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

Although graduated internal dilatation has proved to be an effective, safe, and durable operation for the treatment of symptomatic patients with fibromuscular dysplasia of the extracranial internal carotid artery, the role of surgical treatment in this entity remains unclear because the natural history is not well defined. Forty-nine patients, aged 29 to 82 years (mean, 58.5 years), with angiographically proven fibromuscular dysplasia of 88 internal carotid arteries have been evaluated since 1969. Twenty patients showed symptoms of focal cerebral or retinal ischemia, 10 patients had nonlateralizing neurologic symptoms, three patients sustained intracerebral hemorrhage, five patients complained of nonischemic symptoms, and 11 patients were asymptomatic. The three patients with intracranial hemorrhage and one person who suffered a massive stroke after angiography died within weeks of admission; no surgical therapy was performed. Initial management of the other patients included four internal carotid endarterectomies in four patients for associated atherosclerosis, one with simultaneous graduated internal dilatation; seven graduated internal dilatations in five patients; and one extracranial-to-intracranial bypass in a patient with occlusion occurring after graduated internal dilatation. Seventy-three nondilated arteries in 42 patients have been followed for up to 16 years (mean, 6.8 years). During this time only three patients have undergone surgical therapy; one carotid endarterectomy was done for an asymptomatic atherosclerotic lesion and two graduated internal dilatations in patients with nonfocal ischemia. Through follow-up of all 49 patients, none has had a new neurologic deficit. Fourteen patients who initially presented with focal ischemia were not treated surgically and all but one are now asymptomatic.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The natural history of carotid fibromuscular dysplasia. 394 34

Between 1970 and 1982, 50 patients (38 male and 12 female) underwent revascularization of 51 occluded renal arteries. Ages ranged from 8 to 71 years (mean 54.6 years). Occlusion was caused by atherosclerosis in 43 patients, fibromuscular dysplasia in three, chronic dissection in two, abdominal aortic coarctation in one, and neurofibromatosis in one. Contralateral renal artery occlusive disease occurred in 22 patients. Extrarenal atherosclerosis occurred in 44 patients. Mean preoperative serum creatinine level ranged from 0.5 to 8.4 mg/dl (mean 1.9 mg/dl). No patient required preoperative dialysis. Length of the involved kidney ranged from 8.4 to 14.5 cm (mean 11.5 cm). Indication for renal revascularization was hypertension in 49 patients and preservation of renal function in one. Renal artery bypass was performed in 36 patients, renal artery endarterectomy in six, transaortic endarterectomy in five, and reimplantation of the renal artery in three. Simultaneous revascularization of the contralateral renal artery was performed in 20 patients. There were three operative deaths. At hospital dismissal, hypertension had improved in 45 of 46 patients. Follow-up periods ranged from 4 months to 12 years (mean 50.2 months). Thirty-four patients remained normotensive, five still had less hypertension, and seven became worse. These data demonstrate that revascularization of an occluded renal artery can be effective in controlling hypertension and that this effect is durable in the majority of patients.
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PMID:The occluded renal artery: durability of revascularization. 396 46

Perioperative fluctuation of blood pressure and the use of anticoagulants during carotid endarterectomy may potentiate lethal aneurysm rupture in patients who have symptomatic extracranial carotid artery occlusive disease with incidental, asymptomatic, intracranial berry aneurysms. Ten patients having this combination are described in the present study. Of five men and five women whose mean age was 63 years, nine had symptomatic carotid bifurcation atherosclerosis, one had internal carotid fibromuscular dysplasia, and all had intracranial berry aneurysms ranging from 2 to 13 mm in diameter (mean diameter 6.6 mm). In seven patients, aneurysms were greater than or equal to 6 mm in diameter. Hypertension was present in seven patients and moderately severe in five. Three of the aneurysms were located in the intracranial internal carotid artery, five in the middle cerebral artery, three in the posterior communicating artery, one in the anterior cerebral artery, and one in the superior cerebellar artery. Twelve carotid reconstructive procedures were performed without morbidity related to aneurysm rupture. These included 10 carotid endarterectomies, one of which was combined with Dacron patch angioplasty and one of which was combined with a simultaneous coronary artery bypass; one carotid artery dilatation for fibromuscular disease; and one reoperative carotid endarterectomy with patch angioplasty. Three patients had correction of hemodynamically significant lesions, two of which were proximal to ipsilateral anterior circulation aneurysms. An intraluminal shunt and heparin anticoagulation therapy were used in all patients. Despite a concerted effort to control blood pressure, the patients' perioperative blood pressures ranged from 60/30 to 240/110 mm Hg. Three patients had subsequent elective clipping of intracranial aneurysms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Management of patients with symptomatic extracranial carotid artery disease and incidental intracranial berry aneurysm. 396 49

