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

The incidence of nonobstructive colonic dilatation (NCD) is unknown, but the attendant mortality associated with perforation is nearly 50%. Patients with chronic renal failure and transplant recipients may manifest many of the conditions that have been implicated in the development of NCD. Mechanical obstruction and ischemic bowel disease must be eliminated as causes for colon dilatation. Over a four-year period eight patients (mean age 50 years) were treated for presumed NCD. Six patients with a mean cecal diameter of 12.8 cm were treated initially with colonoscopy. Five patients (83%) had successful endoscopic decompression; of the three remaining patients, one underwent urgent ileocolectomy for cecal ischemia after unsuccessful endoscopic decompression, a second (cecal diameter 13 cm) had a tube cecostomy performed as an initial procedure, and the third (cecal diameter 9 cm) was managed successfully with enemas and nasogastric suction. Two deaths occurred in the series (25%), but both were unrelated to colon distension. No complications of colonoscopy were observed. The sequelae of massive NCD (cecal ischemia, perforation, and protracted sepsis) are poorly tolerated in the immunocompromised patient. Conservative management may be employed in patients with a cecal diameter of 9 cm, but urgent diagnostic and therapeutic colonoscopy is recommended for patients with a cecal diameter of 12 cm or greater. Operative tube cecostomy may be necessary if colonoscopic decompression is unsuccessful or cannot be performed.
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PMID:Treatment alternatives in renal failure and renal transplantation patients with nonobstructive colonic dilatation. 634 13

A 26-year-old woman with enteric endometriosis presenting with cecocolic intussusception, a cecal mass on barium enema, and gastrointestinal hemorrhage is described. Laparotomy revealed cecocolic intussusception, ileocecal endometrial implants, and cecal mucosal ulceration presumed secondary to ischemia of the intussuscepted bowel. Histopathology showed serosal and subserosal endometrial implants without mucosal invasion. A review of the literature of endometrial bowel disease is presented.
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PMID:Ileocecal endometriosis presenting with abdominal pain and gastrointestinal bleeding. 660 98

To clarify the value of the serum inorganic phosphate concentration in the diagnosis of ischemic bowel disease, a retrospective study of 24 patients with various causes of intestinal ischemia was carried out. Only 25 percent of the patients had elevations of their serum phosphate concentrations. These patients had the combination of extensive bowel injury, acute renal insufficiency, and acidosis. Mortality was significantly increased in these patients. Thus, the serum phosphate concentration was not a sensitive indicator of ischemic bowel disease, but elevations did predict extensive injury and poor prognosis.
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PMID:Value of serum inorganic phosphate in the diagnosis of ischemic bowel disease. 688 53

Fifteen patients with ischemia of the colon are presented. The majority showed a similar clinical presentation with hematochezia, abdominal pain, and diarrhea in an elderly patient population having associated disease. Colonoscopy was abnormal in all patients studied. Three endoscopic stages were recognized; (1) acute stage characterized by petechiae, pallor, and hyperemia; (2) subacute stage consisting of ulceration and exudation; and (3) chronic stage characterized by stricture, decrease in haustrations, and mucosal granularity. Conventional barium enemas were abnormal and suggested ischemic colitis in six of 15 patients. Rigid proctoscopy was normal or demonstrated nonspecific proctitis in 12 of 15 patients studied. Colonoscopic biopsies demonstrated superficial inflammatory changes in all patients. Thirteen patients had complete mucosal healing endoscopically in 2 weeks to 3 months with stricture developing in four patients. Because ischemic colitis is a distinct subtype of ischemic bowel disease most often limited to the superficial mucosa, colonoscopy is an alternative and usually safe modality in the diagnosis of this entity and proved more accurate that conventional x-ray and proctoscopy.
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PMID:Colonoscopy in ischemic colitis. 729 23

Nonocclusive mesenteric ischemia (NOMI) is a poorly understood condition marked by progressive intestinal ischemia leading to infarction, sepsis, and death in a high proportion of patients. The mortality rate for this intestinal disorder remains high, even when the diagnosis is made early in the disease course. This paper presents a comprehensive review of NOMI with a detailed discussion of its history, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment.
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PMID:Current theories of pathogenesis and treatment of nonocclusive mesenteric ischemia. 772 Apr 58

