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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The triad of postprandial pain, weight loss, and
diarrhea
are the hallmarks of abdominal angina. An anastomotic meandering mesenteric artery noted on frontal arteriogram is valuable in signaling significant disease, but lateral views are the sine qua non for diagnosis. Early surgical correction either by local endarterectomy or bypass of a stenotic or occluded segment and accurate selection of cases results in long-term correction of the intestinal
ischemia
. When advanced occlusive disease of the mesenteric arteries is noted on the preoperative arteriogram of patients selected for aortoiliofemoral, renal artery, or aortic aneurysm reconstructive surgery, concomitant reconstitution of the mesenteric vascular circulation is advisable. It is our opinion that such an approach can be a significant deterrent to subsequent catastrophic bowel infarction from mesenteric arterial occlusive disease.
...
PMID:Management of chronic visceral ischemia. 708 18
DT, a 63-year-old white male with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and severe peripheral vascular disease, was admitted with a five-day history of vague abdominal pain and
diarrhea
. On the day of admission he vomited three times, was noted to have a bloody stool, and came to the emergency room. DT denied hematemesis, fever, or chills. He had bilateral leg amputations and had sustained three myocardial infarctions, the last one 15 months before this admission. He had never experienced symptoms of abdominal angina. Of significance was his history of congestive heart failure, mitral regurgitation, and atrial fibrillation. His medications on admission included digoxin 0.25mg per day, furosemide 40mg per day, and NPH insulin 15 units per day. On admission to the hospital his oral temperature was 38 degrees C, pulse was 90/min, respiratory rate was 24/min, and blood pressure was 134/80mmHg. Abdominal examination revealed a distended abdomen with hypoactive bowel sounds and mild tenderness. Chest x ray revealed cardiomegaly. The electrocardiogram demonstrated atrial fibrillation. A plain film of the abdomen was positive for gallstones and edema of the bowel wall (thumb-printing). Laboratory results included blood urea nitrogen 48mg%, creatinine 1.2mg%, hemoglobin 18g/dl, and hematocrit 52.9%. White blood cell count was 11,900 cells/cc with 33% polymorphonuclear leukocytes, 47% bands, 8% lymphocytes, 11% monocytes, and 1% atypical lymphocytes. The prime considerations for differential diagnosis were mesenteric
ischemia
and infectious gastroenteritis. While it was appreciated that mesenteric
ischemia
, if present, might warrant surgical intervention, the risk of anesthesia itself in this patient was felt by his attending physicians to exceed 30%. Furthermore, the clinical findings were only "suggestive" of mesenteric eschemia. They were certainly not "diagnostic." In view of this dilemma, a consultation with the Division of Clinical Decision Making was requested.
...
PMID:Abdominal pain, atherosclerosis, and atrial fibrillation. The case for mesenteric ischemia. 716 38
Twenty-six cases of carcinoid-related mesenteric angiopathy and intestinal infarction (three from our institution and 23 previously reported cases) were reviewed. Twenty patients presented with acute abdominal findings, including peritonitis (13 cases), intestinal obstruction (five cases), and bleeding per rectum (two cases). Fifteen patients (75%) experienced antecedent symptoms of abdominal pain and/or
diarrhea
, averaging 2.5 years in duration. Twelve patients (46%) exhibited symptoms of carcinoid syndrome. Mesenteric angiography in three cases demonstrated encasement and segmental branch narrowing or occlusion of major mesenteric vessels. Eleven patients underwent resection and primary bowel anastomosis with an early survival rate of 91%. Four additional patients who underwent lesser surgical procedures and five patients who did not undergo operation all died. Elastic vascular sclerosis (EVS) was identified in 19 of 22 cases with available histologic material (86%). These changes were observed in proximity to as well as distant to the primary tumor. In general, the severity of EVS did not correlate with the likelihood of gut
ischemia
. Although not the sole cause of intestinal gangrene in patients with midgut carcinoids, EVS may contribute significantly to the evolution of these ischemic changes.
...
