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

For the past decade a common procedure used to salvage severely ischemic limbs has been autogenous vein bypass grafting to the distal popliteal artery or, if the popliteal trifurcation is occluded, to one of the tibial-peroneal branches. Reported limb salvage rate and long-term graft function varies considerably but in most series is low. To increase graft flow and to decrease resistance in femoral-poplitical-tibial grafts and thereby to perfuse the ischemic foot more effectively, we have employed multiple sequential anastomoses of a single vein graft to distal branches--a technique similar to that used occasionally in aortocoronary bypass grafting. The autogenous vein graft alone, or in combination with bovine heterograft, has been used in six patients with gangrenous toes or far advanced ischemia and in one patient with severe claudication. Multiple anastomoses below the knee were carried out in each patient. Anastomosis has been to a blind popliteal segment, then to a tibial or peroneal in four patients, to both tibials in another two patients, and to both tibials and the peroneal in one patient. Flow rates measured on the operating table clearly demonstrated a significant increase in flow through the graft with each additional anastomosis. There has been a greater response to surgery with return of pulses, warmth of the foot, and rapid healing as compared with previous patients having single femoral-tibial anastomoses. One failure occurred acutely from a technical problem early in the series; one failed at 3 months in a patient with pancreatic cancer and another patient died 2 weeks after operation of a myocardial infarct.
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PMID:Multiple sequential femoral tibial grafting for severe ischemia. 100 19

Coeliac plexus block (CPB) is one of the few neurolytic procedures that is still considered very useful in managing chronic cancer pain. We describe what we believe to be the fifth case in the literature of paraplegia following coeliac plexus block with ethyl alcohol. Clinical and neurophysiological examination confirmed the hypothesis of an acute myelopathy probably caused by ischemia due to involvement of Adamkievicz's artery. The seriousness of this neurological complication led us to review the different pain-relieving strategies in pancreatic cancer. Several medical and surgical procedures are available for advanced pancreatic cancer, yet none of them alone can be considered the therapy of choice for all cases. Hence, only a multidisciplinary approach to pancreatic cancer pain can help in making the most appropriate choice for each patient.
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PMID:Paraplegia following coeliac plexus block. 785 97

We investigated perioperative complications and survival rate in 114 patients with pancreatic cancer who underwent surgical resection between July, 1981 and March, 1992 with an antithrombogenic bypass catheter of the portal vein which we have developed. With this catheter, mesenteric venous blood can be bypassed to the systemic circulation or intrahepatic portal vein to prevent portal congestion or hepatic ischemia during portal obstruction or simultaneous obstruction of the hepatic artery. All the arteries supplying, and veins draining, the pancreas are dissected prior to its manipulation, following which isolated pancreatectomy accompanied by portal vein resection can be performed. Eighty patients (70%) also underwent isolated pancreatectomy. The perioperative death rate was 9.6%, and the main factor contributing to mortality with the bypass method was not portal vein resection, but various postoperative complications, such as insufficiency of the pancreatojejunostomy and thrombosis of the hepatic artery or superior mesenteric artery after resection and reconstruction. We conclude that aggressive surgery with the bypass method increases the operability of pancreatic cancer, although auxiliary therapies combined with radical surgery are necessary to improve the therapeutic outcome for this cancer.
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PMID:Isolated pancreatectomy for pancreatic head carcinoma using catheter bypass of the portal vein. 827 Feb 30

Multi-detector row computed tomography (CT) offers important advantages over more conventional imaging methods in the evaluation of the mesenteric vasculature. It allows faster scanning, which practically eliminates motion and breathing artifacts, as well as thinner collimation. These advances, coupled with rapid intravenous administration of contrast material, allow excellent opacification of the mesenteric arteries and veins. This improves the quality of the three-dimensional (3D) data sets, which in turn leads to improved 3D vascular maps and more accurate assessment of various conditions such as arterial or venous encasement in patients with pancreatic cancer, mesenteric ischemia, or inflammatory bowel disease. Three-dimensional multi-detector row CT also allows better visualization of arterial and venous branching, thereby improving detection of more distal vascular involvement. In addition, 3D multi-detector row CT may help detect hemodynamic changes in patients with active inflammation and hyperemia of a bowel segment because it can be used to measure bowel wall enhancement over time. Carcinoid tumors that have infiltrated the mesentery have a characteristic CT appearance, and other conditions such as lymphoma or sclerosing mesenteritis can also manifest as an infiltrating mass that envelops mesenteric vessels. Three-dimensional multi-detector row CT represents a significant advance in CT technology and can help ensure prompt, accurate evaluation of the mesenteric vasculature.
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PMID:Volume-rendered 3D CT of the mesenteric vasculature: normal anatomy, anatomic variants, and pathologic conditions. 1179 5

The present paper summarizes the various themes of research which have been developed in the department of medical gastroenterology since it was created in 1977. These include: in pancreatology, the study of chronic pancreatitis pathogenesis, acute pancreatitis pathogenesis and immunomodulation, endoscopic treatment of chronic pancreatitis, the development of new imaging techniques of the bile ducts and the pancreas, as well as the treatment of pancreatic cancer and benign or malignant biliary diseases. in hepatology, the immunomodulation of liver cirrhosis, especially alcoholic liver disease, the modulation of experimental acute and chronic hepatitis, the study of liver ischemia-reperfusion. Clinical hepatology has focused on liver transplantation, prognosis factors of chronic liver disease and treatment of portal hypertension and viral hepatitis. in gut diseases, the treatment of gastro-oesophageal reflux and its complications, the therapeutic endoscopy of the upper and lower GI and the prevention, as well as the treatment, of colon cancer, the pathogenesis and the immunopharmacology of inflammatory bowel diseases and the clinical enteral and parenteral nutrition.
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PMID:[The medical gastroenterology department]. 1258 14

