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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Surgical closure of a left coronary artery-left ventricular fistula in a 44-year-old black man is reported. The fistula was discovered by coronary arteriography after the patient was admitted to the hospital complaining of recurrent chest pain. The fistula was closed with cardiopulmonary bypass, ischemic arrest, and hypothermia, and there was an uneventful postoperative recovery. The previously reported five cases of fistulas terminating in the left ventricle that were closed surgically are reviewed. Four of these cases originated in the right coronary artery and one in the left coronary artery. Three of the six patients were symptomatic at the time of discovery of the lesion. Cardiopulmonary bypass was necessary in five of the six cases. One patient died in the postoperative period from intractable hemorrhage. It is recommended that coronary artery fistulas by closed upon establishment of the diagnosis because of the sequelae if they are allowed to remain open; these include premature atherosclerosis, aneurysmal dilatation of the coronary artery, and congestive heart failure.
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PMID:Surgical closure of left coronary artery-left ventricular fistula: the second case reported in the literature and a review of the five previously reported cases of coronary artery fistula terminating in the left ventricle. 88 74

The hypotensive drug alphamethyldopa, an inhibitor of serotonin synthesis, caused significant hypothermia ranging from 33.4 to 34.8 degrees C (t=3.09 at P less than 0.05) in four out of nine hypertensive patients, with evidence of cerebral atherosclerosis. The anti-serotonin effect of alphamethyldopa correlated with statistically significant (t=6.8 at P less than 0.001) fall in the 24 hour urinary 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid on the third day of the therapy. The possible mode of hypothermic side effect is discussed.
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PMID:Hypothermia dn alphamethyldopa treatment. 101 Jun 37

Eighteen patients who had undergone renal transplantation three months to 25 years earlier were operated on for treatment of complicated aortoiliac atherosclerosis: nine had aneurysms (of which one was leaking) and nine had stenotic or obstructive lesions. Except for the first patient, operated on in 1973, in whom the kidney was protected by general hypothermia, no special measure was used to protect the kidneys in the other 17 patients. A transient increase in creatininemia occurred in the majority of cases during postoperative period. All patients had regained renal function identical to the preoperative state in less than 10 days. Three patients had significant improvement of renal function which lasted in the long term follow-up. Such improvement was a result of correction of a lesion that was impairing renal blood flow. Results obtained in this series show that protection of the transplant during aortic surgery is not necessary, provided an adequate surgical technique is used. This technique is described: it avoids the complex methods employed in several previously reported cases and appears to be a safe procedure.
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PMID:[Aortoiliac surgery after renal transplantation. Authors' experience and review of the literature]. 134 46

Fifteen patients who had undergone renal transplantation 3 months to 25 years earlier were operated on for treatment of complicated aortoiliac atherosclerosis; eight had aneurysms and seven had stenotic or obstructive lesions. Except for the first patient, operated on in 1973, in whom the kidney was protected by general hypothermia, no special measure was used to protect the kidneys. A transient increase in creatinemia occurred in 11 patients during the postoperative period, whereas creatinine values remained unchanged in the other four. All patients had regained renal function identical to the + preoperative state in less than 10 days; three of them had significant improvement as a result of correction of a lesion that was impairing renal blood flow. Results obtained in this series show that protection of the transplant during aortic surgery is not necessary, provided an adequate surgical technique is used. This technique avoids the complex methods employed in the majority of previously reported cases and appears to be a safe procedure.
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PMID:Aortoiliac surgery in renal transplant patients. 202 11

This review presents current epidemiological evidence indicating that a cold environment contributes to increased cardiovascular, especially coronary heart disease, morbidity and mortality, and examines the factors which might explain these findings. Most epidemiological studies have revealed a peak in the coronary morbidity and mortality during the cold season, and a strong negative correlation between the air temperature or its drop and the occurrence of coronary heart disease. These associations could be apparent, indirect or causative. A small part of the increased coronary morbidity and mortality could be due to, for example erroneous recording of cause of death (eg. death due to respiratory diseases). Part of the increased coronary manifestations of cold seem to be due to changes in living circumstances and habits associated with cold. The gradual development of hypothermia among people living in poor socio-economic conditions may lead to a disastrous chain of events. Snowfalls and storms associated with cold weather may increase the incidence of cardiac complications by exposing people to exceptional physical efforts and circumstances. Some of the effects of cold are direct: cold increases the myocardial oxygen demand by increasing sympathetic stimulation, systolic blood pressure and cardiac diastolic pressure and volume. At the same time the myocardial oxygen supply may be impeded by coronary vasoconstriction especially in vessels damaged by atherosclerosis. In addition to these short term effects cold may augment atherosclerosis for example by increasing blood pressure and the blood concentration of cholesterol, catecholamines, corticoids and thrombocytes during the cold season.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The heart and the cold. 331 46

