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

Eleven patients with vascular sequelae of thoracic outlet syndrome were operated on at the University of California, SanFrancisco, during the past 17 years. Five patients presented with episodes of ischemia of the arm and hand secondary to microemboli released from subclavian arterial lesions produced by chronic compression at the thoracic outlet. Treatment consisted of arterial reconstruction, removal of the compressive structure, and cervical sympathectomy to relieve or lessen distal ischemia. Four of the five patients had good or excellent results; one patient required amputation of the forearm. The results were inversely proportional to the extent of distal arterial embolic occlusions present at the time of surgical treatment. Six patients presented with symptoms of chronic venous hypertension. Four of the six had subclavian venous thrombosis and were treated by transaxillary resection of the first rib to decompress the collateral veins within the costoclavicular space. All four were symptomatically improved. Two patients had venous hypertension due to extrinsic compression of the subclavian vein. One patient became asymptomatic and the other was markedly improved after resection for external compression. In this small series transaxillary resection of the first rib has resulted in symptomatic improvement in chronic venous hypertension of the arm.
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PMID:Thoracic outlet syndrome. 46 6

Nine cases of microemboli of arterial origin to the upper extremity are reported. The source of emboli in five of these cases was in the subclavian artery compressed by osseous anomalies in the thoracic outlet. Three aneurysms, one in a subclavian vein graft and two traumatic false aneurysms in the hand, were also noted to be the sources of distal emboli. One unproved case of emboli from an atherosclerotic plaque of the subclavian artery is also reported. Chronicity of symptoms and delay in operation are often noted and lead to difficulties in surgical management. The compressing osseous structures causing the vascular lesion in the thoracic outlet syndrome must be resected, along with removal of the source of emboli. Cervicodorsal sympathectomy is often needed in cases of extensive thrombosis and/or long-standing ischemia. Embolectomy is usually a futile procedure when the main arterial trunk contains old, organized thrombus. Differential diagnostic problems between collagen vascular disease, vasculitis, vasospastic disease, and microembolic disease in cases of unilateral Raynaud's phenomenon are pointed out.
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PMID:Ischemia of the upper extremity due to noncardiac emboli. 56 Jan 30

Arterial damage, causing ischemia of the limb, occurs in less than 5 per cent of all instances of thoracic outlet syndrome. Arterial complications are usually associated with cervical ribs or rudimentary first ribs, but 12 per cent have occurred in patients with no osseous abnormality. The physiopathologic factors begin with compression of the subclavian artery which, in most patients, produces stenosis, poststenotic dilatation, formation of aneurysms and mural thrombosis. In other patients, aneurysms do not form, but the compression still causes stenosis, intimal injury and mural thrombosis. With either scenario, distal embolization can occur and produce signs and symptoms of ischemia that can limb-threatening. In this study, more than 200 patients reported previously and five additional sides in four patients were reviewed. Treatment depends upon the condition of the patient at presentation. Those with osseous abnormalities and no aneurysm or symptoms are not treated, while those with poststenotic dilatation or small aneurysms undergo rib resection only. Aneurysms more than twice the arterial diameter, intimal injury or mural thrombus are indications to resect, replace or bypass the subclavian artery. Patients who have had distal embolization and severe ischemic symptoms require, in addition to the aforementioned, distal thromboembolectomy, dorsal sympathectomy or both. Good results from treatment have been reported in 84 per cent of the 137 patients reported since 1970; 3 per cent required amputation and 3 per cent had cerebral emboli. Because the severe arterial complications were primarily the result of delayed therapy, they can best be avoided by early recognition, diagnosis and treatment.
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PMID:Review of arterial thoracic outlet syndrome with a report of five new instances. 194 97

Vascular reactivity to heat and cold was studied in 11 normal subjects without vascular disease and in 23 patients with Raynaud's phenomenon (etiologies: Raynaud's disease, scleroderma, thoracic outlet syndrome). The study of hand and digital temperatures and brachial artery blood flow was performed in ambiant conditions (room temperature 23.5 +/- 1 degree C) and after thermal (cold or warm exposure: 10, 33 and 40 degrees C), mechanical and metabolic modifications (with a wrist tourniquet). In these conditions, blood flow was studied at each temperature, before, during and after 3 minutes ischemia of the hand. Analysis of results showed that vasomotricity possibilities were preserved but that responses were not identical. Patients with primary Raynaud's phenomenon, and even more those with scleroderma as well, had reduced brachial artery blood flow after cooling (10 degrees C). After ischemia, maximal blood flow was also reduced. The microcirculatory disease existing in Raynaud's phenomenon limits the vasodilator capacity of hand vessels, but probably more in tissues with vascular lesions. Vasodilation seems to be limited during exposure to low well as high temperatures, but vasoconstriction capacity is not disturbed.
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PMID:[Comparison of humeral blood flow during rewarming and recooling of the hand in normal subjects or presenting Raynaud's phenomenon]. 268 59

