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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (
dizziness
)
9,689
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Of the 353 patients followed in the pacemaker surveillance clinic between July 1976 and July 1977, 25 patients complained of episodes of
dizziness
and faintness. 20 of these had normal pacing function and pacemaker parameters at routine clinic testing. 18 patients had 'demand' units and 2 had fixed-rate pacemakers. The indication for permanent pacing was complete heart block in 16 patients and sinoatrial disease in 5 patients. At clinic follow-up, there was unequivocal evidence of
vertebrobasilar insufficiency
in 5 patients and postural hypotension in 4 patients. In 11 patients, the cause of presyncope was not evident at the clinic. All patients were monitored by 24-hour tape recording until an episode of pre-syncope occurred. In 8 patients, there was evidence of intermittent failure to pace associated with the episodes of presyncope. In 2 patients, an additional cause for presyncope was found at clinic examination. Ambulatory 24-hour tape monitoring of the electrocardiogram is an important adjunct to pacemaker follow-up especially when other methods such as transtelephone monitoring are not available in the United Kingdom. Routine electronic testing of pacemaker function does not always reveal intermittent abnormalities related to changes in threshold or unstable electrode positions.
...
PMID:Ambulatory monitoring of the electrocardiogram: an important aspect of pacemaker surveillance. 61 42
A review was performed of 114 patients with symptoms of
vertebrobasilar insufficiency
(VBI) alone, or in combination with carotid territory transient ischemic attacks or carotid territory completed stroke (cCS) with follow-up extending to ten years. The most frequent symptoms of VBI were visual changes (50%),
dizziness
(31%), and syncope (30%). Patients with symptoms of VBI and arteriographic evidence of intracranial disease, regardless of stump pressure, are at high risk for cerebral ischemia during endarterectomy. At late follow-up, ranging from one to ten years, 63% of the patients were alive; 88% were asymptomatic. Causes of death were mainly cardiac (44%) and stroke (36%), but patients with symptoms of VBI and cCS died earlier and from a second cerebrovascular accident. When a correct preoperative diagnosis was established, carotid endarterectomy produced relief of symptoms in 90% of the patients.
...
PMID:Results of carotid endarterectomy for vertebrobasilar insufficiency: an evaluation over ten years. 70 58
A young diabetic man with recurrent attacks of headache,
dizziness
, and blurred vision who was originally thought to have episodes of hypoglycaemia, underwent investigation for the possibility of an occlusive cerebrovascular disease; and eventually was operated upon for
vertebrobasilar insufficiency
. The young age, the degree of occlusive disease, the clinical picture, and the surgical results in this patient on the one hand, and the scanty literature on the other prompted this report.
...
PMID:Atherosclerotic occlusive disease of the vertebrobasilar system in young adults and its surgical consideration. 74 31
Vertebro-basilar insufficiency
(VBI) is a vague clinical entity including several symptoms such as faintness,
dizziness
, vertigo. Millikan and Siekert reported a 'syndrome of intermittent insufficiency of basilar arterial system'. But vascular abnormalities responsible for such symptoms are often hardly diagnosed by conventional angiography, because vertebro-basilar artery systems have many kinds of anomalous congenital origins. Conventional angiography gives us arterial informations such as stenosis, occlusion and malformations, but it often fails to reveal capillary perfusions because of its relatively poor density resolution. Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) is considered to have improved density resolution, and it may enable us to detect vascular perfusions more sensitively in the capillary phase. In this study, we evaluated the usefulness of the capillary filling analysis in digital subtraction angiography for diagnosis of VBI.
...
PMID:Capillary filling analysis by digital subtraction angiography for vertebro-basilar insufficiency. 135 73
We studied the long-term results of percutaneous transluminal angioplasty of the subclavian artery in treating stenosis (43 patients) or occlusion (nine patients). In all 52 patients, the blood pressure before treatment in the arm on the involved side was at least 30 mm Hg lower than that in the opposite arm. Thirty-nine patients (75%) had symptoms of
vertebrobasilar insufficiency
(
dizziness
, blurred vision, ataxia). Angioplasty was successful in 40 (93%) of 43 patients with stenosis and in five (56%) of nine patients with occlusion. In the successfully treated patients, follow-up angiograms showed absence of narrowing greater than 30% stenosis, and the blood pressure in the treated arm equaled that in the opposite arm. The patients were followed up for 6-48 months (mean, 29 months). During this time, the blood pressure in the treated arm remained normal in 41 (91%) of 45 patients. The symptoms of
vertebrobasilar insufficiency
subsided in 28 (72%) of 39 patients. These results suggest that percutaneous transluminal angioplasty is useful for treating subclavian artery stenosis or occlusion.
...
PMID:Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty of the subclavian arteries: long-term results in 52 patients. 153 85
Since 1964 we have performed 136 vertebral artery reconstructions representing 4% of all operations on extracranial cerebral arteries by our staff. Fifteen of our patients were under age 55 years and had symptoms of
dizziness
, bilateral visual disturbances, ataxia, presyncopal episodes, and occasionally localized extremity weakness.
Dizziness
, often severe and incapacitating, has been the most common and consistent symptom. The diagnosis of vertebral artery lesions was made using aortic arch four-vessel cerebral arteriography. Operations were performed for severely obstructing bilateral vertebral artery lesions and included only unilateral vertebral vein patch angioplasty with or without suture plication of the artery in 13 patients. Unilateral carotid vertebral bypass was performed in one patient and unilateral vertebral reimplantation to the carotid in another. Follow-up averaged 8.9 years, ranging from ten months to 20 years. Eleven of 15 patients have remained asymptomatic and without strokes. Recurrent
dizziness
was present in three, two of whom had vertebral arteriography showing patent vertebral reconstructions. Another had a stroke related to the anterior circulation in follow-up at nine years. Atherosclerotic obstruction of vertebral arteries does occur in patients in the preatherosclerotic age group. Even atypical symptoms suggestive of
vertebrobasilar insufficiency
may be associated with isolated correctable bilateral flow-impeding vertebral lesions. These symptoms warrant evaluation with cardiac neurological and cerebrovascular studies. Vertebral angioplasty relieves symptoms and the incidence of stroke during follow-up is low.