PMID:Mesenteric angiopathy, intestinal gangrene, and midgut carcinoids. 728 Oct 10
Fifteen patients with
ischemia
of the colon are presented. The majority showed a similar clinical presentation with hematochezia, abdominal pain, and
diarrhea
in an elderly patient population having associated disease. Colonoscopy was abnormal in all patients studied. Three endoscopic stages were recognized; (1) acute stage characterized by petechiae, pallor, and hyperemia; (2) subacute stage consisting of ulceration and exudation; and (3) chronic stage characterized by stricture, decrease in haustrations, and mucosal granularity. Conventional barium enemas were abnormal and suggested ischemic colitis in six of 15 patients. Rigid proctoscopy was normal or demonstrated nonspecific proctitis in 12 of 15 patients studied. Colonoscopic biopsies demonstrated superficial inflammatory changes in all patients. Thirteen patients had complete mucosal healing endoscopically in 2 weeks to 3 months with stricture developing in four patients. Because ischemic colitis is a distinct subtype of ischemic bowel disease most often limited to the superficial mucosa, colonoscopy is an alternative and usually safe modality in the diagnosis of this entity and proved more accurate that conventional x-ray and proctoscopy.
...
PMID:Colonoscopy in ischemic colitis. 729 23
Intestinal ischemia should be suspected in any patient following aortic surgery who has pain out of keeping with the operation, postoperative
diarrhea
(with or without bleeding) or an unexplained metabolic acidosis. Ten such cases of intestinal
ischemia
were identified during a 10-year period at the Toronto General and Toronto Western hospitals. Six occurred following repair of a ruptured abdominal aneurysm, one followed elective aneurysmectomy and three followed elective bypass for occlusive disease. The overall mortality was 70%. Transmural bowel infarction was found in six patients (all died), while four patients had partial-thickness injury (one died, three had late strictures). Potentially preventable factors in each patient, either single or multiple, were identified and are discussed. Emphasis on ealy diagnosis is stressed, because once transmural necrosis had occurred the prognosis is poor.
...
PMID:Prevention of severe intestinal ischemia following reconstruction of the abdominal aorta. 732 30
Iloprost is a synthetic stable analogue of prostacyclin (PGI2), which shares its antiaggregating and vasodilating properties. Iloprost has been administered by i.v. route to patients with critical limb ischaemia (CLI) of different origin (maximal dosage: 2 ng/kg/min 6 hours/day infusion for 14-28 days). In patients with claudicatio intermittens (Fontaine stage II) iloprost improved the time to claudication and the maximal walking distance on treadmill, with an effect still lasting 60 days after suspension. This benefit was not related to a significant improvement in blood flow. Five multicentric, perspective, randomized versus placebo studies in patients with more severe CLI (Fontaine stage III-IV) susceptible to surgical treatment, showed that iloprost was able to reduce pain and ulcer dimensions. Furthermore, tha amputation rate of the ischemic limb was significantly lower in patients treated with iloprost during a 6 month follow-up (p < 0.01). Iloprost was also more effective than aspirin in causing pain relief and ulcer healing in patients with thromboangiitis obliterans and more effective than nifedipine in reducing frequency, intensity and duration of ischemic episodes in patients with Raynaud's phenomenon. Minor side effects of iloprost administration are represented by facial flushing, tachycardia, headache, nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramping,
diarrhoea
, whose frequency ranges from 16% to 70%; major collateral effects, occurring in less than 5% of patients, are above all represented by severe hypotension and angina pectoris. Clinical data indicate therefore that iloprost treatment can allow to improve the clinical conditions and the prognosis in patients with critical
ischemia
of the limbs, not candidate to surgical revascularization, by causing a relief of pain, a reduction in ulcer dimensions and deferring amputation.
...
PMID:[The role of iloprost in the treatment of critical ischemia of the limbs]. 750 14
Besides classical necrotizing enterocolitis (in neonates), which is seen in India as elsewhere in the world, we observe sporadic cases of tropical enterocolitis, i.e. segmental jejunitis, ileitis or colitis and rarely duodenitis. This is a distinct clinico-pathological entity presenting as "acute abdomen", with pain, bilious vomiting, constipation or bloody
diarrhoea
. The clinical course is not as fulminating as neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis. Most cases are salvaged by conservative treatment especially after the confidence brought by laparoscopic vision of the abdomen, thus excluding perforation or gangrene of the bowel involved. Without laparoscopy, most of the cases end up in laparotomy. The pathology appears to be a kind of local hyperimmune reaction in the segment of bowel involved, ranging from punctate haemorrhages in the seromuscular layer of the bowel to a generalized red fiery look or perforation due to mucosal ulceration. Whatever the causative agent, the pathogenesis is of local vasculitis leading to
ischemia
and various patterns of disease.
