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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Aneurysm formation and rupture within the petrous internal carotid artery (ICA) is an extremely rare occurrence with approximately 10 such cases in the literature. Etiologies of petrous ICA aneurysms include
atherosclerosis
, closed head trauma, iatrogenic injury during mastoid surgery, chronic
middle ear
infections, and congenital causes. Therapeutic options include carotid artery ligation, aneurysm resection with or without reconstruction, and radiographically controlled vessel occlusion. The case of a patient who presented with otorrhagia, epistaxis, and transient focal neurologic signs due to a ruptured petrous ICA aneurysm is presented. The incidence, etiology, and anatomy of these aneurysms is reviewed, and the various tests for determining adequacy of collateral cerebral blood flow are described. Factors that affect the selection of surgical versus radiologic control of these lesions are also discussed.
...
PMID:Ruptured petrous carotid aneurysm presenting with otorrhagia and epistaxis. 178 9
In patients in whom the internal carotid artery has to be occluded because of the presence of an intracranial giant aneurysm or an infiltrating skull base tumour and in patients with brain ischaemia, whose internal carotid artery has been occluded spontaneously on the basis of
atherosclerosis
, a transcranial bypass can be created. Since the beginning of the seventies 'low-flow bypasses' are made in which a branch of the superficial temporal artery is connected with a cortical branch of the middle cerebral artery. Because of the small calibre of the blood vessels involved the desired effect on the brain circulation is limited. Thanks to the nonocclusive Excimer laser-assisted anastomosing technique, developed by Tulleken et al. in the last fifteen years, it is now possible to create a high-flow bypass in a safe way. A donor vessel, e.g. the V. saphena magna, is connected at one end to the external carotid artery and at the other to the intracranial part of the internal carotid artery beyond the pathological lesion. The mean flow through the bypass was 140 ml/min in about 90 patients. For example, in three patients, a woman aged 45 with rightsided progressive ophthalmoplegia due to a giant aneurysm, a woman aged 31 years with an aneurysm in the right
middle ear
and a man with a chemodectoma at the base of the skull, a transcranial high-flow bypass was created nonocclusively, after which the internal carotid artery was closed without any problems.
...
PMID:[High-flow transcranial bypass for prevention of brain ischemia]. 1057 30
Atherosclerosis
and tympanosclerosis are disorders that affect different organs in the body. When tissue samples taken from atherosclerotic and tympanosclerotic lesions are compared under light and electron microscopes, common pathological characteristics become apparent in both tissues. These similarities indicate that genetic predisposition to
atherosclerosis
is also seen in the
middle ear
. For the purpose of evaluating this genetic predisposition, the incidence of tympanosclerosis in atherosclerotic patients was examined and compared with the normal population. Otoscopic examination of 1,024 atherosclerotic patients was performed, and myringosclerosis was revealed in 66.6%. Myringosclerosis was found in 36 out of 300 non-atherosclerotic patients (12%). In the group of atherosclerotic patients, 174 individuals had past histories of previous ear infections. Myringosclerosis was detected in 147 of these patients (84.5%) during ear examinations. In 637 non-atherosclerotic patients with histories of ear infections, this figure was 114 (17.7%). The high rate of tympanosclerosis observed in atherosclerotic patients in comparison to the normal population was found to be statistically significant. These findings indicate that there must be a genetic predisposition for sclerotic degeneration in some individuals.
...
PMID:Genetic predisposition for tympanosclerotic degeneration. 1206 5
Tympanosclerosis is a particular kind of chronic inflammatory response of the
middle ear
to mechanical injuries and/or infections. This condition is characterised by the formation of plaques presenting ultrastructural analogies with the atherosclerotic lesions, extended to the tympanic membrane and possibly to the ossicular chain. The less severe degree of tympanosclerosis is represented by asymptomatic and clinically unsignificant whitish plaques within the tympanic membrane, detectable at otoscopy. The pathogenesis of this phenomenon is supposed to present a tight relationship with the pathogenesis of
atherosclerosis
. This observation has been already reported in medical literature, but deserves further clinical confirmations to better define the real extent of the analogies of both affections. A practical implication of this matter of study could be the possibility to find out a fast and non-invasive test as an early marker of an increased risk of atherosclerotic disease: could otoscopy play such a role?
...
PMID:Otoscopic examination: a diagnostic contribution for atherosclerotic disease? 1848 53