...
PMID:Vertebral artery angioplasty in patients younger than 55 years: long-term follow-up. 201 81
It has been known that significant narrowing of the subclavian or innominate artery may cause cerebrovascular ischemic symptoms, especially
vertebrobasilar insufficiency
. This condition has been named as the subclavian steal syndrome (SSS). Recently, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) has been developed and used in treating occlusive vascular lesions. In this report, we presented a 61-year-old man who suffered from SSS and treated by PTA. He complained of
dizziness
and dysesthesia on his left upper extremity which got worse on exertion. The left radial pulse was diminished and the left brachial blood pressure was lower about 50 mmHg than the right. Bruits were recognized over the left suprasubclavicular area. Arch aortogram revealed an 80% stenosis of the proximal left subclavian artery and retrograde flow of the left vertebral artery on late arterial phase. PTA was successfully performed at the same time as angiography via the right femoral artery without any complications. His clinical symptoms improved immediately following PTA. A month after PTA, left retrograde vertebral angiogram demonstrated that the dilation of the treated segment of the left subclavian artery continuously remained. Because of several advantages such as a technical easiness and a more safety, PTA will be a useful therapeutic tool for not only SSS but also other obstructive diseases of brachiocephalic arteries prior to some surgical treatments. However, it is necessary to avoid some possible complications, especially embolism into the cerebral circulation in this technique, and the careful procedure should be done under the co-operation with vascular surgeons and radiologists.
...
PMID:[Treatment of subclavian steal syndrome by percutaneous transluminal angioplasty: a case report]. 293 78
Noninvasive carotid artery testing was performed in 73 patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation who were referred because of symptoms or signs of cerebrovascular disease. Thromboembolism related to atrial fibrillation without valvular heart disease was the probable source of cerebral ischemia in 25 (80%) of 31 patients with stroke and coexisting atherosclerotic disease at the carotid artery bifurcation in six (20%). Nonvalvular atrial fibrillation was the probable source of symptoms in nine (70%) of 13 of patients with transient cerebral ischemia, while coexisting carotid artery disease was present in four (30%). Nonvalvular atrial fibrillation accounted for the symptoms in four of five patients with amaurosis fugax, with atherosclerotic carotid artery disease present in one. The remaining 24 patients had nonhemispheric symptoms of cerebrovascular disease, including
vertebrobasilar insufficiency
,
dizziness
, and syncope, and only one had a carotid lesion. A significantly higher proportion of patients with focal hemispheric symptoms had coexisting carotid disease than patients with nonfocal symptoms had, suggesting that atherosclerotic cerebrovascular disease contributes to stroke in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation. Noninvasive carotid artery testing may be helpful in identifying atherosclerotic lesions at the carotid artery bifurcation in patients with atrial fibrillation and cerebrovascular disease, because different therapeutic modalities may be appropriate when two potential sources of cerebral ischemia are present.
...
PMID:Noninvasive evaluation of the extracranial carotid arteries in patients with cerebrovascular events and atrial fibrillations. 230 22
Twenty patients underwent axilloaxillary bypass at Tufts-New England Medical Center, Boston, between 1973 and 1983, all for tight stenosis or occlusion of the subclavian artery. Review of records was possible for 19 cases. Symptoms included intermittent claudication and numbness of the upper extremity, as well as
dizziness
, vertigo, and ataxia due to episodes of
vertebrobasilar insufficiency
. Dacron, reversed saphenous vein, and polytetrafluoroethylene grafts were inserted, with all but one occupying a subcutaneous tunnel across the sternum. There were no operative deaths, and morbidity was minimal. The median follow-up was 83 months. The early patency rate was 94%, with a cumulative patency rate of 89% at ten years of follow-up, as determined by the life-table method. Our experience supports axilloaxillary bypass as a safe and effective treatment for symptomatic subclavian artery insufficiency.
...
PMID:Subclavian artery insufficiency. Treatment with axilloaxillary bypass. 363 38
The classical subclavian steal syndrome is a larcenous
vertebrobasilar insufficiency
, secondary to retrograde flow in the vertebral artery. The authors present their experience with an unusual variant of subclavian steal in which the ipsilateral vertebral artery was completely or partially occluded, or arose from the aortic arch. These patients had symptoms typical of
vertebrobasilar insufficiency
--
dizziness
or brain stem transient ischemic attacks--despite steal through relatively small cervical collaterals to the obstructed subclavian artery. Physical findings of diminished pulses and blood pressure in the involved upper extremity are similar to those in the common form of subclavian steal. The alternate collaterals found in these patients are documented by angiography and other potential collaterals are reviewed. All three symptomatic patients were treated successfully by carotid-subclavian bypass or anastomosis of the subclavian to the common carotid artery. They have remained asymptomatic for 1 1/2 to 3 years following operation. The potential for development of subclavian steal in the absence of a vertebral artery to provide collateral flow adds another reason for abandoning vertebral artery ligation as an alternative treatment for the subclavian steal syndrome.
...
PMID:Subclavian steal with ipsilateral vertebral artery occlusive disease. 372 45
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