Eleven cases of renovascular hypertension treated by the authors during the 10-year period from 1974 to 1984 are summarized in this paper, referring particularly to its etiology and prognosis. The causative diseases included 3 cases of atherosclerosis, 4 cases of fibromuscular dysplasia, 1 case of aortitis syndrome, 1 case of abdominal aneurysm, 1 case of renovascular thrombosis, and 1 case of unknown origin. Operations were given in 10 of the 11 cases i.e., 7 cases of nephrectomy and 3 cases of reconstructive surgery for renal blood-flow. The results of operations at discharge were 7 cases of blood pressure normalization, 2 cases of its improvement and 1 case of no change. There was no operative mortality. The outcome of long followup revealed that 2 of the 3 patients with atherosclerosis died in 9 months and 1 year and 10 months, respectively, due to cerebral hemorrhage and renal failure. However, the patients with other diseases maintained their health for 5 years and 5 months (mean observation period), with normal blood pressure or a mild hypertension. Sometimes, in patients with atherosclerosis in whom severe arteriosclerotic lesions already exist in the cardiovascular system, conservative therapy is better than surgical therapy. The indication for surgical therapy, should be made after considering the results of the angiotensin II analogue test.
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PMID:[Etiology and prognosis of renovascular hypertension]. 399 95

From 1962 to 1984 splenorenal bypass was performed in 69 patients with renal artery disease caused by either atherosclerosis (n = 54) or fibrous dysplasia (n = 15). Renal revascularization was performed to control hypertension in 27 patients, to preserve renal function in nine patients, and for both of these reasons in 33 patients. The mean follow-up interval is 5.4 years. Postoperatively hypertension was cured or improved in 52 of 60 patients (87%); the serum creatine level was improved or stable in 37 of 42 patients (88%) who underwent revascularization to preserve renal function. Postoperative graft thrombosis (n = 2) or stenosis (n = 3) occurred in five patients (7%). Splenorenal bypass is an excellent method of revascularization of the left renal artery, particularly for patients with a troublesome aorta that precludes performance of an aortorenal bypass.
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PMID:Splenorenal bypass in the treatment of renal artery stenosis: experience with sixty-nine cases. 400 36

Forty-six patients who underwent renal artery repair for presumptive renovascular hypertension are presented. Preoperative investigation included a rapid sequence IVP, a high quality angiogram and split function studies, as well as renin assays of renal venous blood in the more recent cases. Atherosclerosis was the causative pathological lesion in 60% of the patients, with fibromuscular dysplasia or miscellaneous causes of stenosis accounting for the remaining 40%.Surgical correction was usually obtained by bypass grafting (57%). Hypertension was cured or significantly improved in 36 patients (78%).Optimal results are dependent upon complete preoperative investigation and surgical repair of all the stenotic areas.
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PMID:Reconstructive vascular surgery for renovascular hypertension. 459 Jul 96

We performed follow-up studies in 26 patients four to 36 months after percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty. Restenosis was found in 47 per cent of the patients who had an atherosclerotic type of stenosis and in 14 per cent of the patients with fibromuscular dysplasia. We could not detect any significant differences between the atherosclerotic patients who did develop restenosis and those who did not. In fact, the presence of generalised atherosclerosis, the severity of the stenosis and the initial success of the dilatation were similar in the two groups. It thus cannot be predicted which patients will develop restenosis.
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PMID:Restenosis of the renal artery after percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty: an inevitable outcome? 622 43

Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) was used to treat 109 patients with 141 renal artery stenoses, including 58 patients in whom medical management was unsuccessful. The initial success rate was 94%. Fifty-five patients had severe diffuse atherosclerosis and 40 had renal insufficiency. Thus far, 36 patients (50 stenoses) have undergone a total of 52 follow-up angiographic studies. Clinical data, including blood pressure response, were obtained in all cases. Only 7 of the 98 hypertensive patients failed to respond to PTA. Of the 11 patients treated primarily for renal insufficiency, 5 improved. Of the 29 hypertensive patients who also had elevated BUN and creatinine, renal function improved in 13. Altogether, 96 patients (88%) benefited from the procedure. Analysis of long-term results suggests that PTA should be the treatment of choice for fibromuscular dysplasia and short, segmental atherosclerotic lesions and could also prove helpful in improving renal insufficiency.
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PMID:Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty of the renal artery. Results and long-term follow-up. 623 77

Twenty patients with renovascular disease in 22 kidneys were treated surgically by the method of renal autotransplantation at our department during the 13 years from 1970 to 1982. Etiological disorders included 11 cases of fibromuscular dysplasia, 3 cases of atherosclerosis, 3 cases of aortitis syndrome, two cases of renal artery aneurysm and one case of renal artery thrombosis. Age distribution ranged from 13 to 64 years old (average 28.9 years), and male to female ratio was 1 to 3. Ex vivo surgery was carried out in 11 of these 20 cases. Angioplasty in 9 cases, endarterectomy and partial nephrectomy in one case each were performed extracorporeally. Reconstruction of the urinary tract was needed for 14 kidneys in 13 patients, 12 kidneys were treated by UCN, and PU anastomosis was performed in 2 kidneys in 2 patients. Outcome of renal autotransplantation was "cured" in 17 cases and "improved" in 3 cases during follow-up period from 8 months to 13 years. Revision was successful for the postoperative complication such as urine leakage, bladder tamponade, perirenal fluid collection and ileus.
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PMID:[Indication and result of renal autotransplantation for renovascular hypertension]. 639 55

From 1977 to 1984, 752 reconstructions of the supra-aortic arteries were performed at our service. In a group of 31 patients presenting with transient ischemic attacks (13) or minor strokes (15), preoperative multiplane angiograms identified lesions from various causes in extremely high locations (fibromuscular dysplasia, 10; atherosclerosis, 6; traumatic changes, 10; spontaneous dissection, 3; and mycotic aneurysms and others, 4) in 34 internal carotid arteries (aneurysms, 10; and stenosis, 24). Surgery was performed on 30 patients. Flow restoration was achieved by resection and vein graft replacement (20), gradual dilatation (5), thromboendarterectomy (6), and tangential clip for exclusion of a lateral aneurysm (1). Only one patient was treated with an extracranial-intracranial anastomosis because the stenosis extended into the carotid siphon. One patient was treated with heparin. Exposure of the internal carotid artery (ICA) at the base of the skull required dissection of the digastric muscle, careful mobilization of the cranial nerves, and detachment of the styloid process in 29 patients. Partial resection of the mastoid process was helpful in two patients. The carotid bone canal was opened from the lateral side in four cases to allow the most distal anastomosis 1 cm within the carotid canal. Back-bleeding was controlled by a balloon catheter. A shunt was impossible to use and clamping time averaged 62 +/- 40 minutes. Except for one recurrent stroke and two transient ischemic attacks no other neurologic deficits occurred. Cranial nerve damage could not be avoided in 21 cases (nervus recurrens, 7; nervus glossopharyngeus, 16; and nervus facialis, 4) but disappeared clinically within a 1- to 6-month period in all but two. Each surgical patient underwent control angiography, which demonstrated 30 arteries to be patent, two became occluded, and one had an insignificant stenosis. We conclude that standard surgical techniques are unsuitable for repair of highly located lesions of the ICA. Although extracranial-intracranial anastomosis has been proposed in patients with planned ligation of the ICA, the anatomic reconstruction remains advantageous because flow is restored to normal and the source of emboli is eliminated. With the use of a special approach, graft replacement can be performed up to the base of the skull.
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PMID:Progress in carotid artery surgery at the base of the skull. 654 33


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