Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The surgical approach to aneurysms involving the transverse aortic arch usually requires either techniques for perfusion or hypothermic circulatory arrest. A simplified approach may be warranted when the aneurysmal process begins in the distal aortic arch and spares the innominate artery. Between November, 1975, and January, 1984, 32 patients (22 men, 10 women; median age 61 years) underwent repair of aneurysms of the distal aortic arch by simple cross-clamping of the diseased aortic segment. In each, the aneurysm arose distal to the innominate artery and involved the arch at the origin of the left subclavian or left common carotid artery. Proximal control was achieved by cross-clamping the aortic arch between the innominate and left carotid arteries. No shunts or extracorporeal bypass circuits were employed. Proximal hypertension was controlled by sodium nitroprusside infusion. All patients were heparinized. A mean aortic cross-clamp time of 27 +/- 10 minutes was required for Dacron graft replacement in 28 patients and Dacron patch repair in three patients. Surgical repair was accomplished successfully in 32 patients. The 30 day mortality was 3% with an in-hospital mortality of 6%. There were no complications as a result of myocardial infarction or stroke. Paraplegia (three patients) was related to cross-clamp time (less than 30 minutes, 0/18; greater than 30 minutes, 3/13 [p less than 0.001]) and distal extent of the aneurysm (localized, 0/22; extensive, 3/9 [p less than 0.001]). Transient renal failure (two patients) was related to cross-clamp time (less than 30 minutes, 0/18; greater than 30 minutes, 2/13 [p less than 0.001]). This experience supports the use of simple aortic cross-clamping for aneurysms of the distal aortic arch, especially if an expeditious repair can be accomplished.
...
PMID:Surgical repair of aneurysms involving the distal aortic arch. 395 Dec 44

We report 3 cases of severe syphilitic neuro-meningitis during the secondary stage: acute transverse dorsal myelitis with permanent paraplegia in a 17 year old teenager (case no. 1), uveo-meningitis with intracranial hypertension and diminished vision in a 52 year old woman (case no. 2), lower medulla lesion in a 46 year old man (case no. 3). The diagnosis was based upon highly positive serological tests for syphilis, associated with a compatible clinical context and meningitis in CSF specimens. Treatment was successful in cases nos. 2 and 3, unsuccessful in case no. 1 due to the irreversible character of the medullar lesions. Based on these 3 cases, the following points are discussed: the relatively atypical clinical character in the current context, the difficulties of the diagnosis, and the treatment regimens recommended for neurological syphilis. Despite the rarity of such cases, their extreme severity early in the secondary stage strongly implies the necessity for prevention by detecting and treating early syphilis. Attention is drawn upon the importance of doing serological tests for syphilis when presented with any atypical neurological situation.
...
PMID:[Early manifestations of neuromeningeal syphilis. Review of the literature apropos of 3 severe forms]. 400 28

From 1974 through 1983, 107 patients 4 days to 27 years old underwent 115 operations for treatment of coarctation of the aorta. Thirty-two patients were infants (1 year old or younger), and 28 of them were newborns. All newborns were seen with congestive heart failure. Seventy-one patients were seen with hypertension. Associated anomalies were present in 72 patients (67%). Resection was performed in 48 patients, patch aortoplasty in 16, bypass of the coarcted segment in 15, and left subclavian artery flap angioplasty (LSAFA) in 36. Ligation of a patent ductus arteriosus was simultaneously performed in 28 patients and pulmonary artery banding, in 4. Follow-up was 6 months to 9.2 years. There was a significant difference in aortic cross-clamp time between 26 patients who had resection (37.9 +/- 12.9 minutes) (mean +/- standard deviation) and 32 patients who had LSAFA (22.9 +/- 7.7 minutes) (p less than 0.05). Six patients died within thirty days after operation; 5 of them had resection, and 1 had bypass. Major postoperative complications included bleeding requiring exploration in 3 patients (2 after resection and 1 after LSAFA) and paraplegia in 1 patient after reoperation (resection) for recurrent coarctation 3 years after patch aortoplasty. Paradoxical hypertension was observed in 13 patients, and sustained systemic postoperative hypertension developed in 11 after effective repair of coarctation. There was no significant difference in early postoperative arm-leg pressure gradients between the types of operation or the various age groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Changing trends in the surgical treatment of coarctation of the aorta. 401 42

