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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Transluminal dilatation of seven left subclavian arteries and one right subclavian artery was attempted in seven patients. Dilatation was successful in four left subclavian arteries and the single right subclavian artery treated. Five of the patients suffered from cerebral symptoms as well as
ischemia
of the upper limb, one had only cerebral symptoms and another had only arm
claudication
. All patients also had significantly reduced systolic blood pressures in the brachial artery. Standard techniques for percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) were employed, using the femoral route six times and the axillary route four times. No complications occurred. All patients were permanently given a maintenance dose of antiplatelet treatment with dipyridamole 75 mg tds after PTA. Follow-up of up to 36 months, indicates that angioplasty can be accomplished in the stenosed subclavian artery with relatively little hazard. Patients with hemodynamically significant stenoses should be considered for PTA if their symptoms and signs warrant such therapy.
...
PMID:Transluminal dilatation of the subclavian artery. 316 Apr 63
Spinal stenosis, which may be congenital/developmental or acquired in origin, is a narrowing of the spinal canal, nerve root canals, or intervertebral foramina. Compression of the spinal cord or nerve roots may lead to structural neuronal damage, neuronal
ischemia
or edema, and axonal transport block. The most frequent symptom in patients with spinal stenosis is back pain and some have classic neurogenic
claudication
. We have performed urodynamic evaluations in 2 patients with combined cervical and lumbar spinal stenosis. A girl with achondroplastic dwarfism had urgency incontinence and detrusor hyperreflexia. An adult man with acquired degenerative spinal stenosis had difficulty voiding and findings compatible with the cauda equina syndrome.
...
PMID:Urodynamic evaluation of patients with spinal stenosis. 318 19
Fibromuscular dysplasia is a nonatherosclerotic, noninflammatory vascular disease that involves primarily the renal and internal carotid arteries and less often the vertebral, iliac, subclavian, and visceral arteries. Although its pathogenesis is not completely understood, humoral, mechanical, and genetic factors as well as mural
ischemia
may play a role. The natural history is relatively benign, with progression occurring in only a minority of the patients. Typical clinical manifestations are renovascular hypertension, stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage, abdominal angina, or
claudication
of the legs or arms. In patients with symptoms, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty has emerged as the treatment of choice in most involved vascular beds.
...
PMID:Arterial fibromuscular dysplasia. 330 88
Peripheral arterial obstructive disease with symptoms of
ischemia
in the limbs is a common cause of disability, morbidity, and even mortality in the elderly. The most important cause is atherosclerosis, which is ultimately a systemic problem, but the cardinal symptom in the limbs is intermittent claudication. Unfortunately, the elderly patient often displays severe
ischemia
with pain at rest, and ulceration or gangrene of the extremity, even where there was a paucity of prior
claudication
, perhaps due to associated illness which reduces mobility. The essential aspects of clinical diagnosis and assessment of severity of
ischemia
involve relatively simple bedside techniques, and noninvasive laboratory methodology is mainly of value in selection of patients for angiography and potential revascularization. While conventional therapy involves bypass surgery, an expanding array of drugs and the advent of interventional angiographic measures including angioplasty offer alternatives which were not available even a few years ago.
...
PMID:Peripheral vascular disease: medical evaluation and treatment. 331 89
There is little information available concerning the alterations in skeletal muscle energy metabolism which occur in response to chronic arterial occlusive disease. In addition, the effect of arterial reconstruction on skeletal muscle energy metabolism in patients with peripheral vascular disease has not been defined. Needle biopsies were obtained from the quadriceps femoris muscle of 7 patients with aortoiliac disease and 15 patients with femoropopliteal disease and from the gastrocnemius muscle of 9 patients with femoropopliteal disease. Muscle samples were analyzed for ATP, ADP, AMP, phosphocreatine, creatine, and lactate. Eleven patients were rebiopsied after vascular reconstruction. Patients with rest pain had decreased total adenine nucleotides, energy charge potential, and ATP/ADP ratios as compared to those of controls. ATP levels were significantly decreased in muscle samples obtained distal to the arterial occlusion (i.e., quadriceps/aortoiliac, gastrocnemius/femoropopliteal) in patients with rest pain (compared with controls). ATP levels did not differ significantly from those of controls in muscle samples obtained from patients with
claudication
. However, energy charge potential was significantly decreased in all patients with
claudication
regardless of biopsy site and location of arterial occlusive disease. Normalization of muscle energy metabolism was not demonstrated following arterial reconstruction. We conclude that resting skeletal muscle energy metabolism is abnormal in patients with chronic arterial insufficiency and that progression of disease toward more severe
ischemia
is associated with more marked derangement. Whether the possible beneficial effects of revascularization on muscle energy metabolism are masked by the concurrent effect of injury in the early postoperative period remains to be clarified.
...
