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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Between January 1981 and April 1988, histologically proven renal cholesterol embolism was diagnosed in 13 men over 60 years of age with a previous history of hypertension and
atherosclerosis
. Six patients developed acute renal failure, usually induced by a triggering factor such as angiographic procedure or anticoagulation, and associated with peripheral and visceral cholesterol embolism,
eosinophilia
and a high sedimentation rate. In this group of patients, whose protean clinical manifestations and laboratory data mimicked necrotizing angiitis despite the absence of antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies, skin lesion biopsy established the diagnosis and made renal biopsy unnecessary. Six patients had chronic renal failure and elevated sedimentation rate, and the last patient had isolated microhematuria. In these 7 patients, percutaneous renal biopsy was an adequate procedure for the diagnosis of cholesterol embolism. As medical management of cholesterol embolism is essentially preventive, these unusual presentations must be emphasized.
...
PMID:[Renal cholesterol embolism. Apropos of 13 cases]. 214 Nov 58
A total of 145 BB Wistar diabetic rats, 46 of their nondiabetic siblings, and 43 outbred Wistar rats were autopsied and the frequency of lesions in all organ systems were determined. Common strain-related lesions included pulmonary infections, granulomas, lymphoid hyperplasia, lymphomas, lymphocytopenia,
eosinophilia
, supradiaphragmatic accessory lobes of the liver, and prostatic atrophy. These suggest some basic strain-related abnormalities of the immune system that were selected by the process of inbreeding. Diabetes-related lesions were insulitis, testicular atrophy, cataracts, hepatic fatty change, pancreatitis, lymphocytic thyroiditis, hypoglycemic brain damage, central pontine myelinolysis, stomach erosions, and idiopathic megacolon. Many of these are sequelae of human juvenile-onset diabetes and support the validity of the BB Wistar rat as an animal model for human diabetes mellitus. The absence of several important sequelae of the human disease (i.e., diabetic nephropathy,
atherosclerosis
, and severe microangiopathy) suggests a degree of infidelity as a model for human diabetes mellitus. Nonspecific lesions occurring in all three groups of rats included myocardial degeneration and fibrosis, splenic extramedullary hematopoiesis, and chronic progressive glomerulonephropathy.
...
PMID:Pathological lesions in the spontaneously diabetic BB Wistar rat: a comprehensive autopsy study. 634 94
Cholesterol embolism after left heart catheterisation by the femoral approach was diagnosed in seven men (mean age 59.6 years) out of a total of 4587 catheterisations. Diabetes was present in four patients, systemic hypertension in three, and signs of extensive
atherosclerosis
in six; five patients were taking anticoagulant drugs. Acute pain in the legs or abdomen occurred in six patients, two of whom had abdominal angina; renal failure was present in six patients, cutaneous manifestations in five, and a cholesterol embolus was seen in the retina in one. Six out of six patients had an appreciable increase in the erythrocyte sedimentation rate and five out of five had
eosinophilia
within a week of catheterisation. Renal failure was progressive in five patients, one of whom required haemodialysis. Three patients required amputation of the toes because of gangrene. Four patients died within four and a half months of catheterisation from causes not directly related to cholesterol embolism. At necropsy cholesterol emboli were found in all four patients. Cholesterol embolism is a rare but serious complication of left heart catheterisation.
...
PMID:Cholesterol embolism as a complication of left heart catheterisation. Report of seven cases. 646 20
We attribute a case of acute irreversible renal failure associated with "blue toe syndrome" and
eosinophilia
to a cholesterol embolism after "successful" treatment of myocardial infarction with fibrinolysis. This case shows that CE can be caused not only by invasive arterial procedures but also by thrombolytic as well as by anticoagulant treatment. In modern medicine, the importance of this often fatal but usually undetected systemic affection is increasing. For patients with serious
atherosclerosis
it is essential to analyze the risks and benefits before undertaking arterial invasive procedures or fibrinolysis.
...
PMID:[Cholesterol embolism: a heavy price to pay after successful fibrinolysis]. 797 40
This article is meant to increase the interest in an often forgotten clinical entity. Cholesterol emboli are in the majority of cases only diagnosed at post-mortem examination. Even though the triad livedo reticularis, renal failure and
eosinophilia
constitutes its most prominent feature, the variable clinical manifestations of this disorder with multiorgan involvement ("pseudovasculitis") make the search for cholesterol crystals particularly exciting. The discovery of 10 cases of cholesterol emboli over 2 years in a regional hospital's internal medicine department demonstrates that this occurrence is not rarely and that its accurate identification can be particularly relevant. It is important to recognize this disease since it is often iatrogenic, affects elderly people with
atherosclerosis
of the large vessels and causes high morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:[Cholesterol crystal embolisms: an exciting search for "pearls"]. 921 14
The multiple cholesterol emboli syndrome (MCES) is a rare, multi-organ disease than can occur spontaneously or after arterial or cardiac catheterization, arteriography, angioplasty, cardiovascular surgery, oral or intravenous anticoagulation, systemic fibrinolysis and cardiorespiratory resuscitation, predominantly in male subjects with disseminated
atherosclerosis
over the age of 60 years. Clinical signs of MCES vary considerably depending on the organs involved, but the signs most frequently encountered are renal failure, skin lesions (livedo reticularis, purple toc, ulcers, etc) and transient
eosinophilia
. Optimal treatment of this syndrome is controversial and is often symptomatic. However, the most effective measure remains prevention based on identification of high-risk patients, treatment with platelet antiaggregants and careful handling of catheters. This syndrome has a serious prognosis in the majority of cases. In this article, the authors describe a case of MCES. After thoracic aortography, this 73-years-old patient presented typical clinical sign of MCES (angina, cerebrovascular accident, bilateral blindness, transient renal failure and splenic infarction). The clinical course was favourable in response to heparin therapy and splenectomy and caudal pancreatectomy. Histology confirmed the presence of cholesterol emboli in the lumen of splenic arterioles. Except in the case of severe bleeding diathesis, the authors recommend early heparin therapy for MCES caused by catheterization, angioplasty or cardiovascular surgery. However, complementary studies must be performed to more clearly define the effects of heparin on MCES.
