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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Transluminal angioplasty of brachiocephalic vessels for atherosclerotic lesions is now being performed in selected cases. We have thus far treated 17 cases of vertebral artery stenosis and one case of basilar artery stenosis by intravascular balloon dilatation techniques. Clinical presenting symptoms included vertebral basilar insufficiency, repeated transient ischemic attacks (TIAs), and multiple strokes. We performed successful transluminal angioplasty in 16 patients with marked narrowing (greater than 70%) of the dominant vertebral artery from
atherosclerosis
. One patient with basilar artery stenosis with tandem atherosclerotic lesions was also treated by angioplasty techniques. Repeat angiography at 3- to 12-month intervals has revealed continued patency at the angioplasty site. Complications occurred in our one patient with basilar artery angioplasty, who suffered a brainstem infarction after treatment, and in one patient who had a
TIA
after bilateral vertebral artery angioplasty. Two other patients had residual vertebral stenosis but remained asymptomatic after the procedure. All other patients who had successful dilatation were asymptomatic at 6 months to 2 years (mean, 15 months) of follow-up. These initial studies indicate that vertebral artery angioplasty may be effective for treating high-grade atherosclerotic lesions and for improving blood flow to the posterior circulation. Angioplasty of the basilar artery is technically more difficult and has a higher degree of risk because of the many perforating branches supplying the brainstem.
...
PMID:Transluminal angioplasty of the vertebral and basilar artery. 296 Feb 22
Among 128 patients operated for
atherosclerosis
of the internal carotid artery, 83 (59 males, 24 females, mean age 64 years) were controlled by Doppler ultrasonography, spectral analysis and Duplex. They had been submitted to 86 endarterectomies and 5 operations for total occlusion. In 23 cases, the stenosis was asymptomatic. The delay between operation and control varied between 12 and 123 months (mean follow-up: 50.6 months). 75 patients remained asymptomatic, whereas 8 suffered TIAS. Ultrasound examinations revealed 57 normal arteries or with thickened walls (62.6 p. 100), 9 stenoses less than 50 p. 100 (10 p. 100), 14 stenoses more than 50 p. 100 (15 p. 100) among which 8 were reoperated and 11 occlusions (4 failures of desocclusion and 7 postoperative occlusions: 7.6 p. 100). Recurrent stenoses occurred more frequently in females, mean age lower than in the whole group, as has been already reported. They determined minor symptomatology (vertebro-basilar insufficiency in 2 cases,
TIA
in 1 case). Three postoperative occlusions were acute and gave rise to a severe neurological deficit, whereas the other ones remained generally asymptomatic. These results are compared to reported series. Ultrasonography is a technique of choice to follow endarterectomised patients. The high rate of recurrent stenoses after endarterectomy raises questions about endarterectomy.
...
PMID:[Carotid endarterectomy: long-term ultrasonic evaluation]. 304 39
Results are presented of a retrospective analysis of 651 carotid endarterectomies in 605 patients with carotid territorial transient ischemic attacks (TIAs). All operations were performed by the same surgeon in a community hospital from 1963 to 1986. Arteriographic findings consisted of carotid stenosis of 50% or greater in 88.5% of patients and stenosis less than 50% and/or an ulcerated plaque in the remaining 11.5%. Medical risk factors were detected in 92% of patients; hypertension, peripheral vascular disease, and coronary
atherosclerosis
were most prevalent. All operative procedures were conducted with the patients under general anesthesia, routine shunting, and arterial closure without a patch. The perioperative stroke rate was 1.5% (10 patients); the morality rate was 0.8% (three deaths from myocardial infarction and two from stroke) for a combined stroke and mortality rate of 2.0% (13 of 605 patients). Follow-up (mean 61.8 months) was possible in 570 (96%) of the patients surviving operation without a perioperative stroke. The cumulative probability of late stroke (i.e., cerebral infarct ipsilateral to the operated artery) was 2.5% at 5 years and 8.1% at 10 years. When the perioperative stroke-mortality rate (2.0%) is combined with the data for late ipsilateral stroke, the 5- and 10-year probabilities of ipsilateral stroke were 4.5% and 9.9%, respectively (mean 1% per year for 10-year period). Coronary atherosclerosis accounted for 43% of late deaths and 16% of strokes. The perioperative stroke-mortality rate of 2.0% in this group of patients falls within the acceptable range for carotid endarterectomy in patients with
TIA
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Carotid endarterectomy in patients with territorial transient ischemic attacks. 317 81
In a prospective study of postoperative complications, strokes occurred in 6 out of 2463 patients (0.2%) who underwent non-cardiac, non-carotid artery surgery. The patients who experienced cerebrovascular accidents, including three cases of
transient ischemic attack
, were significantly older than the rest of the group (mean age 79 years versus 65 years) and had manifestations of
atherosclerosis
in at least one organ preoperatively. Significant predictors of risk for postoperative cerebrovascular accidents were previous cerebrovascular disease, heart disease, peripheral vascular disease, and hypertension. Cerebrovascular accidents occurred late in the postoperative period, 5-26 days after surgery, and were not directly related to surgery and anesthesia. They were more frequent after acute than after elective operations. Precipitating factors for some of the stroke incidents were rapid atrial fibrillation and postoperative dehydration.
