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

A case of acute aortic dissection (AAD) presenting as sudden, transient paraplegia and severe back pain is reported. The patient was a 66-year-old male with a 10-year-history of hypertension. The pain characteristically migrated from the back to the neck and then returned to the back. He showed complete transverse myelopathy at the level of the 9th thoracic cord. Computed tomography disclosed internal displacement of aortic intimal calcifications, without abnormalities in the spinal canal, and myelography showed no spinal canal block or stenosis. Electrocardiography and chest x-ray indicated nonspecific changes of high amplitudes and mild cardiomegaly, respectively. Together, these findings suggested acute aortic dissection with spinal cord ischemia. The initial systolic blood pressure of 220 mmHg was lowered with medication, and the pain was controlled with morphine. He recovered fully and was discharged 80 days after the onset of symptoms, with no neurological deficits. AAD carries a very poor prognosis unless treated immediately. Therefore, it is very important to promptly differentiate this disorder from spinal vascular conditions that also produce back pain and paraparesis.
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PMID:Transient paraplegia caused by acute aortic dissection--case report. 169 75

A 54-year-old man was admitted to our hospital complaining of back pain and right hypochondrial pain. Ultrasonography and celiac angiography revealed a large tumor sized 9.4 X 8.1 cm. The tumor appeared hypervascular on angiogram. During the second angiography, an attempt at superselective hepatic angiography for the purpose of infusing a combination of Adriamycin and Lipiodol, spasm of the celiac artery occurred. High fever continued for 11 days after the spasm and serum transaminase was elevated. At the third angiography, the nature of the tumor was seen to have changed remarkably to one of hypovascularity. Percutaneous transhepatic tumor biopsy was done. Pathological diagnosis was necrosis of hepatocellular carcinoma. Due to heart disorders, ligation of the right hepatic artery was performed instead of hepatic resection. Postoperatively, the size of the tumor decreased further. It is thought that this patient had a tendency to suffer from vasospasm and that the tumor had a relatively low resistance to ischemia.
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PMID:[A case of necrosis of a hepatocellular carcinoma, caused by spasm of the celiac artery]. 303 94

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.
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PMID:Urodynamic evaluation of patients with spinal stenosis. 318 19

The ascorbic acid/dehydroascorbic acid system was analyzed in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 41 patients with different neurological disorders. The chi-square test of covariance analysis revealed in this sample significant differences in the CSF levels of total ascorbic acid when patients were classified by diagnostic categories. The population analyzed contained a group of 18 patients (back pain/sciatica group) in whom no overt neurological abnormalities were disclosed upon evaluation. Taking the CSF levels of total ascorbic acid and dehydroascorbic acid in these patients as the reference (3.57 +/- 0.87 (SD)/100 ml and 0.53 +/- 0.19 mg/100 ml, respectively), it was found that head-traumatized patients showed a significant reduction in the concentration of total ascorbic acid in the CSF. CSF ascorbic acid levels were also significantly lower in patients with increased intracranial pressure (noninfected hydrocephalus group) and in patients with cerebral tumors. Although the CSF concentration of dehydroascorbic acid did not correspondingly increase over the reference values in these three groups of patients, the tendency existed for dehydroascorbic acid to represent in them a higher percentage of total ascorbic acid. After examining different alternatives, it is concluded that the hypothesis of free radical damage to the central nervous system after certain types of injury (trauma, ischemia, and tumors) may provide a satisfactory explanation of our findings. A rationale for the use of vitamin C in the management of some neurological patients is also derived from this work.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid ascorbic acid levels in neurological disorders. 670 36

The case was a 61-year-old man who was transported to our hospital with complaining of severe chest and back pain of sudden onset and diagnosed as acute type IIIb aortic dissection. Inspite of intensive medical treatments, severe abdominal pain with abdominal distension and progressive metabolic acidosis appeared at around 11 hours after admission. Aortogram revealed obstruction of both superior and inferior mesenteric arteries suggesting visceral ischemia associated with acute type IIIb aortic dissection. Emergent operation consisting of bypass grafting for the superior and the inferior mesenteric arteries with saphenous vein, partial resection of small intestine, left hemicolectomy and construction of artificial anus was immediately carried out. The patient had no particular trouble after the operation and returned to the previous job.
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PMID:[A case of visceral ischemia associated with acute type IIIb aortic dissection]. 756 13

