in patients with thrombosis. ACA are often seen also in patients after acute infections. To study further our recent observation on the association between infection and cerebral infarction in young and middle-aged patients we measured anticardiolipin response (IgG, IgM, IgA) in paired sera from 54 consecutive patients with cerebral infarction under 50 years of age and in 54 community controls matched for sex and age. An elevated IgG-class ACA level or a significant change in level as observed in 2 serial samples occurred in 15 (28%) patients, but in only 4 (7%) controls (P less than 0.02). These ACA levels were only slightly elevated, and there were no patients with levels approaching values commonly seen in lupus anticoagulant-positive patients. Neither were there any patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) as an underlying disease. The combination of IgG-class ACA positivity and preceding probable bacterial infection (based on clinical, cultural or serologic data) was found in 10 patients (18%) but in only 2 controls (4%) (P less than 0.05). There were no significant differences in IgM- or IgA-class ACA between the patients and their controls. These results suggest that IgG-class ACA response associated with preceding probable bacterial infection is more common in patients with cerebral infarction than in their community controls. However, slightly elevated ACA are probably only indirect indicators of preceding infection and not directly involved in the pathogenesis of thrombosis itself.
    Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 12/1988; 78(5):381-6. · 2.47 Impact Factor
  • Article: Anticardiolipin response and its association with infections in young and middle‐aged patients with cerebral infarction
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    ABSTRACT: ABSTRACT- Antibodies binding to solid-phase cardiolipin (anticardiolipin antibodies, ACA), which are closely associated with lupus anticoagulant activity, have been found in patients with thrombosis. ACA are often seen also in patients after acute infections. To study further our recent observation on the association between infection and cerebral infarction in young and middle-aged patients we measured anticardiolipin response (IgG, IgM, IgA) in paired sera from 54 consecutive patients with cerebral infarction under 50 years of age and in 54 community controls matched for sex and age. An elevated IgG-class ACA level or a significant change in level as observed in 2 serial samples occurred in 15 (28%) patients, but in only 4 (7%) controls (P < 0.02). These ACA levels were only slightly elevated, and there were no patients with levels approaching values commonly seen in lupus anticoagulant-positive patients. Neither were there any patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) as an underlying disease. The combination of IgG-class ACA positivity and preceding probable bacterial infection (based on clinical, cultural or serologic data) was found in 10 patients (18%) but in only 2 controls (4%) (P < 0.05). There were no significant differences in IgM- or IgA-class ACA between the patients and their controls. These results suggest that IgG-class ACA response associated with preceding probable bacterial infection is more common in patients with cerebral infarction than in their community controls. However, slightly elevated ACA are probably only indirect indicators of preceding infection and not directly involved in the pathogenesis of thrombosis itself.
    Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 10/1988; 78(5):381 - 386. · 2.47 Impact Factor
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    Article: Preceding infection as an important risk factor for ischaemic brain infarction in young and middle aged patients.
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    ABSTRACT: The role of preceding infection as a risk factor for ischaemic stroke was investigated in a case-control study of 54 consecutive patients under 50 years of age with brain infarction and 54 randomly selected controls from the community matched for sex and age. Information about previous illnesses, smoking, consumption of alcohol, and use of drugs was taken. A blood sample was analysed for standard biochemical variables and serum cholesterol, high density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglyceride, and fasting blood glucose concentrations determined. Titres of antimicrobial antibodies against various bacteria, including Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Yersinia, and Salmonella and several viruses were determined. Febrile infection was found in patients during the month before the brain infarction significantly more often than in controls one month before their examination (19 patients v three controls; estimated relative risk 9.0 (95% confidence interval 2.2 to 80.0)). The most common preceding febrile infection was respiratory infection (80%). Infections preceding brain infarction were mostly of bacterial origin based on cultural, serological, and clinical data. In conditional logistic regression analysis for matched pairs the effect of preceding febrile infection remained significant (estimated relative risk 14.5 (95% confidence interval 1.9 to 112.3)) when tested with triglyceride concentration, hypertension, smoking, and preceding intoxication with alcohol. Although causality cannot be inferred from these data and plausible underlying mechanisms remain undetermined, preceding febrile infection may play an important part in the development of brain infarction in young and middle aged patients.