A series is presented of 83 patients surgically explored for massive bowel infarction. Old men with previous heart disease and symptoms of peripheral atherosclerosis were primarily affected. Clinical presenting features were abdominal pain (100 per cent), peritonitis (57 per cent), shock (34 per cent) and hypothermia (26 per cent). A third-space syndrome with metabolic acidosis and uraemia was the most common physiological derangement. Age was the only factor that appeared to have influenced the surgeon's decision to perform massive bowel resection (71 years in non-resected versus 64 years in resected patients, P less than 0.006). The overall mortality rate was 71 per cent. Forty-four patients underwent massive bowel resection (mean length of remaining small bowel 60 +/- 40 cm) and twenty-four (54 per cent) survived the procedure. Axillary temperature was higher in survivors (36.7 degrees C versus 36.1 degrees C, P less than 0.03). Early postoperative total plasma protein and albumin concentrations were also higher in survivors (57 versus 46 g/l, P less than 0.005; 27 versus 22 g/l, P less than 0.02). Patients with previous symptoms of atherosclerotic disease and high pre-operative blood urea levels also had a bad prognosis. Survivors had a mean hospital stay of 57 days and parenteral nutrition had to be maintained for a mean of 34 days. The survival rate achieved with massive resection justifies this surgical approach in selected patients with massive bowel infarction.
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PMID:Mesenteric infarction: an analysis of 83 patients with prognostic studies in 44 cases undergoing a massive small-bowel resection. 339 20

The results of a consecutive series of 24 patients reoperated for coronary bypass grafting between May 1977 and February 1983 are reported. The overall incidence of reoperation was 1.4 p. 100 (24 out of 1 716 cases); the incidence is tending to increase (2.3 p. 100 in 1982). Preoperative assessment revealed the persistence of cardiovascular risk factors: 75 p. 100 of patients had continued to smoke; 61 p. 100 had persistent hyperlipidaemia. The usual presenting syndrome was recurrence of chest pain (21 out of 24 cases) leading to control coronary arteriography on the results of which the surgical indication was based. The average time between the two operations was 38.7 months. The patients were classified into two groups; early reoperation (6 cases) for a technical problem or incomplete revascularisation, and late reoperation (8 cases) for disease of the graft and atherosclerosis. Progression of coronary atherosclerosis was the major long-term cause of occlusion of the saphenous graft (10-14 cases). The arteries most commonly bypassed at reoperation were the left anterior descending and right coronary arteries (12 times each). Reoperation comprised single bypass (13 cases), double bypass (10 cases) and triple bypass (1 case) with an average of 1.5 grafts per patient. The most commonly used vein was the internal saphenous vein (32 out of 36 grafts). Myocardial protection was insured by cardioplegia (13 cases) and intermittent clamping (10 cases) after cooling (general hypothermia at 22 degrees C). Global reoperative mortality (4 p. 100) was higher than for elective primary coronary surgery (2.3 p. 100). The incidence of perioperative infarction was 8 p. 100.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Reoperation after saphenous aortocoronary bypass]. 391 77

