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)

Many small bowel abnormalities selectively involve the mesenteric or antimesenteric borders of small intestinal loops solely or predominantly. This report documents the roentgen localization and diagnosis of a variety of intraabdominal disease states by their effects specifically on the mesenteric or antimesenteric margins of small bowel loops. The conditions with selective or predominant involvement of either the mesenteric or antimesenteric borders include diverticulosis, Meckel's diverticulum, intestinal duplication, seeded metastases, hematogenous metastases, regional enteritis, lymphoma, and intestinal ischemia and intramural bleeding.
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PMID:Clinical involvement of mesenteric and antimesenteric borders of small bowel loops. II. Radiologic interpretation of pathologic alterations. 82 5

Episodic cerebro or retinovascular ischemic events without apparent cause occur in patients with cancer. We report a patient in remission from lymphoma whose multiple episodes of presumed ocular ischemia occurred in the setting of a circulating lupus anticoagulant. Symptoms resolved following therapy with Warfarin.
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PMID:Visual scotomata resulting from lupus anticoagulant in a patient with lymphoma in remission. 172 57

Episodic cerebro or retinovascular ischemic events without apparent cause occur in patients with cancer. We report a patient in remission from lymphoma whose multiple episodes of presumed ocular ischemia occurred in the setting of a circulating lupus anticoagulant. Symptoms resolved following therapy with Warfarin.
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PMID:Visual scotomata resulting from lupus anticoagulant in a patient with lymphoma in remission. 191 49

Radiographic studies have a major role to play in patients undergoing lung transplantation. A review of the findings associated with the reimplantation response, acute rejection, bronchiolitis obliterans, ischemia-induced air-way complications, and cyclosporine-associated lymphoma, as well as the pulmonary and cardiac change following double lung transplantation, has been presented. It should also be kept in mind that this group of patients is also subject to all of the usual problems associated with thoracic surgery, such as infection, atelectasis, pleural effusion, and pneumothorax, conditions for which radiologic assessment is crucial.
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PMID:Radiologic assessment after lung transplantation. 218 67

Ultrasonography offers direct imaging of the bowel wall and allows dynamic evaluation of peristalsis. It helps to differentiate eosinophilic gastroenteritis from regional enteritis and lymphoma, displays a typical appearance in intussusception and is quite specific in the afferent loop syndrome, closed-loop obstruction and lymphedema. It may be helpful in ischemia of the bowel and in the evaluation of acute appendicitis.
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PMID:Current status of small-bowel ultrasound. 219 34

We reviewed the transpulmonary gradient, pulmonary arterial systolic pressure, pulmonary vascular resistance (Wood units), and pulmonary vascular resistance index (Wood units X Body surface area), recorded preoperatively in 109 recipients aged 44.6 +/- 13.5 (mean +/- SD) years who underwent orthotopic heart transplantation between March 1984 and March 1988, to identify which measure of pulmonary hypertension most accurately predicts poor outcome after orthotopic heart transplantation. These recipients were followed up as many as 57 (24.7 +/- 14.5) months after their transplant procedure. Preoperative hemodynamic values were as follows: transpulmonary gradient, 10.4 +/- 4.7 mm Hg; pulmonary artery systolic pressure, 53.6 +/- 14.8 mm Hg; pulmonary vascular resistance, 2.7 +/- 1.8 Wood units; pulmonary vascular resistance index, 4.9 +/- 2.7. Nineteen recipients died within 1 year after orthotopic heart transplantation. Causes of death were acute rejection (8), chronic rejection (1), infection (2), nonspecific orthotopic heart transplant failure (4), bowel ischemia (1), pancreatitis (1), lymphoma (1), and liver failure (1). Preoperative pulmonary arterial systolic pressure, pulmonary vascular resistance, and pulmonary vascular resistance index were not predictive of 1-month, 6-month, or 1-year mortality. One-month mortality rates of orthotopic heart transplant recipients with transpulmonary gradient greater than or equal to 12 mm Hg and of those with transpulmonary gradient less than 12 mm Hg were not significantly different (11% vs 3%; p = 0.12). The 6-month mortality rate of orthotopic heart transplant recipients with transpulmonary gradient greater than or equal to 12 mm Hg, however, was five times greater than that of orthotopic heart transplant recipients with transpulmonary gradient less than 12 mm Hg (24% vs 5%; p = 0.003), and 12-month mortality of orthotopic heart transplant recipients with transpulmonary gradient greater than or equal to 12 mm Hg was increased sevenfold when compared with that of orthotopic heart transplant recipients with transpulmonary gradient less than 12 mm Hg (36% vs 5%; p = 0.0005). These results suggest that presently used measures of pulmonary hypertension do not predict mortality in the first month after orthotopic heart transplantation, but that elevated preoperative transpulmonary gradient is associated with a significant increase in mortality at 6 and 12 months after orthotopic heart transplantation. Prospective randomized trials are needed to determined whether extended preload and afterload reduction before and/or after transplant will favorably influence long-term prognosis of orthotopic heart transplant recipients with elevated preoperative transpulmonary gradient.
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PMID:Influence of preoperative transpulmonary gradient on late mortality after orthotopic heart transplantation. 223 Oct 91

