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

Cardiomyocyte (CM) apoptosis has been reported in a variety of cardiovascular diseases, including myocardial infarction, ischemia/reperfusion, end-stage heart failure, arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia, and adriamycin-induced cardiomyopathy. The role of CM apoptosis in the development and progression of cardiac diseases merits further investigation. Cumulative evidence suggests that reactive oxygen species (ROS), which have been implicated in cardiac pathophysiology, can trigger myocyte apoptosis by up-regulating proapoptotic proteins, such as Bax and caspases, and the mitochondria-dependent pathway. These apoptotic proteins and pathways are inhibited by various antioxidants, as well as by overexpression of the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2 by way of the antioxidant pathway. Detection of CM apoptosis with the terminal transferase-mediated DNA nick-end labeling assay alone has recently been questioned because of technical concerns regarding its sensitivity and specificity. Because CMs are mononuclear or binuclear, if only one nucleus or a certain percentage of fragmented nuclei is stained with TUNEL assay at the early stage of apoptotic cell death, it remains unknown whether this particular early apoptotic CM is still functionally active. The issue of TUNEL specificity further questions reports of high percentages of apoptotic CM nuclei (0.02%-35%) in the heart. Nevertheless, oxidative stress is a major apoptotic stimulus in many cardiovascular diseases and the process can be inhibited by antioxidants both in vitro and in vivo.
...
PMID:Apoptosis and oxidants in the heart. 1464 32

The ileal pouch anal anastomosis (IPAA) procedure has become the preferred surgical option for most patients with ulcerative colitis who require surgical removal of the colorectum. The vast majority of patients with this new anatomy will either not develop pouchitis or develop a few discrete episodes of acute pouchitis. However approximately one fourth of patients will develop recurrent pouchitis, with 5% being categorized as chronic pouchitis requiring maintenance therapy or, on rare occasion, pouch excision. Factors that are associated with an increased risk of pouchitis include primary sclerosing cholangitis, extraintestinal manifestations, and nonsmokers. Controversy surrounds other risk factors such as extent of colitis, backwash ileitis, preoperative pANCA levels, and carrying a specific allele for IL-1 receptor antagonist. The etiology of pouchitis is unknown, but theories range from genetic susceptibility, bacterial overgrowth, ischemia, and fecal stasis, to a recurrence of ulcerative colitis in the pouch, a missed diagnosis of Crohn's disease, or possibly a novel third form of inflammatory bowel disease. Some patients with symptoms of pouchitis will not have inflammation of the pouch, but rather, irritable pouch syndrome. Thus, endoscopic investigation with biopsy is important for declaring whether a patient has pouchitis. Indeed, the more commonly used scores, such as the pouch disease activity index, incorporate both endoscopic and histologic criteria. Not surprisingly, treatment options for patients with pouchitis resemble that of regular inflammatory bowel disease, although there have only been a few controlled trials. Antibiotics are the mainstay of therapy, with metronidazole and ciprofloxacin demonstrating benefit in controlled trials. Probiotics are effective for maintaining remission of pouchitis. Mesalamine, corticosteroids, and immunomodulators have been used with some success. Occasionally, patients with well-documented ulcerative colitis as the indication for IPAA will develop what appears to be Crohn's disease of the pouch, on the basis of granulomatous inflammation, pre-pouch ileitis, or fistulae. The treatment is similar to Crohn's disease, including the use of infliximab. Dysplasia within the pouch mucosa itself is quite rare. Reports of dysplasia occurring in patients with IPAA are usually due to neoplastic change within the residual cuff of rectal or transition zone mucosa just below the pouch, rather than in the ileal mucosa of the pouch. With further elucidation of the genetic basis for inflammatory bowel disease, we should be able to more accurately classify patients with ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease genotypically. Hopefully, this will also bring more clarity to the heterogeneous population of patients with pouchitis and allow for more focused therapeutic strategies.
...
PMID:The diagnosis and treatment of pouchitis in inflammatory bowel disease. 1511 32

Fibromuscular dysplasia is a rare nonatherosclerotic, noninflammatory angiopathy of uncertain etiology and high morbidity. Because of its propensity to affect medium-sized vessels in a variety of locations, presenting symptoms may vary substantially, resulting in a delayed or missed diagnosis. We describe a 57-year-old woman who, on multiple occasions, presented with progressive gastrointestinal symptoms and eventually underwent surgical revascularization for celiac and superior mesenteric artery stenosis of uncertain etiology. Her postoperative course was complicated by bowel ischemia, multiple organ failure, and death. Autopsy findings proved useful in determining the underlying disease process and cause of death. This case report and a review of the literature illustrate the high morbidity and mortality that are caused by mesenteric fibromuscular dysplasia, the challenge in establishing a correct diagnosis, and the importance of early detection and treatment.
...
PMID:Fatal mesenteric fibromuscular dysplasia: a case report and review of the literature. 1515 74

