Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The clinical and histopathologic findings in 13 patients with lipomembranous changes in the subcutaneous adipose tissue as part of the inflammatory reaction are presented. Nine patients had clinical evidence of vascular disease and four had clinical evidence of connective tissue disease. Histopathologic evidence of endarteritis obliterans, venous stasis, and hemorrhage was present in more than half the patients, and the clinical lesion of liposclerosis was frequently present. These findings suggest that the histologic changes of lipomembranous panniculitis may be the result of an inflammatory reaction in patients who have the liposclerosis of venous insufficiency with connective tissue disease or previous leg ischemia or both.
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PMID:Lipomembranous changes in chronic panniculitis. 304 17

Periarteritis Nodosa (P.A.N.) is a systemic connective tissue disease with a variety of manifestations that includes ocular involvement in 20% of cases. The diagnosis of this condition is difficult due to the absence of any specific clinical signs or laboratory findings. However, histologic studies have demonstrated a segmental vasculitis that is often necrotic. Ocular findings frequently include choroidal involvement that is characteristic. Nevertheless, angiographic studies of this disease are extremely rare. The findings in three patients suspected of having P.A.N. are presented. Fluorescein angiography established the diagnosis of P.A.N. in two cases and ruled-out its presence in the third case. In the first case angiography demonstrated a retinal vasculitis with multiple arteriolar and capillary occlusions. There was also ischemic involvement of the choriocapillaris and a mild anterior optic nerve vasculitis. All findings resolved, leaving numerous Elschnig spots. In the second case the angiogram showed acute multifocal ischemia of the choriocapillaris. The ocular examination and fluorescein angiogram in the third case were entirely normal, thereby ruling-out P.A.N. on the basis of insufficient criteria. Acute multifocal choroidal ischemia is present in a variety of rare conditions: Toxemia of pregnancy, Disseminated Intravascular coagulopathy, Moskowitz Disease (T.T.P.), Leukemia and Malignant Hypertension. However, the presence of multifocal choroidal ischemia in the presence of a systemic connective tissue disorder strongly favors the diagnosis of P.A.N. The relative contributions of co-existent Malignant Hypertension and P.A.N. in producing choroidal ischemia are discussed. The spectrum of clinical manifestations and laboratory findings in P.A.N. as well as hypotheses concerning pathogenesis (immune-complex deposition) are described. Among all systemic vasculitis , only P.A.N., and rarely Scleroderma, feature choroidal involvement. This is possibly due to the fact that the degree of vasculitis in P.A.N. is sufficiently severe to cause clinically significant choroidal involvement.
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PMID:[Fluorescein angiography in the diagnosis of periarteritis nodosa]. 614 75

We describe 4 patients with coagulopathy and vasculitis that demonstrated marked tissue ischemia and necrosis. In the clinical setting of rapid evolution of vascular insufficiency, the possibility of combined vasculopathic processes should be considered. This is especially so in patients with underlying connective tissue disease such as systemic lupus erythematosus or rheumatoid arthritis, in which both vasculitis and antiphospholipid antibodies are frequently present. Treatment of both pathologic processes may be required to prevent progressive tissue ischemia and necrosis. The use of antiplatelet and/or anticoagulation should be given consideration in addition to immunosuppressive agents.
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PMID:The concomitant expression of vasculitis and coagulopathy: synergy for marked tissue ischemia. 800 3

A thirty-one-year-old woman with long-standing mixed connective tissue disease and severe obliterative vasculopathy of the digits developed digital thrombosis of the first three digits of the left hand after using an electric blow dryer. The digits remained cool, cyanotic, and painful for thirty-six hours before medical evaluation. She was given 100 mg recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) intravenously. Within one hour the blood flow to the digits returned, accompanied by severe intermittent vasospasm of the digits. The thumb did not necrose; however, the second and third digits required amputation. No improvement was noted in the patient's baseline Raynaud's phenomenon or digital pressures of the uninvolved digits after TPA treatment. This case documents the usefulness of TPA for digital thrombosis in the setting of vasculopathy of connective tissue disease. However, it does not support the utility of a single dose of TPA for severe Raynaud's phenomenon and recurrent digital ischemia in patients with connective tissue disease.
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PMID:Tissue plasminogen activator treatment of digital thrombosis in severe Raynaud's phenomenon--a case report. 832 85