Multiple extremity gangrene developed in five patients as a complication of dopamine therapy. The clinical conditions were (1) penetrating chest trauma requiring pneumonectomy with postoperative sepsis, (2) cardiac arrest with aspiration pneumonia, (3) lymphoma with sepsis, (4) Klebsiella pneumonia, and (5) myocardial infarction. The development of acrocyanosis leading to gangrene occurred at dopamine dosages of 5.1 to 10.2 micrograms/kg/min. The alpha-adrenergic vasoconstriction effects of dopamine would not be expected from the doses employed in these patients. Thus, other factors beside pure alpha vasoconstriction are responsible for tissue necrosis after the use of dopamine. We believe that the embolic complications of disseminated intravascular coagulation and hypovolemia are serious risk factors in the development of dopamine gangrene. Peripheral vasoconstriction from dopamine, even at low doses, may set the stage for thrombotic complications of disseminated intravascular coagulation and lead to tissue damage. In laboratory models of disseminated intravascular coagulation, an alpha-adrenergic drug is required to produce peripheral ischemic tissue damage. Treatment of tissue ischemia related to dopamine depends on early recognition of acrocyanosis. Phentolamine, an alpha blocker, has been recommended for treating dopamine ischemia, either through local instillation into ischemic tissues or intravenous infusion. We recommend a high index of suspicion for, and early treatment of, underlying consumptive coagulopathy in all patients requiring dopamine.
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PMID:Dopamine gangrene. Association with disseminated intravascular coagulation. 730 16

Imaging studies play a major role in patients undergoing lung transplantation. These patients are subject to unusual problems, such as the reimplantation response, acute rejection, bronchiolitis obliterans, ischemia-induced airway complications, and immuno-suppression-associated lymphoma. In addition, these patients are also subject to all of the usual problems associated with thoracic surgery, including atelectasis, infection, pneumothorax, and pleural effusion, all conditions for which radiologic assessment is crucial.
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PMID:Radiologic assessment after lung transplantation. 802 73

We present the clinical, morphological and neuropathological findings in a 44-year-old male suffering from the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) (CDC stage IV C2) who presented with rapidly progressive right-side hemiparesis and developed hemianopia and aphasia. Scans showed multiple, not contrast-enhancing, not space-occupying echo-intensive lesions in T2-weighted MR-imaging. No hint for an opportunistic infection, necrotizing vasculitis or vascular disease was found. All therapeutic regimens failed and 8 weeks after onset of neurological symptoms the patient died because of cardiorespiratory arrest. Post-mortem examination excluded opportunistic infection, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, lymphoma, vasculitis and ischemia of the brain. In the presence of an unusually high amount of HIV-infected macrophages at immunohistochemical examination, the overall pathological findings were atypical both for HIV encephalitis and HIV leukoencephalopathy. We describe a pathologically distinct new form of HIV associated encephalopathy.
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PMID:A pathologically distinct new form of HIV associated encephalopathy. 815 18

A 70-year-old patient with a 6 x 6 x 12 cm mass involving the mesentery root is discussed. The pseudotumorous infiltration was detected by ultrasound done because of nonspecific abdominal symptoms and weight loss. Laparoscopic biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of mesenteric panniculitis. The primary histologic criterion is infiltration of the mesenterium by foamy lipid-laden macrophages, clusters of lymphocytes and fibrosis. The majority of cases follow a benign course and need no therapy, but co-existence of lymphoma has been reported. There have been few cases where panniculitis with progressive fibrosis changed into retractile mesenteritis with shortening of the mesenterium and compression of mesenteric vessels with partial or complete intestinal obstruction or ischemia requiring surgery. Few reported cases of severe and progressive disease have been treated with prednisone and azathioprine or cyclophosphamide.
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PMID:[Mesenteric panniculitis]. 834 99


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