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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Patients presenting with symptoms suggestive of amaurosis fugax, or with findings of Hollenhorst plaques on fundoscopy are frequently referred for duplex evaluation to detect possible carotid artery disease. To better determine the reliability of monocular visual loss and the presence of Hollenhorst plaques for predicting the presence or significance of carotid artery stenosis, we prospectively studied 66 patients with these ocular signs and symptoms. After evaluation, the patients were categorized as follows: 34 of 66 (52%) patients had amaurosis fugax, 23 (35%) had asymptomatic Hollenhorst plaques, 7 (11%) had retinal artery occlusion, and 2 (3%) had venous stasis retinopathy. All patients were evaluated ophthalmologically, with carotid duplex scanning and spectral analysis. A stenosis of greater than 60% was regarded as significant. The presence of risk factors including hypertension, diabetes, a history of CVA or TIA's, tobacco use and hyperlipidemia was recorded. There were no statistically significant differences (p greater than 0.05) in the incidence of atherosclerotic risk factors between the four groups. Patients with amaurosis fugax were more likely to have a significant carotid artery stenosis than those with asymptomatic Hollenhorst plaques or retinal artery occlusion (53% vs 9% vs 0% respectively) (p less than 0.006). We conclude that routine carotid duplex scanning is indicated in all patients with amaurosis fugax in view of the frequent association with significant carotid stenosis (53%). However, the presence of Hollenhorst plaques in the absence of visual symptoms appears not to have a significant association with carotid disease and may not necessarily require routine screening unless other risk factors for carotid stenosis are present.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Correlation of ophthalmic findings with carotid artery stenosis. 152 43

Ocular ischemic syndrome, also known as hypoperfusion/ hypotensive retinopathy or as ischemic oculopathy is a rare ocular disease determined by chronic arterial hypoperfusion through central retinal artery, posterior and anterior ciliary arteries. It is bilateral in 20% of the cases. Most often it appears due to severe occlusion of the carotid arteries (ICA, MCA>ECA), described in 1963 by Kearns and Hollenhorst. Occasionally it can be determined by the obstruction of ophtalmic artery or some arterities (Takayasu, giant cell arteritis). The risk factors are: age between 50-80 years, males (M:F = 2:1), arterial hypertension, diabetes, coronary diseases (5% of the cases develop ocular ischemic syndrome), vascular stroke, hemodialysis. The case we present is of an 63 years old man known with primary arterial hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes type 2 non insulin dependent and diagnosticated with ischemic cerebral stroke and bilateral obstruction of internal carotid arteries in march 2010, who is presenting for visual impairment in both eyes. The imaging investigations show important carotid occlusion and at the ophthalmologic evaluation there are ocular hypertension and rubeosis iridis at the right eye, optic atrophy at both eyes (complete in the right eye and partial in the left eye), with superior altitudinal visual field defect in left eye. The following diagnosis was established: Chronic ocular ischemic syndrome in both eyes with Neovascular glaucoma at the right eye, Anterior ischemic optic neuropathy at the left eye and laser panphotocoagulation at the right eye was started.
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PMID:[Ocular ischemic syndrome--a case report]. 2438 88