Arterial occlusive disease of the upper extremity is most often due to posttraumatic occlusion of the ulnar artery. An embolic source of the ischemia should be considered most strongly when sudden ischemia or vasospasm is associated with atrial fibrillation or follows a myocardial infarction. Connective tissue disorders and several arteridities are infrequent causes of upper-extremity occlusive disease and can usually be detected by a thorough peripheral vascular examination and blood studies. Atherosclerosis of the upper extremity is usually localized to the region of the subclavian artery and can present as a subclavian steal syndrome or arm ischemia. Finally, upper-extremity venous occlusive disease occurs in association with the hypercoagulable state, venous endothelial injury, or arises in otherwise healthy patients because of venous impingement in the thoracic outlet.
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PMID:Occlusive vascular disorders of the upper extremity. 844 72

We report 10 patients with retinocochleocerebral vasculopathy and review the clinical and diagnostic considerations in previously reported patients with this uncommonly recognized disease. The clinical manifestations include acute and subacute multifocal and diffuse encephalopathic symptoms, hearing loss, and visual loss attributable to microangiopathy affecting the arterioles of the brain, retina, and cochlea. Diagnosis is facilitated by demonstration of retinal arteriolar occlusions without uveitis or keratoconjunctivitis, mid- to low-frequency unilateral or bilateral sensorineural hearing loss, and numerous small foci of increased signal in the white and gray matter on T2 weighted brain magnetic resonance imaging. Because many conditions may produce any combination of strokelike cerebral symptoms, encephalopathy, hearing loss, and visual loss, the differential diagnosis for retinocochleocerebral vasculopathy includes connective tissue disease, demyelinating disease, procoagulant state, infection, neoplasm, and more routine mechanisms of cerebral and retinal ischemia. Brain biopsy specimens demonstrate only minimal nonspecific periarteriolar chronic inflammatory cell infiltration with or without microinfarcts. The demonstration of subclinical arteriolar microangiopathy in muscle biopsy specimens, documented in 3 of our patients may assist in making the diagnosis. The clinical course appears to be monophasic. In addition to corticosteroids, treatment options include immunosuppressant agents (cyclophosphamide or azathioprine) aspirin, calcium channel blockers (nimodipine), intravenous immunoglobulin, and plasmapheresis. The etiology of the disease is unknown, but histopathologic and laboratory evidence suggests that an immune-mediated mechanism may be involved.
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PMID:Retinocochleocerebral vasculopathy. 946 61

Systemic vasculitis occurs in a heterogeneous group of primary disorders or can be a manifestation of infection, an adverse drug reaction, malignancy or a connective tissue disease. A vasculitic process should be suspected in patients with unexplained ischemia or multiple organ involvement, especially when such features as polymyalgia rheumatica, inflammatory arthritis, palpable purpura, glomerulonephritis or multiple mononeuropathy are also present. The clinical features of systemic vasculitis depend on the organs involved and, in turn, organ involvement is largely influenced by the size of the affected blood vessels. The diagnostic work-up should be tailored to the clinical situation and geared toward a tissue or angiographic diagnosis, bearing in mind that the findings from these studies are not always pathognomonic. Emphasis should also be placed on exclusion of a secondary process. The diagnosis of the specific type of vasculitis may be made on the basis of the clinical features and the histopathologic or angiographic findings. Initial therapy for most types of systemic vasculitis consists of high-dose corticosteroids, with the addition of immunosuppressive therapy in certain patients.
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PMID:An approach to diagnosis and initial management of systemic vasculitis. 1052 86