We have previously demonstrated that ischemia caused by acute myocardial infarction induces an abrupt increase of serum deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) activity. In this study, we examined whether hypoxia can affect the levels of DNase I activity and/or its transcripts in vitro. We first exposed the human pancreatic cancer cell line QGP-1, which is the first documented DNase-I-producing cell line, to hypoxia (2% O2), and found that this induced a significant increase in both the activity and transcripts of DNase I. This response was mediated by increased transcription only from exon 1a of the two alternative transcription-initiating exons utilized simultaneously in the human DNase I gene (DNASE1); exposure of QGP-1 cells to hypoxia for 24 h resulted in a 15-fold increase of DNASE1 transcripts starting from exon 1a compared with the expression level under normoxic conditions. Promoter, electrophoretic mobility shift, and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays with QGP-1 cells exposed to hypoxia or normoxia showed that the region just upstream from exon 1a was involved in this response in a hypoxia-induced factor-1-independent, but at least in a Sp1 transcription factor-dependent manner possibly through enhanced binding of Sp1 protein to the promoter. These results indicate that DNASE1 expression is upregulated by hypoxia in the cells.
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PMID:Hypoxia induces upregulation of the deoxyribonuclease I gene in the human pancreatic cancer cell line QGP-1. 1791 Sep 90

Pancreatic cancer is an aggressive malignancy with proclivity to early metastasis. High expression and activation of the collagenase matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) have been found in human pancreatic cancer tissues, being these increased levels of active MMP-2 correlated to tumor invasion and metastasis. Hypoxia and reoxygenation (H-R) are critical pathophysiological conditions during ischemia-reperfusion injury, which has been shown to enhance both invasion and metastasis. In the present study, we investigated the effects of H-R on MMP-2 levels and the invasiveness properties of human pancreatic cancer cells PANC-1. Using specific inhibitors, we found that H-R treatment of these tumor cells induced secretion and activation of MMP-2, which was required for H-R-stimulated basement membrane degradation and cell invasion. Our results also indicate that signaling events involved in H-R-enhanced PANC-1 invasiveness comprehend PI3K-dependent activation of Rac1, which mediated the formation of NADPH-generated reactive oxygen species responsible for MMP-2 secretion and activation.
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PMID:Hypoxia-reoxygenation increase invasiveness of PANC-1 cells through Rac1/MMP-2. 2015 29

The Digestive Disease Week 2010 conference, held in New Orleans, included topics covering new therapeutic developments in the field of gastroenterology, hepatology, endoscopy and gastrointestinal surgery. This conference report highlights selected presentations on the apolipoprotein E-mimetic peptide COG-112 (Cognosci Inc) for the potential treatment of Citrobacter rodentium-induced colitis; the inhibition of sphingosine kinase with ABC-294640 (Apogee Biotechnology Corp) to alleviate stress after hepatic ischemia-reperfusion injury; TLR4 targeting with NI-0101 (NovImmune SA) to prevent colitis-associated cancer; immunization against TNF with TNFalpha kinoid (Neovacs SA) for the treatment of patients with Crohn's disease; and preclinical studies with the anti-inflammatory agent minnelide (University of Minnesota) for the treatment of pancreatic cancer.
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PMID:Digestive Disease Week 2010. Turning Science into Medicine--part 2. 2058 61

The safety of chemotherapy for patients with systemic sclerosis is unclear, and there are few published reports documenting the side effects of chemotherapy in patients with this condition. Here, we report the case of a patient with systemic sclerosis who developed severe digital ischemia during combination gemcitabine/S-1 chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer. In spite of aggressive treatment, the digital ischemia progressively worsened and gangrenous changes developed in multiple fingers and toes. In this patient, the systemic sclerosis had been well controlled, with no digital ischemic symptoms for the previous 6 years, so this progressive clinical course in spite of aggressive treatment strongly suggests that the chemotherapy triggered or aggravated the digital necrosis. To the best of our knowledge, this is only the third reported case of a patient with systemic sclerosis developing digital necrosis after gemcitabine-based chemotherapy. The incidence of digital necrosis during chemotherapy in patients with systemic sclerosis is unknown, and the mechanism by which it occurs is unclear, but the three reports published to date, including the present case, suggest that physicians should be very cautious about administering gemcitabine-based chemotherapy to patients with systemic sclerosis. Any resulting digital ischemia might be refractory to treatment and worsen progressively, even if chemotherapy is withdrawn in the early stages of digital ischemia.
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PMID:A case of progressive digital ischemia after early withdrawal of gemcitabine and S-1 in a patient with systemic sclerosis. 2147 79

A pancreatic adenocarcinoma involving both the celiac artery and the gastroduodenal artery is often considered to be unresectable because the simultaneous division of both arteries may result in an acute severe ischemia of the liver and the stomach. We report here a case of total pancreatectomy with en bloc celiac axis resection for a 61-year-old female with a pancreatic adenocarcinoma involving both the celiac artery and the gastroduodenal artery. The patient had a replaced right hepatic artery from the superior mesenteric artery and a replaced left hepatic artery from the left gastric artery, which was directly arising from the aorta. Preserving these collateral arteries, neither hepatic artery reconstruction nor total gastrectomy was needed after resection. The reported incidence of similar arterial anatomy was only 0.2% but the precise evaluation of arterial anatomy is important to offer a chance of curative resection for patients with usually unresectable locally advanced pancreatic cancer.
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PMID:Total pancreatectomy with en bloc celiac axis resection for a pancreatic adenocarcinoma involving both the gastroduodenal artery and the celiac artery. 2215 51


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