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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Ischemic hepatitis is not an uncommon complication of reversible severe hypotension or cardiac failure. The prognosis usually is determined by the cause of the initial hypotension or cardiac failure, rather than the subsequent hepatic dysfunction. We report a retrospective analysis of nine patients with ischemic hepatitis in which previously unreported clinical and biochemical abnormalities are noted. The clinical and biochemical course of the patients were reviewed until recovery or death from ischemic hepatitis. All the patients had a rapid striking elevation of aspartate aminotransferase, and lactic dehydrogenase, with an equally rapid resolution of these parameters. Abnormal serum glucose levels occurred in six patients (none of whom had a prior carbohydrate intolerance). Insulin therapy was given to three patients for a limited period. Renal impairment was manifest in all nine patients, and it resolved spontaneously within 10 days. Altered mental status was detected in six patients; the changes reverted to normal within 7 days of their onset. A preexisting anemia (hemoglobin less than 11.0 g/dl) was noted on admission in four patients, and it did not appear to potentiate the manifestations of the hepatic ischemia. We conclude that ischemic hepatitis should be anticipated in all patients with a recent history of systemic hypotension. It should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with unexplained hepatitis; the early massive rise in lactic dehydrogenase, the rapid fall in transaminases, and the early mild/moderate renal failure strongly suggest ischemic hepatitis. Patients with ischemic hepatitis can manifest reversible renal failure, mental confusion, and hyperglycemia which may require insulin for its control.
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PMID:Ischemic hepatitis: widening horizons. 848 Jul 56

Eleven cases of subcapsular hepatic necrosis were found in 47 hepatic transplantation patients who underwent CT examination between the second and 14th postoperative day. CT examinations of all 11 cases showed nonenhancing hypodense subcapsular areas with irregular contours in the liver. Major vessels were free of obstruction. Anatomic correlation, possible in one case, confirmed the diagnosis. Size disproportion between the graft and the recipient abdominal cavity reduced hepatic blood flow and caused abnormal pressure points. One or both of these factors could result in ischemia in subcapsular areas and explain the subcapsular necrosis. Although it has good prognosis without treatment, subcapsular hepatic necrosis is important to recognize to avoid confusion with liver necrosis after vascular thrombosis.
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PMID:Subcapsular hepatic necrosis in liver transplantation: CT appearance. 201 64

This article discusses the types of reperfusion injury, some of the causes of the injury and the possible role of the radical scavengers in protecting against it. The methodological problems that have plagued this field are explored and some answers put forward, although we are sure that further questions will have been raised. There are now reasons to question the use of the tetrazolium staining procedure which has become the "gold standard" for measurements of infarct size. It seems likely that it is adequate only as a screening procedure, and even then will be associated with a troublesome number of false positives. Collateral flow is an important determinant of infarct size and simultaneous measurements of collateral flow are essential in the interpretation of the effects of drugs on infarct size. The limitations of the various animal models are important when relating experimental findings to the clinical condition. After a decade of research, reperfusion injury is itself still under question, and there remains confusion as to the role that oxygen-derived free radicals may play in the ischemic/reperfused myocardium. However, we believe that, from the experimental data available, oxygen derived free radicals are involved in the overall pathophysiology of ischemia and reperfusion, although the full extent remains to be clarified and the therapeutic implications explored.
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PMID:Current research views on myocardial reperfusion and reperfusion injury. 210 3

Measurement of arterial flow is a very old practice, and intra-arterial recordings of pressure and flow have long served as a reference for experimental studies (fig. 1). The definition of a hemodynamic state is inconceivable unless these two parameters are associated. The electromagnetic method using an intra-arterial sensor measures pulsatile flow. Now, technological advances have led to the appearance of other methods providing measurement of mean (plethysmography) and nonpulsatile flow. As a result, there has been considerable confusion between mean arterial and pulsatile arterial flow (Fig. 2). Various studies have emphasized the physiological importance of pulsatile arterial flow and thus the interest in measuring it. The recording of mean flow has often proved disappointing because values are comparable in groups of normal subjects and those with arterial disease. Mean arterial flow can be measured by isotopic methods and plethysmography. Xenon-133 clearance is the isotopic method most often used. Since determination of microcirculatory flow at rest proved of no use, it was necessary to add a hyperemia test reactive to ischemia to differentiate patients with artery disease from normal subjects. Methods involving technetium and thallium have been little used since they require the presence of a nuclear medicine center and are not easily reproducible. There are numerous plethysmographic methods, but only those are studied here which allow measurement of arterial flow. Plethysmography by venous occlusion measures arterial flow by recording the increase in limb volume. The sensor is a mercury strain gauge.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Measurement of arterial flow in the limbs: plethysmography, isotopes, electromagnetic methods]. 217 49