The arteriograms of sixty-two patients with chronic ischemia of the hand and fingers were reviewed. Twelve patients were considered to have Raynaud's disease. Thoracic outlet syndrome caused ischemic symptoms in thirteen patients. Arteriosclerosis obliterans affected twenty-two patients. The signs of arteriosclerosis are described including irregular constrictions, multiple occlusions and the corkscrew pattern of the collateral arteries. The differential diagnosis includes thromboangiitis obliterans and collagen vasculitis.
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PMID:[Arteriographic data in chronic ischemia of the hand. Study of 62 cases]. 286 65

A 36-year-old man with thoracic outlet syndrome, admitted to the hospital with digital ischemia from subclavian artery thrombosis and distal embolization, was given intra-arterial urokinase. Thrombus in the subclavian artery was lysed successfully and peripheral emboli were partially cleared, resulting in relief of digital symptoms. Although surgical decompression and vascular reconstruction at the thoracic outlet may be necessary, this technique provides a means of recanalizing small distal vessels.
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PMID:Treatment of a case of thromboembolism resulting from thoracic outlet syndrome with intra-arterial urokinase infusion. 335 71

Arterial complications of thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) were surgically treated in 11 patients (12 limbs) and venous complications in five (6 limbs). Arteriography showed total occlusion or significant stenosis of the subclavian artery in eight patients (bilateral in 1), with complicating peripheral thrombosis in three. Two patients had unilateral subclavian artery aneurysm: One was the patient with bilateral subclavian occlusion, and the other also had brachial artery embolism. Yet another patient had brachial thrombosis. Treatment included reconstructive surgery (3 limbs), thoracic sympathectomy (3) or decompression alone (6). Of the five patients with venous TOS complications, four were found at phlebography to have subclavian thrombosis and one had significant bilateral subclavian obstruction. Treatment was transaxillary first-rib resection (4 cases) or division of soft-tissue bands and hypertrophied anterior scalene muscle (1 case). After follow-up averaging 9 years, eight of the nine survivors in the arterial group were working and seven were asymptomatic. All five in the venous group were working and only two had slight, strain-related symptoms. Impaired arterial flow in TOS can usually be managed with decompression, but direct surgery (bypass or thrombectomy) or thoracic sympathectomy is required in cases with severe ischemia with proximal occlusion and after resection of a subclavian aneurysm or in cases with unilateral Raynaud's phenomenon or thrombosis of small arteries. For venous symptoms decompression alone suffices.
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PMID:Management of vascular complications in thoracic outlet syndrome. 342 Oct

Ischemia occurring during hyperextension of the upper limb in a 25-year-old woman led to the discovery of a supracondylar spur responsible for compression of the brachial artery with anomalous insertion of the pronator teres muscle. Resection of all abnormal structures provided immediate relief of symptoms. When atypical arterial symptoms of thoracic outlet syndrome occur in the upper limb, the brachial artery entrapment syndrome should be considered.
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PMID:Brachial artery entrapment: compression by the supracondylar process. 350 60

Twenty-three patients who had a clavicular non-union were treated operatively at the Massachusetts General Hospital from 1974 to 1985. Twenty-one non-unions were the result of fracture and two, secondary to osteotomy. Twenty non-unions were located in the middle third of the clavicle, while three were in the lateral third. Radiographically, eighteen non-unions were atrophic and three, hypertrophic. Two non-unions resembled pseudarthrosis. Of the etiological factors that were reviewed the extent of displacement of the original fracture was the most significant. Associated complications of the non-union included limited mobility of the shoulder in fourteen, neurological symptoms in eight, thoracic outlet syndrome in four, and arterial ischemia in one. Of the nineteen patients who were treated to obtain union, seventeen had a successful result at an average length of follow-up of 23.8 months. In sixteen (93.7 per cent) of the seventeen patients union was achieved by fixation with a plate; one patient required two procedures. Ancillary bone graft was used in eighteen patients, with three requiring a sculptured bicortical graft from the iliac crest to span a defect. Of the four other patients three were treated with a partial clavicular resection and one, with complete clavicectomy.
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PMID:Non-union of the clavicle. Associated complications and surgical management. 359 76

A case of acute upper limb ischemia in the thoracic outlet syndrome is reported. Its relief by axillo-axillary bypass grafting is described. The advantages of the latter procedure in a poor-risk patient are discussed. More than 2 1/2 years after operation the graft is patent an the patient is essentially symptom-free.
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PMID:Acute upper limb ischemia in the thoracic outlet syndrome: its correction by axillo-axillary bypass grafting. 728 2


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