...
PMID:Tropical enterocolitis in children. 808 96
Interleukin (IL-4) is a pluripotent cytokine that stimulates proliferation of activated T-cells and has antineoplastic activity against human renal tumors in animal systems. In phase I trials, IL-4 could be tolerated at doses up to 20 micrograms/kg, with dose-limiting toxicities consisting of fever, fluid retention, nasal congestion, and mucositis. We report the results of two separate Phase II trials of IL-4 in 30 patients with metastatic malignant melanoma and 19 patients with advanced renal cancer. IL-4 was administered intravenously every 8 h for 14 doses in two 5-day courses separated by a 9-day interval. The first 27 patients were treated at a dose of 800 micrograms/m2, but after three of these patients developed cardiac toxicities, the dose was decreased to 600 micrograms/m2. One complete response occurred in a patient with metastatic melanoma (duration > or = 30 months). No responses were seen among the patients with renal cancer. The most frequent side effects were fever, nausea, malaise, nasal congestion, and
diarrhea
. Reversible hepatic and renal dysfunction were also common. Hypotension was infrequent, but transient weight gain due to fluid retention was common. The major life-threatening toxicities were cardiac and gastrointestinal. Suspected cardiac
ischemia
was observed in two patients, pericarditis in one, and arrhythmias in two. Three patients had major upper gastrointestinal bleeding without evidence of local tumor. We conclude that IL-4, when given as a single agent on this schedule at maximum tolerated dose, does not possess meaningful activity in renal cancer or melanoma.
...
PMID:Phase II studies of recombinant human interleukin-4 in advanced renal cancer and malignant melanoma. 813 48
Canine jejunoileal transplantation induces an early profuse watery
diarrhea
of uncertain etiology. Our aim was to determine the temporal effects of a canine model of jejunoileal autotransplantation (a model devoid of confounding effects of
ischemia
-reperfusion or immune rejection) on basal jejunal and ileal absorption of water and electrolytes to determine if impaired absorption is responsible for the
diarrhea
. Our hypothesis was that net absorption of water and electrolytes in an enterically isolated loop would decrease after jejunoileal transplantation. Four groups of dogs (N > or = 6) were prepared with 80-cm modified Thiry-Vella loops: group I, neurally intact jejunum; group II, autotransplanted jejunum; group III, neurally intact ileum; and group IV, autotransplanted ileum. The loops were perfused for 3 hr with 150 mM NaCl at 3 ml/min under fasted conditions; transit time through the loop was determined by bolus of a nonabsorbable marker. Dogs were studied on three separate days at one, two, eight, and nine weeks postoperatively. Net absorptive fluxes of water and electrolytes and transit times were similar (P > 0.05) between neurally intact and autotransplant groups (group I vs II and group III vs IV) at each time point. Ileal loops absorbed more than jejunal loops, and transit was slower in ileal loops (each P < 0.05). Our findings suggest that, despite the obligate disruption of extrinsic innervation, enteric (intrinsic) neural continuity, and lymphatic drainage that accompanies this canine model of jejunoileal autotransplantation, net basal absorptive function of water and electrolytes during the fasted state was not decreased nor was transit altered either in jejunum or ileum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of a model of canine jejunoileal orthotopic autotransplantation on jejunal and ileal transport of water and electrolytes. 814 51
Lower gastrointestinal tract symptoms occur frequently in runners. The most common complaints are bowel urgency and
diarrhea
. Many etiologies have been proposed, including enteric fluid and electrolyte imbalance, autonomic nervous system stimulation,
ischemia
and mechanical trauma. The evaluation should include a review of the athlete's training program and diet, as well as a review of any preexisting gastrointestinal disease. A stool examination for occult blood should be performed in the athlete who complains of
diarrhea
. Treatment begins with a reduction in the intensity of workouts, followed by a gradual return to the previous level of training after the symptoms resolve. In most cases, symptoms do not recur. Dietary manipulation or antimotility agents may be helpful in some athletes. Bloody diarrhea, usually related to hemorrhagic gastritis, can be effectively treated with histamine H2-receptor antagonists.
...
PMID:Runner's diarrhea and other intestinal problems of athletes. 837 91
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