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

Acute visual loss secondary to ischemic optic neuropathy in children is extremely rare. The causes are usually hypotension or anemia. We describe the clinical course of a 9-year-old boy with a functional renal transplant who presented to the emergency room hemodynamically stable after waking up with complete bilateral loss of vision (no light perception). Examination showed that he had suffered massive nocturnal blood loss from esophageal varices secondary to portal hypertension. The patient's end-stage renal disease was secondary to autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD), an entity comprised of renal cysts and hepatic fibrosis. Ophthalmologic findings in ARPKD are rarely cited in the literature. A literature search revealed 3 other cases of sudden visual loss reported in nonophthalmologic journals in patients with ARPKD. Funduscopic examination showed bilateral optic nerve head pallor and swelling with associated flame hemorrhages. The fact that this patient already had mildly pale nerves on presentation, along with hemodynamically compensated blood pressure and pulse, suggested chronic as well as acute ischemia. Based on our findings and other reported cases in the literature, ophthalmologic examinations may be indicated in all patients with ARPKD.
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PMID:Acute visual loss in a child with autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease: case report and review of the literature. 1282 65

Early recognition of limb ischemia may allow prompt, effective therapy for peripheral arterial injuries. A review of cases of peripheral arterial trauma at the Toronto General Hospital since 1953 revealed that 50% of the injuries were not immediately recognized. An expanding hematoma, pulsatile hemorrhage or the onset of a bruit and thrill signifies arterial damage in penetrating wounds. Ischemia may be difficult to recognize in patients with soft tissue or skeletal trauma, but the presence of distal pallor, coolness, paresis, cyanosis, anesthesia, poor capillary refill and disproportionate pain indicates significant arterial damage and necessitates surgical exploration. The diagnosis of arterial "spasm" in such instances is untenable and can only be made after direct inspection, or on the return of pulses after reduction of a fracture or release of a tight cast. Restoration of arterial continuity by end-to-end anastomosis is the recommended technique for all arterial injuries, since after ligation of even minor vessels, ischemia may ensue, and amputation may occasionally be necessary.
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PMID:THE RECOGNITION AND MANAGEMENT OF PERIPHERAL ARTERIAL INJURIES. 1428 3

We report a case of a 21-year-old man with Fabry's disease who presented with a sudden decrease in visual acuity to 20/200 in the left eye. Pale areas with a lobular choroidal distribution were seen on fundus examination. No retinal vascular causes were found on further evaluation. With anticoagulation treatment, the patient's subsequent course was good, with visual recovery to 20/25 and normalization of the funduscopic appearance. Recovery of both visual acuity and the pale, lobular areas suggested a choroidal etiology, probably ischemic because of the sudden onset. Choroidian ischemia is therefore a cause of visual acuity loss in Fabry's disease, so far not described in the literature.
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PMID:[Loss of visual acuity due to choroidal ischemia in Fabry's disease]. 1458 28

