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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The problem of altered hemostasis remains a major challenge during thoracic aortic surgery. Bleeding is associated with a marked increase in morbidity and mortality. The hemostatic derangements are caused by multiple interrelated factors including interference with the vascular integrity, extensive surgical dissection, transient need for complete inhibition of the normal coagulation process, large blood products and fluid requirements, hemodilution, hypothermia, extensive
ischemia
and reperfusion, activation of systemic inflammatory responses, interference with fibrinolysis, and the use of extracorporeal circulation systems. Acquired
coagulopathy
must be specifically diagnosed and treated. Platelet deficiencies, both qualitative and quantitative, are the most predictable and consistent disturbance in the hemostatic function and the most common cause of intraoperative and postoperative bleeding. Precise surgical technique is essential to prevent blood loss. Topical agents should not be used for and cannot correct imperfections in surgical technique. Nonspecific measurements that are useful to decrease intraoperative blood loss include strict control of blood pressure and hemodynamic status, the induction of mild controlled hypotension, and the reversal of hypothermia. Rewarming may produce clear procoagulant effects by improving the efficacy of platelets and clotting factors. Platelet dysfunction can be reduced by several pharmacological interventions including acid aminocaproic, desmopressin and aprotinin; however, efficacy and safety are still being established. The most important factorS regarding safety in thoracic aortic surgery are a secure suture line and the experience of the surgical and anesthesiology teams.
...
PMID:Individual strategies of hemostasis for thoracic aortic surgery. 927 49
We treated a neonate in intractable cardiac failure due to a vein of Galen malformation. She manifested severe multiple organ failure. Perioperative problems are cardiac failure, respiratory failure, renal as well as hepatic dysfunction, and
coagulopathy
. Direct clipping of the feeding arteries improved her symptoms. Anesthetic problems encountered in this patient are massive bleeding and drastic circulatory changes while clipping the feeding arteries, increased intracranial pressure and brain
ischemia
, and other underlying complications; hepatic and renal dysfunction, respiratory failure and
coagulopathy
.
...
PMID:[Anesthetic and perioperative management of a neonatal vein of Galen malformation with multiple organ failure]. 928 69
Repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms may require aortic occlusion above the renal arteries. Despite fears of renal, hepatic and intestinal
ischemia
, recent publications have suggested that when repair would be difficult or impossible with infrarenal aortic clamping, supraceliac clamping may not be associated with significantly increased morbidity. Between February 1985 and January 1994, 169 patients underwent elective or urgent (symptomatic but not ruptured) repair of infra- or juxtarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm. Twenty-three patients (14%) required supraceliac clamping for juxtarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm, inflammatory abdominal aortic aneurysm, or other difficult exposure problems. Supraceliac clamping and infrarenal aortic clamping patients were indistinguishable with respect to age, gender, abdominal aortic aneurysm diameter, and other co-morbidities. There was a trend toward more frequent use of supraceliac clamping in urgent operations. Preoperative angiography was used selectively and was obtained more often in supraceliac clamping patients, reflecting suspected juxtarenal or renal involvement based on computed tomography findings, but the decision to employ supraceliac clamping was made at surgery. Mean (s.d.) supraceliac clamping clamp time was 22(5) (range 12-30) min. Similar numbers of supraceliac clamping and infrarenal aortic clamping patients required bifurcated grafts, operative times were comparable, and numbers of early complications were similar in the two groups. Transfusion requirements were slightly greater and length of stay was insignificantly shorter in supraceliac clamping patients (due to a few prolonged hospital stays in infrarenal aortic clamping patients). No supraceliac clamping patient required dialysis or suffered clinically apparent hepatic failure,
coagulopathy
, or intestinal
ischemia
. There were no operative deaths and all patients were discharged from the hospital. Supraceliac clamping was not associated with greater perioperative morbidity and may have contributed to a lack of mortality by facilitating repair of difficult abdominal aortic aneurysm. Supraceliac clamping should be considered for elective and urgent abdominal aortic aneurysm repair when there is inadequate length or quality of infrarenal aorta for anastomosis, severe associated pararenal atherosclerosis, inflammatory aneurysm, or previous aortic surgery. It is concluded that selective supraceliac clamping is safe and facilitates repair of difficult aortic problems.
...