1. Electrophysiological techniques were used to characterize responses of afferent fibers in pelvic nerve of adult, virgin female rats to mechanical or chemical stimulation of internal reproductive organs and to mechanical stimulation of other pelvic organs. 2. In an in vivo barbiturate-anesthetized preparation, pelvic nerve afferent fibers responded to a wide variety of mechanical stimulation applied to restricted regions of the vaginal canal, caudal uterus (body and cervix), bladder, ureter, colon, or anus. 3. Single-fiber mechanoreceptive fields were invariably confined to a single organ. Notably, responses could be evoked not only by gentle stimulation of the unit's receptive field directly on the organ itself, but also by stimulating the field indirectly with intense stimulation through the appropriate part of a contiguous organ. This innervation feature is consistent with the separability of pelvic organ functions under innocuous conditions but their confusion under noxious ones. 4. Receptive fields on the reproductive organs extended from the caudal edge of the vagina to the uterine body (including the cervix) but were most often located in the fornix (vaginocervical junction). Most units had no or low levels of spontaneous activity. Their responses to mechanical stimuli were usually slowly or moderately adapting and time-locked to the stimulus. 5. Fibers with vaginal receptive fields (including the fornix) responded best either to vaginal distension with a balloon or, more often, to a probe moving along the internal vaginal surface in a direction toward the cervix. They were observed most frequently during the proestrus stage of the rat's estrous cycle. These fibers, therefore, seem particularly suited for relaying information about stimuli that occur during mating. 6. Fibers with receptive fields on the uterine cervix and body responded best to static pressure and were observed less frequently than those with vaginal fields, regardless of estrous stage. They were, however, sensitized by hypoxia. In addition, irritation of the uterus increased the probability of observing them. These fibers, therefore, may exert their primary function during reproductive conditions different from those of virgin rats, such as parturition. 7. Response activity of most of the mechanoreceptive afferent fibers supplying reproductive organs increased as the stimulus intensity increased into the noxious range; i.e., into a range in which the stimulus momentarily produced ischemia at the stimulus site. In addition, in an in vitro preparation, pelvic nerve fibers responded in a dose-dependent manner to injections through the uterine artery of bradykinin (BRAD) as well as to other algesic chemicals, 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) and KCl.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Functional properties of afferent fibers supplying reproductive and other pelvic organs in pelvic nerve of female rat. 231 44

The incidence of perioperative myocardial ischemia and associated cardiac complications in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) varies widely, as reported in the literature. Much of the confusion and contradictions surrounding this issue can be attributed to differences in populations studied, study protocols, and techniques employed to diagnose myocardial ischemia and infarction. Data obtained in recent years have indicated that a large proportion of intraoperative myocardial ischemic events are unrelated to hemodynamic aberrations. Coronary vasospasm and blood flow redistribution have both been suggested as important mechanisms for ischemia during anesthesia and surgery in patients with CAD. These findings challenge our concepts of how ischemia might be prevented by maintaining systemic hemodynamics within "normal limits". They also emphasize the importance of establishing new and more sensitive methods to detect myocardial ischemia in the operating room and recovery area. This paper focuses on myocardial ischemia related to coronary vasomotion during anesthesia and surgery.
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PMID:Coronary vasomotion during anesthesia. 265 73