There are numerous literature reports of oral contraceptive-induced (estrogen and progesterone) ischemic bowel disease. However, Premarin-induced (equine conjugated estrogen) intestinal ischemia has rarely been reported. We describe three cases of Premarin-induced ischemic colitis. In contrast to oral contraceptive-induced ischemic colitis, Premarin-induced ischemia is restricted to the colon, has not required surgical therapy, can have a chronic or chronic intermittent course, may be reversible despite continued usage of Premarin, and may present with nonspecific abdominal and colonic symptoms.
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PMID:Premarin-induced ischemic colitis. 796 54

The radiographic appearance of intestinal edema, including colonic edema, has been well described in the literature. Severe wall circumferential thickening can occur within the colon in a number of conditions. This includes edema secondary to colitis, allergy, ischemia, and infiltrative neoplastic processes. Edema may be secondary to low protein levels, as from protein losing enteropathy, nephrotic syndrome, and hepatic cirrhosis. The following case, in which there was severe ascending colonic wall thickening due to edema, is unusual in two respects: it had well-developed demonstrated "protective" right colonic varices and a normal protein level.
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PMID:CT demonstration of ascending colon varices. 818 Aug 60

Eight tests of hemostasis were measured in 233 horses with colic. Blood samples were obtained at admission and for 4 consecutive days of hospitalization. Data were analyzed retrospectively by outcome, by broad-category diagnosis group, by small intestinal disorder, and by smaller categories for comparing specific diseases. Nonsurviving horses and horses with the most severe forms of intestinal ischemia had changes interpreted as hypercoagulative, the intensity of which was increased on the first and second mornings (sample times 2 and 3) after admission, when most significant differences for results of specific tests were detected. Nonsurvivors had decreased antithrombin III activity and prolonged prothrombin and activated partial thromboplastin times; those with strangulating obstructions also had decreased protein C and plasminogen activities. During hospitalization and with survival, these changes tended to reverse. In most horses, regardless of diagnosis or outcome, concentration of fibrin degradation products and fibrinogen, and alpha 2-antiplasmin activity increased over time. Whether these changes reflected specific effects of colic or of the acute-phase response was not determined. In comparisons of small intestinal disorders (proximal enteritis, strangulations, and impactions), diagnostically distinguishing features were not found. Likewise, in comparisons of specific diseases (small vs large intestinal impaction, proximal enteritis vs colitis, small vs large intestinal obstruction), diagnostically distinguishing features were not found.
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PMID:Analysis of hemostasis in horses with colic. 840 38

Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) commonly involves the renal and carotid arteries. However, visceral arterial involvement is rare. We report a 39-yr-old male who developed ischemic bowel disease twice (once in the jejunal artery and once in the sigmoid artery) as a result of FMD. First ischemic change occurred in the sigmoid colon with manifestation of melena and abdominal pain, and the second occurred in the jejunum, with severe abdominal pain and intestinal stenosis. Angiography revealed the "string of beads" appearance, characteristic of FMD, in those two arteries responsible for the ischemic lesions. Fasting therapy with intravenous hyperalimentation improved both lesions, but secondary stenosis caused by ischemia occurred in the jejunum. Surgical resection of the stenotic jejunum was required. Although the abnormal arteries that had been imaged as a "string of beads" on angiography were not resected, the postoperative course has been uneventful and satisfactory.
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PMID:Fibromuscular dysplasia of the visceral arteries. 875 76

The objectives of this study were to determine whether an elevated serum phosphate level is predictive of acute ischemic bowel disease and whether it serves as a prognostic indicator in patients with intestinal ischemia. A retrospective chart review was performed at an urban teaching hospital emergency department. Twenty-three patients with documented acute ischemic bowel disease from 1990 through 1994 were compared with 27 patients with acute abdominal disease entities unrelated to intestinal ischemia. The sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of serum phosphate were 26%, 85%, 60%, and 58% respectively. Levels of phosphate in patients with intestinal ischemia versus controls were 4.20 versus 3.41 mg/dL (P = .1338). The length of bowel necrosis in the experimental group with elevated phosphate versus normal phosphate level was 57.53 cm versus 99.00 cm (P = .4132). Although not statistically significant, linear regression revealed slightly positive correlations in those with elevated phosphate versus normal phosphate level (in the experimental group) with the length of bowel necrosis and duration of hospital stay as r= .155 (P = .4813) and r= .134 (P= .5418), respectively. Serum phosphate level independently has no diagnostic or prognostic value in acute ischemic bowel disease.
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PMID:The role of serum phosphate level and acute ischemic bowel disease. 876 59


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