Ischaemic strokes and TIA are increasingly being found to be due to arterial cervical dissection, particularly in young adults. Physicians have better knowledge of this disease, and diagnostic neuroimagery has improved. Sometimes traumatic, arterial dissection can also be truly spontaneous or coincides with ordinary neck movement. Dissection consists in an intramural hematoma, and affects most commonly the carotid artery. In 25% of cases, two or more cervical arteries appear to be affected simultaneously, suggesting fibromuscular dysplasia. Pathophysiological considerations remain unclear and several hypotheses are considered. Clinical manifestations are evocative and cervical warning signs such as pain, headache or Horner's syndrom provide an opportunity to recognize the patients few hours or days before cerebral or ocular ischemia occurs. Conventional angiography remains the gold standard in the diagnosis of arterial dissections but ultrasonography and magnetic resonance techniques are more and more often informative. Although no therapeutical trial is available, anticoagulant therapy has been recommended, except in intracranial dissection. Recurrent dissections are very rare and long term functional prognosis seems to be favourable.
...
PMID:[Dissections of the carotid and vertebrobasilar arteries]. 1536 50

Chronic mesenteric ischemia is primarily a disease of the elderly, who have widespread atherosclerosis of the celiac, superior mesenteric, and inferior mesenteric arteries. Risk factors include smoking, vasculitis, fibromuscular dysplasia, and arterial dissection. Presented here are 2 cases of women under age 50 years burdened with this condition, owing primarily to advanced arteriosclerosis. These cases illustrate a need for increased awareness of mesenteric ischemia as a cause for postprandial abdominal pain in young patients with other stigmata of advanced arterial occlusive disease.
...
PMID:Young women presenting with chronic mesenteric ischemia--two case reports. 1607 45

Dysplasia of the renal and cervical arteries are well known, but dysplasia of the superior mesenteric artery (SMA) is less frequent and has specific presentation. There have been few reports on the different types of presentations. We report a series of 38 cases and present the characteristic features together with a comparison with data in the literature. These non-atheromatous non-inflammatory lesions of the arterial wall occurred either in a context of fibromuscular disease which cause is unknown (30/38 patients) or in patients with genetic disease such as neurofibromatosis (3/38) or Ehlers-Danlos disease (5/38). The fibromuscular disease presented three aspects with specific characteristics. a) stenosing lesions found predominantly in women with a different morphology than in the other localization (usually associated): irregular diffuse stenosis discovered in patients with hypertension, or ischemic digestive symptoms (6/14 patients). b) Aneurysms, also found predominantly in women, but less frequently associated with other dysplasias. These aneurysms were generally sacciform. Unlike data in the literature, our series only included rupture in 1/8 cases. The aneurysm was discovered during the exploration of abdominal pain or hypertension. c) The third type of fibromuscular disease concerned dissections which were observed in the male population, (except one case of segmental dysplasia), and presented with signs of digestive ischemia in the other seven patients, four in an emergency context requiring immediate treatment. Two genetic diseases were observed. a) Neurofibromatosis led to dysplasia analogous to fibromuscular disease, but with abnormal nerve formations in the wall. For the three cases observed, one involved only the visceral arteries and the two others thoraco-abdominal coarctation. b) We had five patients with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, with dysplasia of the superior mesenteric artery. For three there was a fusiform dilatation and in one small aneurysms along the arterial trunk, which only required surveillance. There was only one aneurysm which required treatment by resection and venous graft. In these young patients, revascularization was generally achieved with autologous material and the prognosis was favorable. Embolization was successful in treating the sacciform aneurysm in one patient. In conclusion, dysplasia of the superior mesenteric artery has a specific presentation which must be recognized to enable diagnosis of this not uncommon condition in young subjects (even children) who often present with an acute abdomen requiring urgent treatment.
...
PMID:[Thirty-eight cases of dysplasia of the superior mesenteric artery]. 1614 79

Salvia miltiorrhiza (SM) has been used clinically in Asian countries to improve the microcirculation in the human body. Salvianolic acid B (Sal B), a pure compound extracted from SM, has been reported to be effective against fibrosis and ischemia-reperfusion injury, possibly through its anti-lipid peroxidation action. But the effect of Sal B on oral premalignant lesion and oral carcinogenesis remains unexplored. It is our interest to investigate the chemopreventive effect of Sal B on 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA)-induced oral carcinogenesis in hamsters with respect to angiogenesis. Seventy male Syrian golden hamsters were randomly divided into five groups, with two of 20 and three of 10. DMBA solution (0.5% in acetone) was applied topically to the left cheek pouch of male Syrian golden hamsters in Groups A and B, while animals in Group C were painted with acetone, three times a week for 6 weeks. For the next 18 weeks, animals in Groups B and D received Sal B daily (10 mg/kg body wt/day) by gavage, animals in Groups A and C received same volume of saline. Animals in Group E received no treatment and served as blank control. At the end of the experiment, animals were killed and tissue samples were collected for histopathological and immunohistochemical examinations. The results showed that Sal B significantly decreased the squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) incidence from 64.7 (11/17) to 16.7% (3/18) (P=0.004); angiogenesis was inhibited in dysplasia and SCC (P<0.01), with a simultaneous decrease in the immunostaining of hypoxia-inducible factor 1alpha and vascular endothelium growth factor protein (P<0.05). The results suggested that Sal B had inhibitory effect against the malignant transformation of oral precancerous lesion and such inhibition may be related to the inhibition of angiogenesis.
...
PMID:The preventive effect of salvianolic acid B on malignant transformation of DMBA-induced oral premalignant lesion in hamsters. 1628 60