PMID:Supraceliac versus infrarenal aortic cross-clamp for repair of non-ruptured infrarenal and juxtarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm. 929 62
During a 5-year period, superior mesenteric vein (SMV) thrombosis was detected with computed tomography (CT) in six patients shortly after an appendectomy. No sign of SMV was present at appendectomy, and a period of more than 2 weeks free of clinical symptoms had elapsed between the appendectomy and the onset of the SMV thrombosis. In four cases, the appendicitis was complicated. These patients had nonspecific signs and symptoms, although two of them had elevation of blood hepatic enzyme levels. In all cases, postcontrast CT demonstrated enlargement of the SMV, with well-defined enhancement of the vascular wall and an intraluminal clot. In one case, CT showed extension of the thrombus to the portal vein with the presence of low-attenuation areas in the liver, consistent with hepatic infarcts. Two patients had predisposing diseases: idiopathic hypersplenism in one case and chronic hepatic disease in the other. SMV thrombosis is a possible complication of appendicitis, and early appendectomy in appendicitis can prevent this complication. Moreover, as in any abdominal surgery, early appendectomy may be complicated by thrombosis of the SMV, thus creating problems of postoperative diagnosis. The complication is more frequent when the initial operation is performed under difficult conditions (peritonitis), or when the patient presents with a
coagulopathy
. CT is useful in the diagnosis of SMV thrombosis, thus leading to early management with anticoagulant therapy, with a view to avoiding complications such as intestinal
ischemia
, portal vein thrombosis, and hepatic infarction.
...
PMID:Computed tomography of superior mesenteric vein thrombosis following appendectomy. 992 85
The aims of this study were to investigate current results of surgical treatment for elderly patients with ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) and to define factors associated with mortality. The study included 112 patients aged 75 years or older who were operated on for a ruptured AAA. The surgeries took place from January 1995 to December 1996 in 21 hospitals in Spain. Variables that could be related to death were retrospectively analyzed by entering data into SPSS statistical software. These variables included sex, age, diabetes, hypertension, cardiopathy, pulmonary obstructive disease, renal dysfunction, symptomatic cerebrovascular disease, peripheral occlusive disease, peripheral aneurysms, hematocrit on admission, preoperative hypotension, loss of consciousness, cardiac arrest, AAA location, aneurysm size, type of rupture, place of aortic cross-clamping, type of graft, use of cell saver, technical complications, intraoperative blood loss, and transfusion requirements. Postoperative complications were also considered, including renal failure, sepsis,
coagulopathy
, cardiac complications, pulmonary complications, colon
ischemia
, prosthetic graft complications, and need for reoperation. For univariate statistical analysis, the Student's t-test, Mann-Whitney test, and chi-square test were used. Those variables showing statistical significance were entered into a multivariate logistic regression model. The results of these analyses indicate that in elderly patients undergoing surgery for ruptured AAA have a high operative mortality. Comorbid factors, however, were not identified as independent predictors of death. Surgery should not be denied these patients and selective screening should be contemplated.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms in the elderly. 1054 13
This study was performed to determine whether human urinary soluble thrombomodulin plays a role in liver
ischemia
-reperfusion injury. Liver
ischemia
was induced in two groups of dogs. Group 1 was exposed to 60 min
ischemia
, and group 2 was exposed to 60 min
ischemia
after preischemic administration of human urinary soluble thrombomodulin. In group 1, the thrombin-antithrombin complex and hyaluronic acid were significantly elevated after
ischemia
, compared with the preischemic values. While liver issue blood flow and the plasmin-alpha(2)-plasmin inhibitor complex significantly decreased, AST, ALT and m-AST dramatically increased after reperfusion. In group 2, the increase in the thrombin-antithrombin complex and hyaluronic acid was significantly suppressed, and AST, ALT and liver tissue blood flow significantly improved, compared with group 1. Histologically, in group 2, the hepatic tissue structure, including endothelial cells, was relatively intact. These findings suggest that administration of thrombomodulin inhibits endothelial cell injury and
coagulopathy
and offers protection from liver
ischemia
-reperfusion injury.
...
PMID:Protective effect of human urinary thrombomodulin on ischemia- reperfusion injury in the canine liver. 1081 Feb 13
We investigated the effects of nafamostat mesilate, a synthetic protease inhibitor clinically used for patients with pancreatitis or disseminated intravascular
coagulopathy
, on NO synthesis and apoptosis in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-treated human trophoblasts. Nafamostat mesilate or aminoguanidine, an inhibitor of NO synthase, suppressed NO synthesis and apoptosis in trophoblasts induced by LPS. Both agents also suppressed matrix metalloproteinase-2 activity induced by LPS. LPS also stimulated secretion of IL-6 and IL-8 in cultured trophoblasts, which was suppressed by nafamostat mesilate. Protease inhibitors including nafamostat mesilate may be therapeutic agents for chorioamnionitis and various diseases including septic shock,
ischemia
-reperfusion injury in brain and heart, graft rejection, and acute phase inflammatory diseases, in which overproduction of NO or peroxynitrite is involved in tissue injury.
