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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (atherosclerosis)
77,401 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A retrospective analysis of peripheral and renal vein plasma renin activity has been performed in 9 patients with bilateral renal artery stenosis (3 fibromuscular dysplasia and 7 atherosclerosis). In all cases angiography showed a reduction of the arterial diameter of more than 70 p. 100. The renal artery was occluded in 3 cases. All patients received a constant sodium diet (100 mEq/day). Peripheral PRA values were classified as normal or low in 6 cases (less than 2.8 ng/ml/h) and high in one case (greater than 2.8 ng/ml/h): this values concerned 2 cases with renal artery occlusion and 1 case with a narrowing of 90 p. 100. Renal venous renin ratio of 1.5 or more has been found in 8 cases. In one case, the stenosis was quite symmetrical (70 p. 100) and the ratio less than 1.5. The secretion index has been calculated as the ratio between the venoarterial difference of both affected and unaffected side over the arterial value of PRA (V-A/A). On the more stenosed side, was found a V-A/A ratio of 0.5 or more. This ratio is particularly high in case of artery thrombosis, but there is no correlation between the ratio and the degree of stenosis. On the contralateral side, where the lesions were less important, the V-A/A ratio was low, ranging from 0 to 0.2; this estimation of renin secretion was found despite a significant stenosis on the angiography. 7 patients underwent PTA or surgery. 2 kidneys with arterial thrombosis were nephrectomized. In 5 cases the surgical treatment is performed on the 2 sides during the same procedure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Lateralization of renin secretion in renovascular hypertension with bilateral arterial stenosis]. 314 9

Therapeutic results in 102 hypertensive patients were evaluated after either renal artery percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) or surgical bypass procedures for renovascular hypertension. A minimum of 6 months of follow-up was accepted to evaluate therapeutic success or failure. Renal angioplasty had a beneficial result in each of 13 patients with fibromuscular dysplasia and in 10 (83%) of 12 patients with atherosclerotic lesions that did not involve the origin of the renal artery. Although surgery was also beneficial in each of six patients with fibromuscular dysplasia, it helped only five of 10 patients with atherosclerosis of the renal artery. Angioplasty results were similar to surgical results for atherosclerotic lesions that involved the origin of the renal artery. Angioplasty was unsuccessful in two cases of neurofibromatosis because of the firm nature of the lesions, where a bypass procedure was successful in one case. Major complications were more common in surgical cases than in angioplasty. PTA is recommended for all renal artery lesions; surgery should be reserved for failed PTA or recurrent renal artery stenosis after PTA.
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PMID:Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty vs. surgery for renovascular hypertension. 315 91

Therapeutic effects of heterotopic renal transplantation for renovascular hypertension were evaluated in ten patients with a follow-up period of more than three years. These ten patients consisted of 4 males and 6 females with the range of age from 21 to 55. The causes of renovascular hypertension were fibromuscular dysplasia in five patients, atherosclerosis in 3 and aortitis syndrome in 2. All the ten patients had a unilateral stenosis of the renal artery. At 3 years after operation, the blood pressure fell to normal range without any medication in 9 patients (90%) and it could be controlled with antihypertensive drugs in the remaining one patient. Operative mortality or deterioration of graft function was not experienced in any of them. One of the female patients had three deliveries after operation. The heterotopic renal autotransplantation is a therapeutic method to be selected for renovascular hypertension, since excellent and stable long-term results can be achieved.
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PMID:[Long-term follow-up study of renal autotransplantation in reno-vascular hypertension]. 330 41

Autorenal transplantation was performed on 32 renal units including three bilateral transplants, in 29 renovascular hypertensive patients. Aortoarteritis in 18, fibromuscular dysplasia in six, and atherosclerosis in five were the causative renal arterial lesions. Young patients with severe or uncontrolled hypertension but with functioning kidneys were selected for this procedure. Follow-up varied from one to seven years. Twenty-two patients were cured of hypertension, four showed improvement and in three the transplanted kidneys failed to function due to vascular thrombosis postoperatively. There was no death in the series.
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PMID:Autorenal transplantation in the treatment of renovascular hypertension. 332 57

Between 1974 and 1986, 17 patients (16 men and 1 woman) with renal insufficiency (serum creatinine greater than 1.5 mg/dl, mean 3.75 mg/dl), with a mean age of 51.3 years, underwent surgical renal revascularization. Two of them were on maintenance haemodialysis. All were severely hypertensive in spite of antihypertensive drugs. Atherosclerosis was the cause of renal stenosis in 14 cases and fibromuscular dysplasia in 3. Operative procedures included splenorenal shunt (5), autotransplantation (3), aortorenal bypass (3), hepatorenal bypass (1), bilateral renal endarterectomy (1), renal ostial closure (1) and nephrectomy (3). Mean serum creatinine showed a decrease from 3.76 to 1.65 mg/dl (P less than 0.005). Mean arterial pressure dropped from 161 mmHg to 103 mmHg (P less than 0.001). Systolic and diastolic pressures also showed significant decreases. Two patients died. Four patients required a second operation and the renal function and blood pressure then improved. Renovascular disease must be ruled out in patients with renal insufficiency associated with hypertension, including those patients on haemodialysis. We conclude that renal revascularization surgery is a reliable and efficient form of treatment in selected cases of renal failure of renovascular origin.
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PMID:Improvement of renal function in azotaemic hypertensive patients after surgical revascularization. 339 25