The long term course of thromboangiitis obliterans as well as frequency and extent of major or minor limb amputations depend almost exclusively on the smoking behaviour of the patients. Superficial phlebitis accompanying an acute relapse responds well to high-dose aspirin or NSAIDs. Critical limb ischemia is treated by intra-arterial or intravenous prostaglandins (Alprostadil, Iloprost). Lokal measures for finger, toe, or foot gangrene do not differ from comparable sequelae of atherosclerotic vascular disease. Revascularisation procedures (angioplasty, surgery) have a high rate of technical failure and are indicated only in rare atypical situations. Corticosteroids are the therapy of choice for both vasculitides of large muscular arteries, i.e. temporal arteritis (M. Horton) and Takayasu arteritis. Combination therapy is restricted to steroid refractory disease; while this is the exception in temporal arteritis, it occurs in up to 50% of patients with Takayasu arteritis. Critical limb ischemia due to giant cell arteritis may persist even if the inflammatory activity of the disease is well controlled. Revascularisation procedures in Takayasu arteritis may have good results; as with all other therapeutic measures in this disease, they should be provided by specialized centers. Treatment of Raynaud's phenomenon requires patient evaluation for signs or symptoms of an underlying disease, i.e. some kind of connective tissue disease. Strength and frequency of attacks depend on a number of different factors (triggers) which in a given patient may not be completely understood. Exposition prophylaxis for known triggers and vasodilator drugs are the main therapeutic measures in Raynaud's phenomenon. Careful documentation of disease activity provided, non-classical remedies (behavioural psychotherapy, acupuncture) may be attempted.
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PMID:[Special aspects of therapy of non-atherosclerotic vascular diseases]. 1066 28

Polyarteritis nodosa is one of the earliest forms of systemic vasculitis described. It is characterized by segmental necrotizing arterial lesions affecting medium-sized and small-sized arteries. Active necrotizing lesions are frequently associated with chronic reparative lesions. Current convention would exclude patients with necrotizing glomerular lesions from this category. An aneurysm may form when the arterial wall is sufficiently weakened by the necrotizing process. Any organ may be affected; however, pulmonary involvement is very uncommon. Significant potential exists for end organ injury resulting from ischemia, infarcts, and hemorrhage. A variety of other primary systemic vasculitidies, secondary forms, such as connective tissue disease associated, and organ limited forms, have been identified that may exhibit similar arterial lesions including aneurysm formation. Establishing a definitive diagnosis of polyarteritis nodosa is therefore challenging, and mandates dialogue between the pathologist and the clinician primed with pertinent clinical and laboratory data. Fortunately, with early diagnosis and aggressive treatment with cytotoxic agents, the prognosis of polyarteritis nodosa has substantially improved.
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PMID:Polyarteritis nodosa. 1129 89

Thrombotic microangiopathies (TMA) encompass various severe diseases characterized by microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and peripheral thrombocytopenia, associated with fever, neurological signs and renal involvement. Microvascular thrombosis is the typical lesion, and results in tissue ischemia. Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) and hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) are the two most classical forms. These two entities are clinically and histopathologically closely related. There is a body of evidence suggesting that endothelial cell injury is the initial event in TTP and HUS, and that it may be related to a large number of triggering factors, such as infection, connective tissue disease, drugs, cancer and chemotherapy, transplantation, and pregnancy. Endothelial cell injury enhances the release of ultra large forms of von Willebrand factor (ULvWF) multimers and other prothrombotic agents, such as plasminogen activator inhibitor and platelet activating factor, whereas it decreases the release of prostaglandin-I2, a strong inhibitor of platelet aggregation. Recently however, it has been shown that TTP and HUS were pathophysiologically distinct. Actually, TTP is associated with a deficiency in von Willebrand factor-cleaving protease, an enzyme involved in cleavage of ULvWF into circulating 200 kDa and 350 kDa fragments. This deficiency may be either congenital or acquired, and then related to an IgG inhibitory autoantibody. This protease deficiency may account for the high amounts of plasmatic ULvWF in TTP patients. In HUS, vWF-cleaving protease activity is found normal. HUS encompasses two distinct entities. Epidemic, or diarrhea-associated HUS, is associated with verotoxin or Shiga toxin-associated enterobacteriaceae. These toxins are directly responsible for endothelial cell injury. Sporadic HUS (also termed atypical HUS in children) is closely related to TTP, and shares the same triggering factors. Familial HUS has been associated in some cases with hypocomplementemia and factor H dysfunction, the pathophysiological role of which remains unclear. The study of the different triggering factors and predisposing factors may be useful to define different subsets of TMA, that may be characterized by their course and prognosis.
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PMID:[Pathophysiology of thrombotic microangiopathies: current understanding]. 1221 98


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