Among 86 patients with aneurysms arising from the vertebral artery or its branches, 24 had dissecting aneurysms. The patients with dissecting aneurysms were characteristically relatively young males. Twenty-one patients presented with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and three with ischemia. Severe headache or neck pain occurred in all three patients with ischemia. Five of the 21 patients with SAH and all three patients with ischemia experienced recurrent episodes. Angiography typically showed fusiform dilatation and proximal and/or distal narrowing of the affected artery. The difficulty of diagnosing this disorder is pointed out. Surgery was performed in 19 patients, the most common technique being clip-occlusion of the proximal vertebral artery. There were no postoperative deaths or rebleeding; a lateral medullary syndrome developed in three patients. The observation at surgery of intramural clot with characteristic discoloration was limited to the cases operated on within 36 days after the ictus. After this period, the aneurysm was whitish gray in color and had become firm. Of 36 other cases of vertebral dissecting aneurysm reported in the literature, 20 were operated on. The indications for surgery are discussed.
The Japanese sardine Sardinops melanostictus started to decline after 1989. Recruitment to age 1 population was small in four year-classes from 1988 to 1991. The population decline after 1989 resulted from recruitment failures in 4 consecutive years. Egg production was high in the years of poor recruitment. The recruitment failures were caused not by a reduction in reproductive output but by low survival between egg stage and age 1 recruitment. Abundance of post first-feeding larvae positively correlated with egg and yolksac larval abundance. Mortality at the first-feeding stage was not so variable as to destroy correlations between the abundance of early life stages. The population of age 1 recruits did not correlate with the abundance of post first-feeding larvae. Recruitment of the sardine was not fixed by the end of the first-feeding stage. Cumulative mortality through the early life stages, rather than relatively instantaneous mortality at the first-feeding stage, is thought to be responsible for the recruitment success or failure and eventual population fluctuations of the sardine.
Larvae, juveniles, and adults of Japanese anchovy, Engraulis japonicus, were distributed throughout the Kuroshio‐Oyashio transition region off northern Japan as far offshore as 170°E in 1996 and 1997. The growth trajectories of individual larvae and early juveniles were backcalculated using the biological intercept method based on the allometric relationship between otolith radius and somatic length. Mean larval growth rates ranged from 0.49 to 0.71 mm day–1 in the transition region, and were comparable to those reported from the Pacific coastal waters of central Japan, which is the principal distribution range of E. japonicus. In terms of growth, the Kuroshio‐Oyashio transition region seemed to be a favourable nursery area for larval E. japonicus. Larval growth tended to decline from the inshore to the offshore waters in the transition region. Thermal conditions did not show an inshore–offshore trend in the survey area and did not explain the longitudinal trend in growth rates.
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