...
PMID:[Multiple cholesterol emboli syndrome: beneficial effects of early heparin therapy. A case report]. 1255 63
Cholesterol crystal embolization (CCE) is a complication of
atherosclerosis
. A 67-year-old Japanese man underwent coronary artery bypass grafting. After the surgery, he underwent coronary angiography via the right femoral artery. Twelve days later, he suddenly developed acalculous cholecystitis and was treated with antibiotics. Gradual deterioration in renal function, purplish discoloration of the distal portion of his toes, and
eosinophilia
were noted. We performed a skin biopsy and made a diagnosis of CCE. Cilostazol and intravenous heparin improved the symptoms and decreased the creatinine level. We retrospectively studied the clinical features of 36 cases registered with a diagnosis of CCE in the Japanese literature.
...
PMID:Cholesterol crystal embolization (CCE) after cardiac catheterization: a case report and a review of 36 cases in the Japanese literature. 1458 58
We report an adolescent girl with a history of angiolymphoid hyperplasia with
eosinophilia
(ALHE) diagnosed at the age of 10 years. The patient also suffered from chronic persistent multiresistant herpes simplex virus infection. Atherosclerotic occlusive disease of the abdominal aorta and its major branches was observed at the age of 17 years, necessitating vascular surgical intervention 1 year later because of disease progression. Histological examination of the aorta disclosed widespread
atherosclerosis
and high levels of gene expression of both T-helper cell type (Th) 1- and Th2-derived cytokines. This suggests that a highly stimulated systemic immune response including increased production of both Th1- and Th2-derived cytokines such as interferon-gamma and interleukin-4 may result in severe atherosclerotic lesions at a very young age. In addition, the patient developed a peripheral T-cell lymphoma at the age of 18 years. Neither systemic
atherosclerosis
nor T-cell lymphoma has been reported in association with ALHE. It is suggested that a highly stimulated dysfunctional immune response may play a key role in persistent inflammatory disease and premature development of
atherosclerosis
as well as malignant transformation of T cells.
...
PMID:Severe atherosclerosis of the aorta and development of peripheral T-cell lymphoma in an adolescent with angiolymphoid hyperplasia with eosinophilia. 1588 66
Atheroembolic disease is recognized as an iatrogenic complication from an invasive vascular procedure, such as manipulation of the aorta during angiography or vascular surgery, and after anticoagulant and fibrinolytic therapy. Cholesterol crystal embolism is caused by showers of cholesterol crystals from an atherosclerotic aorta that occlude small arteries. The kidney is a frequent target organ for cholesterol emboli because of proximity of the renal arteries to abdominal aorta and it receive an enormous amount of blood flows. We describe the epidemiologic agents of 19 cases that were diagnosed by histologic sections of the affected tissues; the
eosinophilia
and the renal failure are the clinical features that guide to the diagnosis, in patients with ischemic nephropathy and general
atherosclerosis
. 53% among patients had a previous invasive procedure and 26% occurred spontaneously. We remark the importance of the kidney's biopsy in diagnosis of the atheroembolic disease and their bad prognosis with 63% of death rate in 18 months of average follow-up. We report patients with the multiple cholesterol emboli syndrome mimicking systemic vasculitis: they died by multivisceral acute failure. The subacute presentation of atheroembolic disease with progressive renal failure treated with hemodialysis is a sign of bad prognosis. The knowledge of the disease and their prevention are the better treatment.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and prognosis of atheroembolic disease]. 1651 4
Cholesterol crystal embolization (CCE) is a dreaded complication of radiology, vascular surgery, and/or anticoagulation in patients with
atherosclerosis
and ulcerated aortic plaques. It also represents a cause of early graft failure and of poor results of renal artery surgery. Crystals lodge in small caliber renal arteries, where they induce early, transitory thrombosis followed by delayed, definitive obstruction by endarteritis, accompanied by evidence of inflammation and
eosinophilia
. Massive CCE leads to early oligoanuria. In subacute forms, renal insufficiency is often delayed by weeks or months following the triggering event. A third, chronic subset of CCE is easily mistaken for atherosclerotic renal ischemia and/or nephrosclerosis. The kidney is rarely the sole organ involved in acute/subacute forms, in which the central nervous system, the coronary arteries, the spinal cord, and the mesenteric and pancreatic blood supply compromise represent the main causes of death. Cutaneous, retinal, and muscle involvement allow diagnosis by inspection or scarcely invasive biopsies in about 80% of cases, whereas renal biopsy as the only diagnostic procedure is required in 20% of cases. Prevention is based on avoidance of endovascular radiology maneuvers, vascular surgery, and excess anticoagulation in atherosclerotic patients. Treatment of acute/subacute forms of renal insufficiency consisting of stopping anticoagulation and forbidding any new radiologic and/or vascular surgery procedure; treating hypertension with angiotensin 2 antagonists and vasodilators, strict volemic control by loop diuretics and ultrafiltration, along with parenteral nutrition and prednisone, has been credited with improved outcome. Iloprost may obtain favorable results. Statins definitely ameliorate the renal and patient's prognosis.
...
PMID:Cholesterol crystal embolism: diagnosis and treatment. 1702 71
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