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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
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Upper respiratory and pulmonary complications of cocaine addiction have been increasingly reported in recent years, with most of the patients being intravenous addicts, users of freebase, or smokers of "crack." The toxicity of cocaine is complex and is exerted via multiple central and peripheral pathways. Recurrent snorting of cocaine may result in ischemia, necrosis, and infections of the nasal mucosa, sinuses, and adjacent structures. Pulmonary complications of cocaine toxicity include pulmonary edema, pulmonary hemorrhages, pulmonary barotrauma, foreign body granulomas, cocaine related pulmonary infection, obliterative bronchiolitis, asthma, and persistent gas-exchange abnormalities. Respiratory manifestations are nonspecific and include shortness of breath, cough, wheezing, hemoptysis, and chest pains. Severe respiratory difficulties have been reported in neonates of abusing mothers. In the absence of a cocaine-abuse history, it may be difficult to recognize the etiological role of cocaine, especially in the absence of needle tracks pointing to previous intravenous drug abuse and/or negative toxicology.
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PMID:Respiratory complications of cocaine abuse. 158 7

Forty-four patients with massive or repeated hemoptysis due to nonneoplastic lung diseases were treated by embolization of the bronchial and non-bronchial systemic arteries with Ivalon particles or a mixture of Ivalon and gelatin sponge particles during the past five and a half years. Immediate control of hemoptysis was achieved in 43 patients (98%), and no spinal cord ischemia was observed. Among 30 patients followed for more than 12 months, successful control of hemoptysis was obtained in 22 (73%). Hemoptysis recurred in eight patients (27%); four underwent repeated embolotherapy alone, two underwent surgery alone, and two underwent repeated embolization and surgery. Successful control of hemoptysis was achieved after repeated embolization and/or surgery in all eight patients. It is concluded that embolization of bronchial and non-bronchial systemic arteries is an effective initial treatment for hemoptysis, and good long-term results can be obtained in combination with surgery.
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PMID:[Bronchial and non-bronchial systemic artery embolization for hemoptysis due to non-neoplastic lung diseases. Immediate effect and long-term results]. 194 83

A 36-year-old patient was found to have severe left main-stem bronchial stenosis two years after bronchial artery embolization (BAE) for hemoptysis. Embolization-induced bronchial ischemia appeared to be the only potential cause for the observed lesions, and, to our knowledge, this constitutes the first report of late bronchial sequelae following BAE. Despite balloon-catheter dilatation of the stenosis, the severity of poststenotic lesions led to left pneumonectomy. The anatomic data further supported the hypothesis of a complication of BAE. Clinicians and radiologists should be aware of this potential complication of a widely used therapeutic procedure.
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PMID:Left main-stem bronchial stenosis complicating bronchial artery embolization. 233 22

We describe the case of a 23 years old male, who suffered a 45 bullet wound in the arm and upper right hemithorax. He walked after his injury and 10 minutes later presented dizziness, cough and tachycardia. On admission a minor haemothorax was seen on a chest X ray, but the bullet was not seen. Even without symptoms, an X ray of abdomen showed the missile lying above the left sacroiliac joint. A chest tube was placed, the patient had an excellent recovery and was discharged a week later. After several months he presented hemoptysis and a moderate pain on his right chest and was treated as an acute bronchitis. Six months after his initial injury he developed a florid picture of acute pulmonary embolism (chest pain, dyspnea, hemoptysis, tachycardia, severe cough). A new chest X ray was done and the bullet was shown lying in the right chest. A pulmonary arteriography located it in a lower basal branch. Through a posterolateral thoracotomy the slug was obtained. The recovery was uneventful and he has remained well since. We discuss the possible mechanisms to explain the entrance of the bullet into the vascular system and conclude that in cases of gunshot wounds: a) An exit wound must be always searched for; if not found exploratory X ray are mandatory, b) If the bullet is not found, specially after thoracic injuries, bullet embolism should be contemplated, c) If there are signs of regional ischemia arteriography is mandatory.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Embolism caused by a bullet. Report of a case and review of the literature]. 265 26

Surgery remains the treatment of choice for massive and recurrent hemoptysis. In some instances, however, immediate surgical intervention is contraindicated. In these situations, bronchial artery embolization (BAE) has proved to be a successful definitive treatment for non-surgical candidates and a palliative therapy in patients requiring hemodynamic stabilization prior to surgery. The most serious complication of BAE is spinal cord ischemia. This relates directly to the potential anastomotic connections between the bronchial circulation and the anterior spinal artery. Somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) have been used in the past to monitor spinal cord ischemia during procedures that threaten the vascularity of the spinal cord. The authors report two cases in which SSEPs were employed to monitor spinal cord ischemia during bronchial artery embolization.
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PMID:Bronchial artery embolization: monitoring with somatosensory evoked potentials. Work in progress. 329 87