...
PMID:Postoperative cerebrovascular accidents in general surgery. 321 96
In the course of a six-month study, a three-subgroup cohort of 113 patients (103 m, 10 f, mean age 58 +/- 8 years) with angiographically proven occlusive peripheral arterial disease (COAD) Fontaine stage II was analyzed regarding the therapeutic (improvement of walking performance) and prophylactic (prevention of new vascular events) effects of oral treatment with three different drug regimens. Group A (38 patients) was treated with the anticoagulants phenprocoumon or acenocoumarol; group B (32 patients), with the same anticoagulants plus pentoxifylline--800-1200 mg per day; and group C (43 patients) received irregular treatment with various vasodilators, such as xanthinolnicotinate, naftidrofuryl, pyridylmethanol, and others. At the end of the trial period a significant increase in systolic ankle pressure index and walking distance was observed in group B whereas the two other groups showed minor changes only. The elevated plasma fibrinogen concentration in group B was also significantly decreased. The percentage of atherosclerotic complications such as new arterial thrombosis in the lower limbs, newly appeared stenocardia, myocardial infarction,
transient ischemic attack
(
TIA
), and stroke was highest in group C (20%), relatively lower in group A (10%), and lowest in group B (3%). The percentage of hemorrhagic complications was minimal, with no significant differences between group A and group B. These complications were mild and disappeared quickly. The combined therapy with anticoagulants and pentoxifylline had a marked therapeutic and probably prophylactic effect as regards thromboembolic complications in patients with COAD and other localizations of
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:Rheological and anticoagulant therapy of patients with chronic peripheral occlusive arterial disease (COAD). 329 61
Carotid bifurcation
atherosclerosis
was demonstrated in 34 of 108 patients with familial hypercholesterolemia and coronary artery disease by B-scan, continuous-wave Doppler sonography, and intravenous digital subtraction angiography. An intensive combined therapy of diet, colestipol, and nicotinic acid was mounted to control the hypercholesterolemia of these patients. Their serial sonographies and digital subtraction angiography were evaluated independently by technical specialists who served as coinvestigators. The data obtained suggest that extracranial arterial disease can develop concurrently with coronary artery disease in a significant proportion of patients with familial hypercholesterolemia, and amaurosis fugax,
transient ischemic attack
, cerebral infarction, and myocardial infarction did not recur during 58-72 months of control of familial hypercholesterolemia in this series of patients.
...
PMID:Extracranial carotid arterial disease in patients with familial hypercholesterolemia and coronary artery disease treated with colestipol and nicotinic acid. 329 82
The classification, epidemiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment of ischemic cerebrovascular disease (ischemic stroke) are reviewed, and the major drugs used in the prevention of this disease are discussed. Ischemic stroke is a major problem in terms of morbidity and mortality because of the high prevalence of
atherosclerosis
in the United States population. The pathogenesis of cerebral ischemia is multifactorial, beginning with an atherosclerotic plaque on the arterial wall that may result in stenosis or ulceration with subsequent thrombosis or embolization. Platelets may adhere to the exposed arterial wall endothelium, stimulating further platelet aggregation and accumulation of leukocytes and fibrin. Consequences of cerebral ischemia include transient ischemic attacks and brain infarcts. Diagnosis is based mainly on patient history and ancillary radiologic studies. Treatment of ischemic cerebrovascular disease is primarily preventive, since the brain has limited capacity to recover neurologic function after an infarction.