From 1973 to 1982, 253 patients--164 males and 89 females--underwent an operation for coarctation of the aorta in our clinic. Of the patients 72.3% presented with a circumscribed lesion and 58.5% with associated congenital cardiovascular defects. Resection with end-to-end anastomosis was performed in 138 patients (54.5%). Seventy-four patients (29.3%) had vascular graft prosthesis, 1.2% underwent the Clagett's operation, 9.1%, the indirect isthmoplasty and the rest (5.9%), the subclavian flap plastic. Ventricular fibrillation led to the intraoperative death of 3 infants with associated intracardiac and multiple somatic defects. The operative mortality was high in children under 15 months (13.2%), 1% in all the others taken together and 0% in all cases without concomitant lesions. Paraplegia occurred in only one patients (0.4%). One hundred twenty-eight patients were followed-up over a mean period of 3.6 years. The systolic and diastolic pressures decreased by a mean of 30 mmHg and 15 mmHg respectively. Eighty-seven patients (68%) had normal blood pressure at the time of examination. The rest (41 patients) had persistent postoperative hypertension necessitating medical management. The surgical technique elected did not influence the level and incidence of persistent postoperative hypertension, rather the level of the preoperative systolic right arm-to-leg pressure gradient (SPG) related closely to the incidence of persistent hypertension. Thirty patients (23.4%), among whom were 24 children under 10 years--some of them with preductal hypoplasia--presented with an SPG above 20 mmHg.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Surgery of coarctation of the aorta: a nine-year review of 253 patients. 608 29

A 20 year (1963 to 1982) surgical experience including 175 consecutive patients with aortic dissections was analyzed by logistic discriminant analyses to identify predictors of high operative risk. The patient population had characteristics similar to those in large autopsy series. Sixty-nine percent had type A and 58% had acute dissections. The intimal tear was located in the ascending aorta in 60% of the patients, the descending aorta in 27%, and the transverse arch in 13%. The overall operative mortality rate was 23 +/- 3%. The operative mortality rates were substantially lower between 1977 and 1982: mortality in patients with acute type A dissections, 7 +/- 5%; in those with chronic type A, 11 +/- 7%; in those with acute type B, 13 +/- 12%; and in those with chronic type B, 11 +/- 11%. After preliminary univariate screening, the following factors were determined to be significant independent predictors of operative mortality (in rank order of declining predictive power): type A patients (n = 121), renal dysfunction, tamponade, renal/visceral ischemia, and operative date; type B patients (n = 54), rupture, renal/visceral ischemia, and age; all patients (n = 175), renal dysfunction, renal/visceral ischemia, site of tear (ascending less than descending less than arch), tamponade, operative date, and pulmonary disease. Interestingly, several variables had no important bearing on operative mortality, including type (acute vs chronic) of dissection, age, previous operation, rupture, stroke, paraplegia, Marfan's syndrome, concomitant aortic valve replacement and/or coronary artery bypass grafting, site of tear, and whether or not the tear was resected in type A patients; emergency operation, hypertension, previous cardiac symptoms, paraplegia, site of tear, and resection of tear in type B patients; and, when all patients were considered together, age, sex, cardiac symptoms, prior operation, stroke, paraplegia, acute myocardial infarction, acute aortic regurgitation, Marfan's syndrome, and tear resection. These data allow calculation of any individual patient's operative risk and document that the operative mortality rate today is relatively low for all patients with aortic dissections, irrespective of type or acuity. Earlier surgical referral of patients with acute type A or acute type B dissection before irreversible major end-organ ischemia and/or infarction is probably in part responsible for the substantially improved results since 1977.
...
PMID:Independent determinants of operative mortality for patients with aortic dissections. 623 61

Three cases of acute interhemispheric subdural hematomas, one of which bilateral, are reported. These are secondary to cranial traumatism and/or to treatment by anticoagulants and have stereotyped clinical signs. Following a lucid period, intracranial hypertension appears, then a sudden predominantly crural hemiparesis or even paraplegia. The aspects shown by computerized tomography are characteristic. The literature and our experience suggest that the best treatment is complete evacuation of the hematoma by craniotomy performed before alteration of consciousness.
...
PMID:[Acute interhemispheric subdural hematomas]. 661 43