Isobutyl-2 cyanoacrylate (IBC) was used to embolize the bronchial arteries of 14 patients with severe hemoptysis. The site of bleeding was supplied by a bronchial artery from the aorta in 11 cases and from a right bronchointercostal trunk in three. IBC was injected after previous reduction of the blood flow in the artery by embolization with particles of dura mater. In all cases, bleeding stopped immediately after occlusion and no spinal cord complications were observed. The results indicate that IBC may be a valuable occluding agent in severe hemoptysis, since it produced virtually permanent occlusion of both the distal and proximal parts of the artery. In 13 patients, bleeding did not recur throughout follow-up periods of 2-17 months. In one patient, it recurred 12 months after embolization but stopped after occlusion of another bronchial artery with IBC. It should be noted, however, that immediately after embolization, five patients experienced violent transient retrosternal burning, and one patient experienced dysphagia and fever for 2 days. Since mediastinal ischemia cannot always be avoided, this procedure must be reserved for cases of severe hemoptysis for which surgical treatment is contraindicated.
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PMID:Bronchial artery occlusion for severe hemoptysis: use of isobutyl-2 cyanoacrylate. 660 May 35

From January 1989 to September 1993, 59 consecutive patients (35 males and 24 females, mean age 59.6 years old) underwent surgical repair of aortic dissection on the cardiovascular surgical unit at Takeda Hospital. The type of aortic dissection were classified according to Stanford University criteria. Twenty-two patients had acute type A (Ac-A), 10 had chronic type A (Ch-A), 4 had acute type B (Ac-B), and 23 had chronic type B (Ch-B) dissection. Seventeen dissections (29%) in the entire group of 59 cases had ruptured (including cardiac tamponade, pleural effusion and hemoptysis etc.). Ischemia of lower extremity occurred in 7 patients and ischemia of visceral organs in 3 patients. Type A dissection were approached via a median sternotomy and cardiopulmonary bypass with systemic hypothermia. Type B dissections were approached through a left postrolateral thoracotomy. Left heart bypass (left atrial-femoral in 8 cases) and partial cardiopulmonary bypass (femoral-femoral in 12 cases) generally were utilized. Resection of intimal tear and replacement of aorta with vascular grafts (including aortic arch in 19 cases) were performed in most patients and primary closure of the intimal tear was performed in 9 cases using GRF. The over-all operative mortality rate was 36% (8/22) for Ac-A, 20% (2/10) for Ch-A, 25% (1/4) for Ac-B, 22% (5/23) for Ch-B. Main causes of operative death was perioperative brain damage. It is necessary to improve the operative mortality for Ac-A dissections (especially in replacement of aortic arch and arch vessels). Further researches are needed regarding optimal methods of the cerebral protection during reconstruction of aortic arch.
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PMID:[Results of surgical treatment of aortic dissections]. 788 69

A case of watershed infarction in the spinal cord is reported. The patient underwent bronchial artery embolization for control of massive hemoptysis. The bronchial arteriogram was carefully examined and focused on blood supply to the spinal cord prior to embolization. Acute paraparesis followed the embolization procedure even though there was no visible spinal supply on the arteriogram. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a hyperintensity lesion over the watershed region which is located at the central portion of the upper thoracic cord. This case is reported to emphasize the significant role which angiographically invisible small vessels can play in the blood supply to the spinal cord. The vascular system of the spinal cord and the prevention of spinal cord ischemia secondary to embolization are further discussed here.
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PMID:Watershed infarction of spinal cord after the embolization of bronchial artery: a case report. 870 83

Bronchial artery embolization (BAE) is well accepted and widely used for management of massive and recurrent hemoptysis. Recurrent hemoptysis occurs in 20% of cases. It may be due to partial embolization, recruitment of other systemic collaterals, recanalization of an embolized artery, or progression of primary disease. Severe complications of BAE are limited to spinal cord injury, oesophageal necrosis, and bronchial ischemia. The proper application of bronchial arteriography and embolization techniques depends on a thorough knowledge of the arterial anatomy, a meticulous catheterization technique, the use of nonionic or lowosmolarity contrast materials, and adequate positioning of the catheter. In these optical conditions of safety, BAE is the treatment of choice for severe and recurrent hemoptysis.
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PMID:[Failures and complications of bronchial artery embolization]. 876 13

Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is generally considered to increase the risk of flexible fiberoptic bronchoscopy (FFB). Currently, to our knowledge, no data in the literature support or challenge this concept. We conducted a retrospective chart review for the years 1986 to 1994 of 20 patients (14 men) who underwent 21 FFBs while hospitalized for an AMI. The mean age was 63.8 years (range, 38 to 83 years). Ten patients underwent revascularization procedures (eight coronary artery bypass grafting and two percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty) before FFB. The mean period between the AMI and FFB was 11.7 days (range, 1 to 30 days). Indications for FFB were pulmonary infiltrate (n = 10), hemoptysis (n = 6), atelectasis (n = 4), and to localize a suspected bronchopleural fistula (n = 1). Procedures performed included airway examination (21), BAL (12), transbronchial biopsy (2), endobronchial biopsy (3), and endobronchial brushing (4). No procedure was interrupted as a result of an adverse event, and five patients died during the same hospitalization. Four of the deaths occurred 6 to 15 days postprocedure; 1 patient (who had active ischemia at the time of FFB) died 4 h postprocedure. We conclude that FFB is safe in the immediate post-AMI period as long as the patient does not have active ischemia at the time of the procedure.
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PMID:Analysis of the safety of bronchoscopy after recent acute myocardial infarction. 922 3


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