Gastritis cystica polyposa (GCP) is a rare inflammatory disease of the gastric remnant that usually develops after partial gastrectomy. It is defined by the presence of polyps on anastomotic gastric mucosa and at histopathological examination, by the presence of mucosal and submucosal cysts with foveolar hyperplasia. The disease is characterized by the frequency of gastro-intestinal bleeding and possibility of carcinomatous association. We report seven cases of GCP collected over 5 years (1994-1999). Diagnosis was made 9 to 45 years after partial gastrectomy and Finsterer. The patients were 52 to 72 years old. Revealing symptoms were cardiac failure, cardiac ischemia, melena, severe anemia and epigastric pain. For one patient, GCP was discovered casually. Endoscopic examination showed in all patients; the presence of several polyps sized between 3 to 15 mm on the perianastomotic gastric remnant. Histology examination of the polyps showed microscopic features of GCP in all cases. In one patient, there was a mild glandular atrophy with extensive intestinal metaplasia and mild dysplasia. Helicobacter pylori was present only in this case.
...
PMID:[Gastritis cystica polyposa: report of 7 cases and literature review]. 1638 3

Between 1989 and 2003, 100 transplants were performed in 96 patients at the pediatric nephrology unit of the Calvo Mackenna Children's Hospital. Mean age 10.9 +/- 3.9 yr (1-17.6), 30% from LD. Donors were younger than 5 yr in five patients and all recipients received an 'en bloc' graft. Original disease was hypo/dysplasia 27%, reflux nephropathy 22 and 17% chronic glomerulonephritis. The immunosuppressive protocol during the first period (n = 56, 1989-2000): Cyclosporine, steroids and azathioprine, and during the second period (n = 44, 2001-2003): FK, steroids, MMF and anti-CD25 antibody (mAbs). AR was reported in 22 patients, 11% in LD, 31% in DD (p < 0.01). The AR rate decreased from 40 to 8% after anti-CD25 monoclonal induction. Patient actuarial survival rate at 1, 3 and 5 yr was 100% for LD and 96% for DD. The overall actuarial graft survival at 1,3, and 5 yr was 96.7, 96.7 and 71% for LD and 89, 76 and 73% for DD donors. Graft survival rate improved from the first period (1989-2000) to the second period (2001-2003; p = 0.05). No difference in graft survival rate with HLA-A,B,DR matching was found. Graft survival rate was better when cold ischemia time was <24 h (p < 0.01). CMV infections increased from 19 to 40% when MMF and anti-CD25 Ab were introduced (p < 0.01). The height/age Z score at 1, 3 and 5 yr post-transplant was -2.2, -2.1, -2.2, respectively, for children older than 7 yr and -1.8, -1.9, -2.1 for those transplanted younger than 7 yr of age who were switched to alternate day steroids (p < 0.01). The cause of graft lost was: chronic rejection eight, non-adherence four, AR four and vascular thrombosis two. The cause of death in two patients was fungus septicemia and accelerated rejection. Pediatric renal transplantation can be performed in our group with acceptable morbidity, low mortality and graft survival rates similar to other reports in North America and Western Europe. Graft survival rate improved with newer immunosuppression and greater experience at the center. Management of non-adherence and chronic rejection remain the major challenges.
...
PMID:Pediatric renal transplantation: a single center experience over 14 years. 1657 6

An attack of abrupt loss of vision in one eye that recovers completely after a short period is called "transient monocular blindness" (TMB) or amaurosis fugax. The most common cause of TMB is atherothromboembolism from the origin of the internal carotid artery (ICA), whereas atrial fibrillation is quite uncommon. TMB also can be caused by anterior optic nerve ischemia, that is usually caused by thrombosis in the posterior ciliary artery. Thrombosis in the central retinal vein may be another cause. Dissection of the ICA, vascular malformations, or fibromuscular dysplasia are other potential etiologies. Blurring of vision as compared with blackened vision or positive phenomena such as flashing is probably associated with a higher risk of future cardiovascular events, whereas involvement of the partial monocular field is associated with a relative benign prognosis. In patients with atherosclerosis, antiplatelet therapy is indicated and treatment of vascular risk factors should have high priority. Carotid endarterectomy should be performed only in case of an ICA stenosis of more than 70% in the presence of at least one other risk factor for stroke.
...
PMID:Transient monocular blindness. 1683 32


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>