Although nuclear medicine is often used as an adjunct to planning skeletal therapeutic interventions, its role in the assessment of these various interventional procedures, after the fact, is equally important. Skeletal therapeutic interventions studied with radionuclide imaging include bone grafts, the postoperative spine, and joint replacements. Vascularized bone grafts allow the successful reconstruction of large bone gaps. Early detection of vascular compromise permits prompt reevaluation of the vascular anastomosis so that potentially reversible causes of ischemia can be corrected. Radionuclide bone scintigraphy is a simple noninvasive method to evaluate the anastomotic patency of these grafts. Scintigraphically, vascular patency is characterized by normal or diffusely increased tracer uptake throughout the graft, whereas failure of the graft presents as photopenia. Bone scintigraphy, especially single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), is of considerable value in the work-up of patients with persistent back pain after spinal surgery. Postoperatively, spinal fusion is characterized by diffusely increased uptake of radiotracer in the fused area. In contrast, focally increased uptake has been shown to be related to bony nonunion or pseudoarthroses. In patients who have undergone laminectomy, SPECT bone scintigraphy can localize the level of maximum instability and vertebral stress. The radionuclide evaluation of joint replacement complications, especially of hip and knee prostheses, has been extensively studied for nearly 2 decades. Bone scintigraphy is probably most useful when the images are normal. Although periprosthetic sites of increased uptake may be indicative of postoperative problems such as loosening or infection, they may also merely reflect postoperative changes. Dual tracer studies, focusing primarily on the diagnosis of the infected joint replacement, have consequently become the norm. Bone-gallium scintigraphy was the earliest dual tracer modality used, with an accuracy of 60% to 80%. The current radionuclide study of choice for diagnosing the infected prosthesis is labeled leukocyte-marrow imaging. Both leukocytes and colloid tracers accumulate in marrow, whereas only leukocytes accumulate in infection. This technique facilitates the discrimination of labeled leukocyte uptake in aberrant, but not abnormal, marrow from uptake in infection. The reported accuracy of this technique consistently exceeds 90%.
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PMID:Radionuclide imaging after skeletal interventional procedures. 771 56

We here report on a rare case of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IV with impending ruptured thoracic aortic aneurysm in a young adult. A 38-year-old man complained of severe back pain and transient paralysis in both legs. He was diagnosed as having an impending ruptured thoracic descending aortic aneurysm. Emergency operation which was aneurysmectomy and reconstruction of the descending aorta was performed. The fact that the aneurysm (11 cm) in a patient was so large for his age and the abnormal subcutaneous fatty tissue suggested the existence of systemic metabolic disease. An analysis of collagen extracted from the patient revealed the absence of type III collagen. Furthermore, an electron microscopic analysis finding that the collagen fibrils was of non-uniform size lead to the diagnosis of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, Type IV (arterial type). Postoperatively the patient suffered paralysis in both legs due to ischemia of the spinal cord. However, his general condition was stable. He was transferred to another hospital for rehabilitation of both legs 60 days after the operation. Although the physical signs usually associated with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome were absent in this case, diagnosis followed electrophoresis of collagen extracted from the patient. As a result of the above observation, we recommended analysis of collagen in cases where the size of the aneurysm or the age of the patient appear unusual even though physical signs of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome are absent.
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PMID:[Ehlers-Danlos syndrome with impending ruptured thoracic descending aortic aneurysm in a young adult--a case report]. 830 68

Vascular emergencies are an uncommon but significant cause of abdominal pain, back pain, hemorrhagic shock, and death in adults. This article reviews abdominal vascular anatomy, risk factors, signs and symptoms, abdominal vascular thrombosis, mesenteric ischemia and infarction, and abdominal vascular emboli and aneurysms.
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PMID:Vascular abdominal emergencies. 868 85

Long-term survival of carcinomas in the body and tail of the pancreas after surgery is still rare. One of the major reasons for unresectability is cancerous invasion to major vessels, such as the common hepatic and splenic arteries. Resection of the involved arteries can increase resectability and thus might increase post-operative survival. The aim of this study was to clarify the importance of the Appleby operation for carcinoma of the body and tail of the pancreas. A Case Report was carried out with a 54 year-old man, had suffered back pain and loss of body weight for six months. Imaging procedures such as US, CT or angiography showed a carcinoma in the body of the pancreas, about 3 cm in size, and both the common hepatic and splenic arteries were invaded by the tumor. The Appleby operation was used for this patient, since firstly there was no invasion to the head of the pancreas, secondly neither the proper hepatic artery nor the SMA was involved, thirdly the root of the CA was free of carcinoma, and finally because clear pulsation of the proper hepatic artery could be felt one or two minutes after occlusion of the CHA, which indicated that resection of the CHA would not lead to hepatic ischemia. The postoperative course was uneventful. His appetite recovered well and his body weight increased to the level before the disease. The patient was relieved from back pain and has returned to work 18 months after the operation, although he had a local recurrence eight months after the operation. In addition, eleven cases with carcinoma of the body and tail of the pancreas were used for a literature review. The average survival time after the Appleby operation is 6.6 months, and four patients are still alive. One patient has survived 13 years after the operation. It was concluded that although the prognosis after Appleby procedure is still not satisfactory that this operation can at least offer patients a better quality of life.
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PMID:Appleby operation for carcinoma of the body and tail of the pancreas. 916 7

The combination of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) and necrosis of the lumbar vertebral bodies is often the consequence of ischemia of the lumbar arteries and local compression from the aneurysm. A patient with necrosis of lumbar vertebral bodies 2 to 4 was admitted for abdominal aneurysm repair. CT scanning revealed almost complete destruction of the second and fourth lumbar vertebral bodies. In a combined operation an orthopedic and a vascular surgical team implanted two carbonic cages with autogenous splinter of the pelvic bone and an aortic vascular graft, using a retroperitoneal approach. Three months after the operation the 61-year-old man is entirely well and without any signs of back pain. He could be fully mobilized within 3 weeks postoperatively. This case study depicts the surgical techniques and discusses the advantages of the simultaneous operation and retroperitoneal exposure.
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PMID:[Simultaneous retroperitoneal operation of juxtarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm and ischemic vertebral body necrosis]. 920 40


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