PMID:Muscle high energy phosphates in chronic peripheral vascular disease. 334 25
In the patient with limb-threatening
ischemia
and aortoiliac occlusive disease surgical reconstruction with a prosthetic bypass, because of its safety and durability, has emerged as the treatment of choice. In obese patients, however, such therapy might be eschewed because of the frequent coexistence of multiple risk factors and the large size of these patients. In ten obese patients who had limb-threatening
ischemia
or rapidly worsening disabling
claudication
and aortoiliac occlusive disease, direct aortoiliac reconstruction was performed. There were no perioperative deaths, and only one major complication occurred in this group. The cumulative 5-year graft limb-patency and limb-salvage rates were each 90%. Despite the higher risk and unusual technical challenges that obese patients may present, direct reconstruction is the preferred treatment for aortoiliac occlusive disease and limb-threatening
ischemia
.
...
PMID:Aortoiliac reconstruction in obese patients. 334 85
To evaluate the efficacy and long-term patency results of axilloaxillary bypass, a review of 32 patients with follow-up extending to 11 years was done. Twenty-two bypasses were performed for vertebrobasilar symptoms or subclavian steal and 10 for upper extremity
claudication
and/or
ischemia
. The mean age of the operative group was 66 years, 94% of patients had more than one atherosclerotic risk factor (hypertension, diabetes, coronary artery disease, smoking), and 75% had undergone a previous arterial reconstruction operation. There were no operative deaths, and the only postoperative complication was a sterile seroma which responded to aspiration. At late follow-up extending to 11 years, three grafts had thrombosed while another became infected and had to be removed; no limb loss resulted from these graft failures and the actual late patency rate was 87%. Carotid-subclavian bypass, intrathoracic bypasses, and endarterectomy at the site of occlusion have all been suggested for the treatment of symptomatic proximal subclavian artery disease. With axilloaxillary bypass, however, the hazards associated with carotid artery manipulation, operation on the notoriously treacherous subclavian artery, and the morbidity related to thoracotomy in this older, high-risk patient population can be avoided. The axilloaxillary bypass is safe and simple, and the excellent long-term patency rates make it the procedure of choice for symptomatic subclavian artery disease.
...
PMID:Axilloaxillary bypass: is it worthwhile? 336 Aug 41
Over a 3 1/2 year period, 55 limbs were revascularized with in situ saphenous vein bypass grafts in 49 patients. Ninety-five percent of grafts were constructed in patients with critical
ischemia
for limb salvage, and 5 percent were constructed for debilitating
claudication
. The proximal anastomosis was performed in the groin in all patients. The distal graft was taken to the popliteal artery in 45 percent and to a tibial or isolated popliteal segment in 55 percent, with 55 percent of the grafts having single-vessel runoff. The perioperative mortality rate was 7 percent. The primary immediate patency rate was 91 percent and the secondary immediate patency rate was 98 percent at 1 month. The cumulative patency rate at 42 months was 85.4 percent overall, 86.6 percent for the tibial grafts, and 84 percent for the popliteal grafts. The cumulative limb salvage rate was 100 percent for the popliteal grafts, 90 percent for the tibial grafts, and 94.5 percent overall. All of the patients were followed and 3 required secondary revision. In situ vein bypass is a technically demanding procedure that can be performed successfully in high-risk patients with limbs with minimal runoff and can yield very high long-term patency and limb salvage rates in a community hospital setting.
...
PMID:Lower extremity revascularization with in situ saphenous vein for critical ischemia. 336 28
Coarctation of the abdominal aorta remains a surgically treatable cause of hypertension in children and young adults. Average age of the patients is 21 years at the time of diagnosis and a second peak in the fourth to fifth decade. If left untreated, most patients die as a result of complications from untreated hypertension by the age of 35 years. Aortography remains the diagnostic test of choice with associated visceral and renal artery stenoses occurring in 26% of cases. Of the 146 cases reported, 109 had surgical treatment with an operative mortality rate of 6.9%. Of those patients having surgery 96% were normotensive or were easily controlled postoperatively with antihypertensive medications. Because
claudication
is a minor problem in most cases, surgical correction of the hypertension by hepatorenal or splenic-renal bypasses may be the preferred initial surgical treatment in patients without significant visceral artery involvement or severe symptomatic lower extremity
ischemia
.
...
PMID:Coarctation of the abdominal aorta. 339 74
In 20 patients (24 limbs) with peripheral occlusive arterial disease involving the lower extremities, foot and chest transcutaneous oxygen tension (tcPO2) and ankle and arm systolic blood pressures were measured, with the patient's legs horizontal and with them in an elevated position, before and after revascularization procedures. Eighteen of the procedures were unilateral and were performed to alleviate severe
ischemia
; the three bilateral procedures were done to relieve intermittent claudication. Regional perfusion index (RPI) was calculated for each foot (RPI = tcPO2 foot/tcPO2 chest) with the legs horizontal and with the legs elevated for 3 minutes (RPI3). The ankle/brachial index was calculated from ankle and arm systolic blood pressures. Limbs with severe
ischemia
had considerably decreased RPI and RPI3 before revascularization, whereas limbs affected by
claudication
had only a modest decrease in RPI but a pronounced decrease in RPI3. The tcPO2, RPI, and RPI3 increased substantially after revascularization.
...
PMID:Effect of arterial revascularization on transcutaneous oxygen tension of the ischemic extremity. 341 29
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