Findings of diminished or absent pulses, pallor on elevation, redness of the foot on lowering of the leg, sluggish refilling of the toe capillaries, and thickened nails or absence of toe hair are consistent with impaired arterial perfusion to the foot. When ischemia is recognized as contributing to pedal ulceration and infection in the diabetic foot, quantitation of its severity may be difficult. Standard clinical evaluation of trophic changes is limited in an infected foot with its accompanying swelling, edema, and erythema. A palpable pedal pulse does not preclude the possibility of the presence of limb-threatening ischemia. Additional non-invasive vascular studies should be undertaken for these patients. Management of the diabetic foot is often a complex clinical problem. However, the principles of care are simple, including correction of systemic factors, such as blood glucose control, cardiovascular risk factor management, and smoking, as well as local factor correction, such as debridement, pressure relief, infection control, and revascularization when indicated. When a patient presents with evidence of infection, adequate drainage and antibiotic therapy are mandatory. The next step should be performed to differentiate the more common neuropathic ulcerations from the truly ischemic ulceration. Symptoms of rest pain or claudication are not often helpful because many of these patients are asymptomatic as a result of the presence of their neuropathy and inactivity. If an infected foot requires debridement or open partial forefoot amputation, observing the wound on a daily base is also important. Once infection is eradicated, there should be prompt signs of healing, including the development of wound granulation within several days. If wounds are not showing signs of prompt healing, arteriography is necessary. Early aggressive drainage, debridement, and local foot amputations combined with liberal use of revascularization results in cumulative limb salvage of 74% at 5 years in high-risk groups. Others report that pedal bypass to the ischemic infected foot is effective and safe as long as infection adequately controlled. These studies strongly suggest that early recognition and aggressive surgical drainage of pedal sepsis followed by surgical revascularization is critical to achieving maximal limb salvage in the high-risk population. Patients who have diabetes present a unique challenge in lower extremity revascularization because of the distal origination of many bypasses, distal distribution of the occlusive disease, and the frequently calcified arterial wall. An aggressive multidisciplinary approach to foot disease associated with diabetes involving the primary care provider, medical specialists, interventional radiology, and podiatric, plastic, and vascular surgeons will provide optimal medical and surgical care. Peripheral vascular disease is highly treatable if intervention is instituted in a timely and collegial fashion.
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PMID:Vascular evaluation and arterial reconstruction of the diabetic foot. 1463 33

Ocular involvements of Biermer's anaemia are rarely reported in literature. We present a case of Biermer's anaemia associated with diabetes. Ocular examination showed important conjinctival paleness, diffuse retinal ischemia, Roth's tasks, macular oedema and ischemic optic neuropathy. The patient was treated with vitamin B12 intramusculary. A month later, on examination, we noted a regression of optic neuropathy, the aggravation of ischemic retinopathy and persistence of macular oedema. The patient was treated with laser photocoagulation. The majority of ocular manifestations are reversible if treatment is underlaken early. The combination of diabetes with Biermer's anemia deteriorates the ischemic retinopathy and aggavates its prognosis.
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PMID:[Ocular findings in megaloblastic anemia associated with diabetes. A case report]. 1604 7

A 35-year-old woman was hospitalized for subacute ischemia of the left leg following an intermittent claudication for some weeks. She also presented paleness and coldness of both hands. The radial pulses could not be palpated. Smoking was the only cardiovascular risk factor. Duplex ultrasonography and angiography revealed a left popliteal thrombus combined with low diameter leg arteries and in the upper limbs stenosis of the left radial artery and thrombosis of the right radial artery. Search for a metabolic, embolic or thrombophilic etiology was negative. More minute history taking revealed use of cannabis and recent nasal administration of cocaine. Her condition improved with heparin therapy except for the upper limbs with ischemia of the hands and disabling Raynaud's phenomenon. This report highlights the combined arterial toxicity of drugs often used together by drug addicts. The association of cannabis use and tobacco smoking is not rare in patients with Buerger-like juvenile arteriopathy and cocaine may provoke peripheral vascular disease by embolism or in situ thrombosis. Interrogation of a patient presenting with Buerger-like peripheral arterial disease should insist on detecting use of drugs in association with tobacco smoking.
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PMID:[Sub acute ischemia of a lower limb in a patient with juvenile peripheral arterial disease and arterial cocaine toxicity]. 1673 38