    British medical journal (Clinical research ed.) 05/1988; 296(6630):1156-60.
  • Article: Is there a link between infection and infarction?
    J Syrjänen
    Annals of clinical research 02/1988; 20(3):151-3.
  • Source
    Article: Increased bacterial antibody titres and IgA deficiency in epileptic patients.
    British medical journal (Clinical research ed.) 04/1987; 294(6573):677.
  • Article: Association between cerebral infarction and increased serum bacterial antibody levels in young adults.
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    ABSTRACT: Increased antibody levels against several bacteria were found in 15 of the 34 stroke patients (44%) under the age of 45 years, but in only six of the 68 controls (9%) (p less than 0.001). Based on the serologic data, the most common preceding infections were streptococcal, staphylococcal, and enterobacterial. There was no relationship between viral antibodies and cerebral infarction. When the clinical history of the patients was also taken into consideration, stroke was found to be associated with a recent infection in 68% of the patients, as compared with 26% for the second most common risk factor, ethanol intoxication. The results suggest an association between cerebral infarction and bacterial infections in young adults.
    Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 04/1986; 73(3):273-8. · 2.47 Impact Factor
  • Article: Association between cerebral infarction and increased serum bacterial antibody levels in young adults
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Increased antibody levels against several bacteria were found in 15 of the 34 stroke patients (44%) under the age of 45 years, but in only six of the 68 controls (9%) (p < 0.001). Based on the serologic data, the most common preceding infections were streptococ-cal, staphylococcal, and enterobacterial. There was no relationship between viral antibodies and cerebral infarction. When the clinical history of the patients was also taken into consideration, stroke was found to be associated with a recent infection in 68% of the patients, as compared with 26% for the second most common risk factor, ethanol intoxication. The results suggest an association between cerebral infarction and bacterial infections in young adults.
    Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 02/1986; 73(3):273 - 278. · 2.47 Impact Factor
  • Article: Three different pathogenic mechanisms for paraparesis in association with bacterial infections.
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    ABSTRACT: Three different pathogenic mechanisms are apparent for paraparesis in association with a bacterial infection: a spinal cord compression caused by either an epidural abscess or a vertebral collapse due to spondylitis, an ischaemic spinal cord lesion as a result of septic thromboembolus in abdominal aorta, and a nonspecific, probably immunological, cause in association with reactive polyarthritis. An example of each of these mechanisms is described by means of case histories.
    Annals of clinical research 02/1986; 18(4):191-4.
  • Article: Clinical course and treatment of IgA nephropathy.
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    ABSTRACT: Impairment of renal function, severe proteinuria and arterial hypertension are the strongest clinical predictors of an unfavorable outcome in IgA nephropathy (IgAN). Glomerulosclerosis and interstitial fibrosis are the most reliable histologic prognostic markers. Metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance probably affect the clinical course of the disease. Among the known gene polymorphism it seems that there is a link between the ACE gene D allele and the progression of IgAN. Elevated blood pressure should be actively treated. The target blood pressure is 130/80 mmHg or less and the goal should also be to reduce proteinuria. Several large-scale trials are currently testing corticosteroids and other drugs in the treatment of IgAN.
    Journal of nephrology 14(6):440-6. · 1.65 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 1994–2012
    • University of Tampere
      • • Medical School
      • • Department of Internal Medicine
      Tampere, Western Finland, Finland
    • Helsinki University Central Hospital
      Helsinki, Province of Southern Finland, Finland
  • 1986–1990
    • University of Helsinki
      • Department of Bacteriology and Immunology
      Helsinki, Province of Southern Finland, Finland