Atherosclerosis and dysplasia are the most common lesions affecting the renal artery, causing stenosis and renovascular hypertension. Surgical revascularization of the ischemic kidney in properly selected patients has proved to be the treatment of choice. The different pathological characters of dysplastic lesions are examined and compared with the ones of atherosclerotic disease, in surgically treated patients. Correlations between angiographic and histological aspects are also considered. The recognition of these different pathological patterns is important for the selection of the most suitable surgical procedures. The results of a personal technique of arterial reconstruction and angioplasty are reported.
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PMID:Pathological patterns and surgical treatment of renal artery stenosis in renovascular hypertension. 345 Jul 58

From 1965 to 1985, 19 patients with a single, ischemic kidney underwent renal revascularization. Thirteen patients had a single kidney and six had a single functioning kidney. The cause of the renal artery lesions was atherosclerosis in 17 patients and fibromuscular dysplasia in two. All but one were hypertensive with a mean diastolic blood pressure of 119 mm Hg and they were taking an average of 2.6 antihypertensive medications. Most had diminished renal function with a mean serum creatinine value of 3.7 mg/dl (range 0.8 to 9.0 mg/dl) and a mean creatinine clearance of 38 ml/min (range 8 to 75 ml/min). Three patients required preoperative hemodialysis. The first two patients treated died postoperatively, but no deaths have occurred since 1970. Follow-up among the survivors averaged 32.9 months. The mean serum creatinine value decreased significantly to 2.2 mg/dl postoperatively (p less than 0.04); the mean diastolic pressure decreased significantly to 86 mm Hg (p less than 0.001). One patient was normotensive preoperatively. Of the 16 patients surviving operation, 14 had improvement of their hypertension, one was cured, and only one did not benefit. No patient's hypertension was worse. The mean number of postoperative antihypertensive medications decreased significantly to 1.5 medications per patient (p less than 0.02). These data suggest that an aggressive surgical approach is warranted in patients with a single ischemic kidney in need of revascularization because of the gratifying response both in control of hypertension and improvement of renal function.
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PMID:Renal revascularization in patients with a single functioning ischemic kidney. 361 67

Aneurysms arising from the extracranial carotid arteries are uncommon lesions. Clinically, they may present as lateral masses in the superior cervical area, as medial masses in the tonsillar fossa or parapharyngeal region, or as a mass palpable in both areas. Tenderness or pain may or may not be present. Pulsation is usually detectable. Embolic neurological episodes are a common event leading to discovery of these lesions. Etiologies include trauma, atherosclerosis, fibromuscular dysplasia, infection, and congenital predisposing factors. We report the CT appearance of this condition in three patients. In all three patients (four aneurysms) the CT findings were characteristic. Thus far, we have discovered only one account in the English literature that included the CT demonstration of an extracranial carotid aneurysm.
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PMID:CT demonstration of extracranial carotid artery aneurysms. 370 Jul 40

We reviewed our experience with surgical revascularization (SR) for renal artery disease (RAD) in 361 patients from 1975 through 1984 to illustrate the evolving role of SR in the management of these patients. The time intervals selected for comparison were 1975 through 1980 (n = 174) and 1981 through 1984 (n = 187). Since 1981, in patients with atherosclerosis, SR has been done more often in elderly patients (30% vs 10.4%), in patients with generalized atherosclerosis (87% vs 73%), and for the sole purpose of preserving renal function (36% vs 14%). Since 1981, fewer patients with atherosclerosis have undergone SR solely to treat renovascular hypertension (26% vs 41%). Since 1981, in patients with fibrous dysplasia, SR has been done in more patients with branch renal artery disease (70% vs 28%). These trends in the performance of SR have been due to the advent of percutaneous transluminal angioplasty as effective therapy for certain patients, improved results of SR in elderly patients with atherosclerosis, an enhanced appreciation of advanced atherosclerotic RAD as a correctable cause of renal failure, and the development of more effective techniques for SR in patients with severe aortic atherosclerosis and branch RAD. The overall clinical results of SR remain excellent in properly selected patients with RAD.
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PMID:Trends in surgical revascularization for renal artery disease. Ten years' experience. 379 33

Spontaneous dissection of a major subarachnoid artery is an uncommon cause of stroke in young and apparently healthy individuals. Such dissection does not correlate well with systemic conditions such as emboli, thrombotic or hemorrhagic tendencies or hypertension, nor with disease of blood vessels such as atherosclerosis, fibromuscular dysplasia, cystic medial necrosis or Moya-Moya disease. Unusual exertion has been implicated as a factor in some cases. Gap defects were found in the internal elastic lamina near the site of dissection in three of four cases of spontaneous dissection reported here. It is suggested that such defects, because of their unusual size or number, may be responsible for initiating dissection in susceptible individuals. A detailed study of the major cerebral arteries in cases of dissection and control cases to document the size and frequency of such defects could shed light on the pathogenesis of spontaneous dissection. The subsequent course of events tends to differ in the internal carotid and vertebro-basilar systems. In most cases, the dissection in the internal carotid system is sub-intimal leading to thrombosis and cerebral infarction, while in the vertebrobasilar system dissection lies between the media and adventitia leading to subarachnoid hemorrhage. It is not known what structural differences of the two arterial systems may underlie this difference in the pattern of arterial dissection.
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PMID:Pathology of spontaneous dissection of intracranial arteries. 381 71


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