Constructing vascular access for hemodialysis causes changes in blood flow to the extremity, which can lead to distal ischemia. Ischemic steal syndrome is manifested by pain; weakness; pallor; and, in severe cases, ulceration and tissue loss. Severe ischemia, requiring reintervention, has an incidence of 4%, although some degree of ischemia causing pain or parasthesias occurs in 10% to 20% of patients following access construction. Pathophysiology may be on the basis of inadequate arterial collateral inflow due to occlusive disease, particularly involving the medium-sized vessels, or high flow in a fistula exceeding the inflow capacity in the absence of intrinsic occlusive disease of the inflow arteries. Predicting steal remains difficult, although certain patient characteristics and preoperative techniques can help identify those patients in whom arteriovenous fistulas have an increased risk of causing steal. Patients with diabetes, multiple access procedures, and constructions based on proximal arteries are more prone to ischemia. Ultrasonography and digital-brachial indices measured by photoplethysmography or Doppler techniques have been used to predict fistulas that are more likely to cause ischemia, but these fall short of reliability. Operative techniques for correcting steal include arteriovenous fistula ligation, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, banding or restrictive procedures, and distal revascularization interval ligation or modifications of this technique. Operative intervention for ischemic steal syndrome successfully resolves ischemia in 80% to 95% of patients. Some patients can have persistent pain despite healing of ulceration.
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PMID:Strategies for management of ischemic steal syndrome. 1788 20

Acute peripheral arterial occlusion is a medical emergency manifesting with pain, pallor, absence of pulse, paralysis, and paresthesia. Neurological deficits have occasionally been described as the presenting symptoms of acute arterial ischemia. We report a patient with acute bilateral occlusion of the femoral arteries and an underlying severe atherosclerotic aorto-iliac disease who presented with acute painless paraplegia and anesthesia in the lower extremities. The patient underwent arterial thrombectomy of the right and left femoral artery, followed by angioplasty and stent insertion of the right and left common iliac artery within 5 h from the onset of his symptoms. Subsequent physical therapy resulted in rapid improvement in the strength of his lower extremities and the patient was able to walk unaided after two weeks.
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PMID:Acute painless paraparesis due to bilateral femoral artery occlusion. 1796 39

Ischaemia, loss of neural tissue, glial cell activation and tissue remodelling are symptoms of anterior ischaemic as well as glaucomatous optic neuropathy leading to pallor of the optic nerve head. Here, we describe a simple method for the pallor measurement using a fundus camera equipped with a colour CCD camera and a special dual bandpass filter. The reproducibility of the determined mean pallor value was 11.7% (coefficient of variation for repeated measurements in the same subject); the variation over six healthy subjects was 14.8%. A significant difference between the mean pallor of an atrophic disc and that of the contralateral eye of the same individual was found. However, even the clinically unaffected eye showed a significantly increased pallor compared to the mean of the healthy control group. Thus, optic disc pallor measurement, as described here, may be helpful in the early detection and follow-up of optic neuropathy.
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PMID:Quantitative assessment of optic nerve head pallor. 1835 44

Radiation colitis refers to the characteristic changes in the mucosa of the colon and rectum secondary to pelvic radiation. Based on the interval from radiation to mucosal changes or symptoms, there are two well-defined forms of radiation colitis: acute, manifested by mucosal sloughing causing diarrhea, mucus discharge, and tenesmus; and chronic, characterized by obstructed defecation or ischemia of the mucosa due to obliterative endarteritis and resulting in mucosal telangiectasias, mucosal pallor, and friability causing rectal bleeding. Up to 25% of all patients receiving pelvic radiation develop mild symptoms, and 2% to 3% develop moderate to severe symptoms. Radiation colitis can be difficult to treat in some patients. There are several options for treating its symptoms. Argon plasma coagulation is the most common method of treating telangiectasias. Topical formaldehyde has also been used for distal telangiectasias. Obstructed defecation caused by radiation strictures (which are very fibrotic) usually can be treated successfully with stool softeners, colonic dilation, or steroid injection. Surgery should be avoided if possible because of its technical difficulty and the high incidence of postoperative complications such as anastomotic leak and fistula formation. New advances in radiation delivery techniques (eg, intensity-modulated radiation therapy) using specialized computer algorithms and medications such as amifostine may decrease the incidence of radiation colitis.
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PMID:Approaches to the prevention and management of radiation colitis. 1879 28


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