...
PMID:Nafamostat mesilate, a serine protease inhibitor, suppresses lipopolysaccharide-induced nitric oxide synthesis and apoptosis in cultured human trophoblasts. 1095 57
Computed tomography (CT) plays an important role in evaluation and management of primary renovascular disease. Nonenhanced CT is useful for demonstrating renal hemorrhage, renal parenchymal or vascular calcifications, and masses. Contrast material-enhanced CT is essential to identify global or regional nephrographic abnormalities resulting from the vascular process (eg, renal infarcts,
ischemia
secondary to renal artery stenosis, arteriovenous communications). In addition, renal manifestations of a systemic disease (eg, vasculitis, thromboembolic disease) can be seen at CT. In trauma, occlusion of the main renal artery can be accurately diagnosed with contrast-enhanced CT. In cases of spontaneous renal hemorrhage without an apparent cause (eg, vasculitis,
coagulopathy
), a careful CT study should be performed to exclude renal cell carcinoma. The presence of fat in a hemorrhagic renal mass larger than 4 cm in diameter is characteristic of angiomyolipoma complicated by hemorrhage. Acute renal vein thrombosis appears as a clot in a distended renal vein, whereas renal vein retraction with collateral vessels is highly indicative of chronic thrombosis. Helical CT, especially with multiplanar two-dimensional and three-dimensional reconstruction following an intravenous injection of iodinated contrast material, has greatly improved our ability to directly image the proximal renal arteries and detect vascular lesions.
...
PMID:CT evaluation of renovascular disease. 1099 21
A 72-year-old man underwent resection of an infrarenal aortic aneurysm; during postoperative recovery, multiorgan failure developed secondary to cholesterol emboli in several arteries. The initial sign consisted of patches of livedo in the lower limbs with pedal pulses, hematuria and hyperdynamic shock with high cardiac output and reduced vascular resistance. The clinical picture progressed to multiple organ failure with non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema, oliguric kidney failure,
coagulopathy
, necrotizing pancreatitis and colic
ischemia
. The patient died 15 days after surgery. The formation of multiple cholesterol emboli is a rare complication after aortic surgery, vascular catheterization or anticoagulant treatment. It is caused by cholesterol crystals measuring 100 to 200 mu that embolize and block small arteries. Diagnosis is difficult because the organs involved can be many and various. No specific treatment is available and the rates of morbidity and mortality are high.
...
PMID:[Multiple cholesterol athero-embolisms after resection of an abdominal aortic aneurysm]. 1117 70
The objective of this report was to analyze the current surgical results of operative treatment in patients suffering ruptured AAA (abdominal aortic aneurysms) and to define those independent predictive factors for mortality. During a period of 2 years, from January 1996 to December 1997, 144 patients operated on for ruptured AAA in 10 hospitals were included in a multicenter retrospective study. Among the collected variables concerning each patient, those with potential relation to surgical mortality were studied: gender, age, diabetes, hypertension, cardiopathy, pulmonary obstructive disease, preoperative renal dysfunction, symptomatic cerebrovascular disease, peripheral vascular disease, hematocrit on admission, preoperative hypotension < 80 mmHg, loss of consciousness, cardiac arrest, aortic aneurysm location (infrarenal versus non-infrarenal), iliac involvement, aneurysm size, type of rupture, left renal vein ligature, ligature of a patent inferior mesenteric artery, place of aortic cross-clamping, type of grafting, exclusion of both hypogastric arteries, venous technical complications, associated surgery, use of cell saver, intraoperative blood loss, and postoperative complications (renal failure, sepsis,
coagulopathy
, cardiac complications, pulmonary complications, colon
ischemia
, prosthetic graft complications, and need for reoperation). Those variables with statistical significance in the univariate analysis were introduced into a multivariate logistic regression model to determine the independent predictors of death. From our results we concluded that surgery for ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms continues to have an excessively high mortality rate. Even though some preoperative variables could be identified as predictors of mortality, an absolute mortality risk has not yet been determined and the decision to negate surgery should be individualized rather than taken on that basis only. Early diagnosis and treatment of symptomatic aneurysms would improve mortality figures and selective screening should be contemplated.
...
PMID:Factors increasing the mortality rate for patients with ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms. 1176 39
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