Transient ischemic attacks
are treated with either antiplatelet agents, anticoagulants, or surgery. Treatment of stroke is also preventive, although anticoagulation is sometimes used to prevent stroke progression. Agents that may reverse neurologic impairment following an acute stroke, such as prostacyclin, calcium-channel blockers, and opiate antagonists, are being investigated. Antiplatelet therapy is indicated in subsets of patients with cerebral vascular insufficiency. Anticoagulation therapy, if needed, should be given for only three to four months.
...
PMID:Current concepts in clinical therapeutics: ischemic cerebrovascular disease. 331 77
Twenty five carotid endarterectomies were performed in 24 patients with cerebral ischemia due to
atherosclerosis
. Four of these patients were asymptomatic, 7 suffered from hemispheric
TIA
(hemispheric attack group), 7 suffered from nonhemispheric
TIA
(nonhemispheric attack group) and other 6 had previous completed stroke (completed stroke group). The average length of follow-up study was two and half years with a range of 2 months to 6 years. Completed strokes occurred in 1 patient following the operation and in 3 patients during the follow-up period (16.7%). Two patients were reoperated upon because of recurrent carotid stenosis (8.3%). Four patients continued to have neurologic symptoms postoperatively. Ultimately 10 of 24 patients had some neurologic complications even following carotid endarterectomies (41.7%). The first postoperative year was the worst period because almost all late neurologic complications occurred in that time. Kaplan-Meier's analysis demonstrated a relatively favorable result in the hemispheric attack group among these 3 groups. The completed stroke group was followed by that and the nonhemispheric attack group was proved to be the worst, although there was no statistical significance.
...
PMID:[Carotid endarterectomies for cerebral ischemia: a follow up study of surgical results and late neurologic complications]. 339 33
Recent reports on the outcome of carotid endarterectomy in patients with contralateral occlusion have been conflicting. Therefore, we reviewed 51 cases identified, among 675 consecutive carotid endarterectomies. A perioperative mortality of 2% and a permanent morbidity rate of 16% was observed. Compared with a complication rate of about 5% previously reported from this institution, this clearly indicates contralateral carotid occlusion as a major risk factor in carotid surgery. Though not statistically significant, patients with severely reduced cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) had suffered more severe strokes when compared to patients with only minor reduction in CPP. In addition, the internal carotid artery blood flow following endarterectomy was significantly higher in the low pressure group (P less than 0.02). No patients were lost during follow-up, for a mean of 34 months. The cumulative five-year survival rate was 74%, not significantly different from the expected survival of an age and sex matched population. During the period of follow-up 16 patients experienced new neurologic symptoms, in six (2 strokes and 4
TIA
's) referable to the hemisphere ipsilateral to operation and in 10 (2 strokes and 8
TIA
's) referable to the contralateral hemisphere. The five-year stroke rate was 16%. This together with the observed survival rate indicated a better-than-expected course in this group of patients with severe cerebrovascular
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:Carotid endarterectomy in patients with occlusion of the contralateral carotid artery. Perioperative risk and late results. 350 19
The prevalence and incidence ratios of cerebrovascular disease, with special reference to
transient ischemic attack
(
TIA
), were studied in the towns of Daisen and Ama in western Japan. There have been no previous reports on this subject in Japan. The prevalence ratios of
TIA
were estimated to be 4.4 in Daisen and 2.0 in Ama per 1,000 people over 40 years old. The ratio of carotid arterial system
TIA
to vertebrobasilar arterial system
TIA
was about 1 to 1. The incidence ratios of stroke were 319.6 in Daisen and 314.5 in Ama per 100,000 people of all ages. The prevalence ratios of stroke were estimated to be 14.8 in Daisen and 13.5 in Ama per 1,000 people of all ages. The prevalence ratio of
TIA
in Japan is about one-third to one-half of that in Western countries. However, the prevalence of complete stroke is much higher in Japan compared with that in Western countries. Therefore, the ratio of
TIA
to stroke is much lower in Japan than in Western countries. The obstruction of small intracranial arteries, in addition to heart disease, might play an important role in
TIA
in Japan, whereas in Western countries
TIA
might be mostly caused by heart disease or the
atherosclerosis
of extracranial arteries.
...
PMID:An epidemiologic study of cerebrovascular disease in western Japan: with special reference to transient ischemic attacks. 356 95
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