The incidence of coronary artery reoperations averaged 2.7% from 1967 through 1979. In a mean interval of 51 months between operations, three-vessel disease increased from 24% to 63%, and 31% of these 500 consecutive patients lost previously normal left ventricular function. Three angiographic indication groups were identified: (1) progressive coronary atherosclerosis, 247 (51%); (2) graft failure, 147 (29%); and (3) a combination of progressive coronary atherosclerosis and graft failure, 96 (19%). Angina recurred earlier in patient with graft failure, mean 17 months compared with a mean of 37 months for the other groups. Twenty (4%) operative deaths occurred. The series is divided into 387 patients operated upon under normothermic anoxic arrest and 113 with systemic hypothermia and cold cardioplegia. In the cardioplegia group, perioperative myocardial infarction was 2.7% in comparison with 7.8% for patients with anoxic arrest (p = 0.055). The number of grafts per patient increased from 1.0 to 1.9 and blood usage decreased from 11 units to 2.7 units. After a mean follow-up of 42 months, angina was relieved or improved in 86%. Recatheterization of 104 patients after a mean interval of 19 months showed a 79% vein graft patency rate and a 97% mammary artery graft patency rate. Grafting performed for graft failure (47) yielded an 85% patency rate. Actuarial 5 year survival was 87.4% for those with progressive atherosclerosis, 89.4% for patients with graft failure, and 91.5% for the combined indication group. Clinical improvement, graft patency, and long-term survival are nearly equal among the indication groups. Palliation derived from these reoperations approaches that achieved after primary revascularization.
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PMID:Late clinical and arteriographic results in 500 coronary artery reoperations. 697 75

Among 172 cases of coronary artery bypass grafting, 9 cases (5%) revealed severely atherosclerotic ascending aorta. In 3 of the 9 cases, total aortic cross-clamping in the distal anastomoses of saphenous vein graft (SVG) and partial aortic clamp in the proximal anastomoses of SVG were performed. In 1 case with this technique, cerebral infarction was occurred. In 4 cases, total aortic cross-clamping in the distal and proximal anastomoses of SVG was performed. In 2 of these cases with this technique, cerebral infarctions were occurred. Hypothermic circulatory arrest was performed in 2 of the rest. In one case that was predicted to have atherosclerosis of ascending aorta prior to operation, the left internal thoracic artery was anastomosed to the left anterior descending, and SVG to the right coronary artery with hypothermia and ventricular fibrillation. And during the proximal anastomoses of SVG, hypothermic circulatory arrest without aortic clamping was initiated. In another case, atherosclerosis of ascending aorta was noted after aortic cross-clamping. Then the aorta was declamped, hypothermic circulatory arrest was established, the aorta was opened, the diseased segment was resected, and proximal anastomoses of SVG was performed to Dacron patch which was implanted for aortic wall. There were no cerebral infarction in last two patients.
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PMID:[Coronary artery bypass grafting in cases with the atherosclerotic ascending aorta]. 756 18

We have used retrograde arterial perfusion of the superior vena cava as an adjunct to deep hypothermia and systemic circulatory arrest for intraoperative cerebral protection in 43 adult patients (18 of whom were 70 years old or older). The indications for the use of circulatory arrest were thoracic aortic operations (37 patients) and atherosclerosis or calcification of the ascending aorta (6 patients) in patients needing aortic valve or coronary operations. In all patients systemic hypothermia (16 degrees to 18 degrees C) was achieved with cardiopulmonary bypass and the systemic arterial circulation was arrested. Retrograde arterial perfusion of the superior vena cava was established through a wire-reinforced venous cannula (with a superior vena cava tourniquet) at a temperature of 15 degrees C. In 36 patients a separate roller pump system was used for the retrograde cerebral perfusion. Central venous pressure was monitored at 25 to 30 mm Hg; mean flow rate was 250 ml/min. Periods of circulatory arrest and retrograde cerebral perfusion ranged from 4 to 110 minutes (mean 38 minutes), and for seven patients the period of circulatory arrest was longer than 60 minutes. Four postoperative deaths occurred, one related to stroke in a patient who had an aortic dissection during coronary surgery and the others related to noncerebral complications. Three nonfatal cerebral complications occurred, although all had completely resolved by late follow-up. Advantages of retrograde cerebral perfusion are (1) simplicity of use and avoidance of vascular trauma, (2) excellent exposure, (3) retrograde flow that minimizes embolization of air and atherosclerotic debris, and (4) effective cerebral oxygen delivery. Retrograde cerebral perfusion appears to be an important adjunct to hypothermia and circulatory arrest not only for patients undergoing operation for ascending aorta and aortic arch disease but also for patients with diffuse aortic atherosclerosis undergoing coronary or valve operations.
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PMID:Systemic hypothermia and circulatory arrest combined with arterial perfusion of the superior vena cava. Effective intraoperative cerebral protection. 771 22


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