In the present study we report the renal pathological findings from autopsy material along with relevant clinical data on 21 spinal cord injury patients with end-stage renal disease (SCI-ESRD) treated with maintenance haemodialysis. These data are compared with the relevant clinical and post-mortem findings on 43 ambulatory dialysis patients who expired during the same time period. The SCI-ESRD patients exhibited markedly different clinical and renal histopathological data when compared to the ambulatory--ESRD group. Chronic pyelonephritis and amyloidosis dominated the findings and were the major causes of renal insufficiency. Acute pyelonephritis, papillary necrosis, calculous disease, pyonephrosis and perinephric abscess formation were also more frequently present in the SCI-ESRD patients. Hypertension and nephrosclerosis, which were common findings in the ambulatory--ESRD patients were comparatively rare in the SCI-ESRD patients. In addition, the incidence of acquired cystic disease (ACD) was considerably less in the SCI-ESRD group. Although the reasons for these findings are not entirely clear several possible explanations are given. Infection with gram negative sepsis was the predominant cause of death in the SCI-ESRD patients, while death secondary to cardiovascular disease predominated in the ambulatory-ESRD group. Furthermore, the urinary tract and infected decubitus ulcers were determined to be the major source for sepsis in the SCI patients. From these findings it would follow that more effective prevention and control of these infections would result in not only a lower incidence of renal failure but also a substantially reduced morbidity and mortality in chronic SCI.
Paraplegia 1984 Feb
PMID:Renal pathology in end-stage renal disease associated with paraplegia. 671 46

The experience in the surgical treatment of traumatic rupture of the thoracic aorta is discussed. Twenty-two patients were seen from 1970 to 1980. They were divided into three groups, according to delay between injury and aortic repair: 1 degree emergency group: 16 patients; 2 degree delayed group: 3 patients; 3 degrees chronic group: 3 patients. All patients had a widened mediastinum and the aortography confirmed the diagnosis. In the first group four patients died before surgery could be started and four after aortic repair from 10 days to 6 seeks postoperatively. In the second and third group all patients survived. Of 22 cases, 21 ruptures were located at the aortic isthmus and 1 at the aortic arch. Many patients had various other injuries, skeletal, abdominal or cerebral. All, but one patient, were operated with the aid of a partial pulsatile left heart bypass to avoid cerebral hypertension and cardiac overload, and to prevent kidney and spinal cord ischemia. One patient was operated, according to the method of Crawford, with blood pressure controlled with nitroprusside. We have not observed in our patients paresis or paraplegia after surgery. The hospital mortality of the surgical treated patients was 34% in the emergency group and 0% in the delayed and chronic group. Surgical treatment is essential in emergency situation, as a complete rupture may be fatal and repair of the chronic post-traumatic false aneurysm is advocated, as their prognosis is unpredictable.
...
PMID:Traumatic rupture of the thoracic aorta. 714 91

A case is reported of multiple myeloma presenting with signs and symptoms of paraplegia in a patient with a history of hypertension and remote cerebral vascular accident. The laboratory findings of hyperproteinemia and uricemia suggest a protein synthesizing abnormality. This case emphasizes that most patients with protein abnormality should be investigated by protein electrophoresis and immunoelectrophoresis.Unusual clinical presentation of multiple myeloma may result in an erroneous diagnosis unless proper investigation in the appropriate line is made.
...
PMID:Multiple myeloma: presenting as a neurological disorder. 736 13

Traumatic rupture of the descending thoracic aorta is lethal within 3 weeks in 95% of patients who do not undergo operation. In this series of 25 patients who were operated on, 84% have survived for 6 years and there have been no cases of paraplegia. The mechanism of injury is most important in the investigation of patients with traumatic injuries and must be sought either from the patient or from witnesses. A history of rapid deceleration (more than 60 km/h) following a highway collision was present in all our cases. Failure to wear seat-belts resulted in 70% of patients being ejected from a vehicle. A side-on collision resulting in lateral deceleration caused trauma to the intrathoracic aorta in 45% of cases. Vertical deceleration resulted from falls from great heights (bridge, overpass) in 25% of cases. Clinical signs of diagnostic importance were: arterial hypertension (60%), systolic murmur (35%) and the pseudocoarctation syndrome (25%). Pertinent signs on chest roentgenograms were present in 95% of cases and included widening of the mediastinum and blunting of the aortic knob. The authors conclude thoracic aortography should be carried out in trauma patients when two or more of the following are present: (a) history of rapid deceleration, ejection from a vehicle or lateral collision, (b) hypertension and (c) blunting or modification of the aortic knob. The presence of a pseudocoarctation syndrome is an absolute indication for aortography.
...
PMID:[25 cases of traumatic rupture of the thoracic aorta: current diagnostic elements]. 743 55


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>