Vascular occlusive disease of the rostral basilar artery (RBAS) causes a myriad of clinical signs and symptoms reflecting rostral brainstem-diencephalic and posterior hemispheric dysfunction. To help define the clinical profile, we prospectively studied 61 patients with clinical/neuroimaging evidence of RBAS during a 7-year period. Fourteen patients mirrored classic descriptions: severe visual, oculomotor and behavioral signs without prominent motoric dysfunction, uniformly poor prognosis, and intimate association with hypertension and prior episodes of vertebrobasilar ischemia (VBI). In contrast, 47 individuals had a reversible syndrome with excellent short-term functional recoveries, and were distinguished by a lower frequency and severity of hypertension, a greater incidence of arrhythmias in the young, and no history of VBI. All patients had important neurobehavioral abnormalities including an invariable acute confusional state. Diagnosis required the integrated assessment of neurobehavioral, ophthalmologic, and imaging tests. The clinical syndrome is more common and etiologically diverse than previously reported and is frequently unrecognized in the young and elderly who present with acute confusion.
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PMID:The rostral basilar artery syndrome: diagnosis, etiology, prognosis. 290 18

Recombinant gamma interferon (r-GIFN) demonstrates in vitro and in vivo characteristics that contrast with those of alpha and beta interferons. It has relatively weak antiviral properties, yet relatively potent immunomodulatory effects. A phase I trial was performed with r-GIFN (specific activity 2.6 X 10(6) IU/mg protein), administered as a continuous intravenous (IV) infusion over 24 hours for five days (Cl X 5) and repeated every 28 days. This schedule was chosen based on the short half-life of r-GIFN in animal systems and the in vitro augmentation of biologic effects with continuous exposure to interferons. Twenty-one patients with refractory solid tumors received 46 evaluable courses of therapy. The dose-limiting toxicities included fever, flu-like symptoms, cardiovascular toxicity, and neurotoxicity. The cardiovascular toxicity included hypotension and one episode of cardiac ischemia with chest pain. Neurotoxicity consisted of lethargy and confusion. These toxicities were reversible, and although dose-limiting, occurred sporadically throughout all dosage levels. Mild to moderately severe non-dose-limiting toxicities included nausea and vomiting, leukopenia, and liver function abnormalities. Other infrequent toxicities included hypocalcemia, diarrhea, constipation, and alopecia. The maximally tolerated dose of r-GIFN on this schedule is 0.5 X 10(6) IU/m2/d. Partial responses were seen in one patient with metastatic melanoma and in one patient with renal cell carcinoma. Toxicity and antitumor activity were seen at doses where interferon serum levels could not be detected by radioimmunoassay. In addition, the toxicity and antitumor activity seen were at much lower doses than previously described for shorter infusion schedules of other recombinant gamma interferon preparations. Differences in biologic activity of interferon preparations and/or differences in scheduling may account for this variability. Although this study defines a recommended phase II dose of r-GIFN based on the maximally tolerated dose, the optimal therapeutic index may exist at a lower dosage level.
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PMID:A phase I clinical trial of recombinant DNA gamma interferon. 310 84

The authors report the observation of a 61-year-old female patient who, following a right frontal-temporal ischemia, presented disorientation with respect to her surroundings. She was convinced during her hospital stay that her house had been transformed into a hospital. There was no evidence of intellectual confusion or deterioration, and the neuropsychological examination revealed visuo-spatial disturbances only. A low basal cerebral blood flow was found in the right anterior hemisphere which further decreased when the patient was asked where he was. It is hypothesized that confabulatory responses corresponded to a disinhibition of the left hemisphere from the control of the hemisphere dominant in dealing with visuo-spatial data.
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PMID:[The delusion of place: contribution of the measurement of cerebral deficit]. 326 38

The term "top of the basilar" has been used in reference to a group of signs and symptoms of midbrain, diencephalic, and posteroinferior hemispheric dysfunction. It has been attributed to ischemia in the territory of second- and third-order vessels that arise from the uppermost portion of the basilar artery. We report our experience with four patients who had alteration of consciousness, confusion, and vertical gaze paresis accompanied by other physical abnormalities. Extensive evaluation did not help in documenting the lesions or in understanding their pathogenesis. The top of the basilar syndrome is a not uncommon form of stroke and carries a variable prognosis. Treatment by anticoagulation may prevent further infarction in selected patients who are seen early.
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PMID:Altered sensorium, confusion, and vertical gaze paresis: the top of the basilar syndrome. 339 40


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