Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 10-year-old boy had acute flaccid paraparesis with sensory deficits. Attention was drawn to his hitherto asymptomatic coarctation of the aorta. Aniography defined the extent of the dilated anterior spinal artery, and reversal of the flow pattern. The residual deficits consisted of minimal impairment of long motor and lateral sensory tract functions in a unilateral fashion, suggesting a steal syndrome with transient ischemia to the spinal cord. Recovery preceded surgical correction of the coarctation.
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PMID:The anterior spinal artery collateral in coarctation of the aorta. A clinical angiographic correlation. 42 71

Relatively short-term treatment of paraparesis due to Paget's disease with subcutaneous salmon calcitonin alone produced dramatic relief of sensory loss, pain, and paraparesis. The successful outcomes in 2 patients, one with spinal cord and one with cauda equina compression, indicate a potential alternative to surgery in reversing mild-to-severe neural dysfunction in Pagets disease. The proposed mechanisms of action of calcitonin include reduction of a direct bony impingement on the neural tissue and/or a decrease of neural ischemia. It is suggested that even if paraparesis does not improve with calcitonin alone, the medication given preoperatively would probably serve a useful adjunctive role by decreasing intraoperative bone bleeding. However, those patients whose pagetic bone is already metabolically inactive would probably not benefit from calcitonin therapy.
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PMID:Paget's disease. Reversal of severe paraparesis using calcitonin. 47 94

Two patients had the initial complaint of fluctuating paraparesis, which was most evident at menstruation. One patient had a semimonthly fluctuating deficit. Spinal cord compression and ischemia, secondary to the vascular mass, were considered the most likely mechanisms. Blood levels of estrogen and progesterone during the menstrual cycle may have had a contributory effect. Fluctuating spinal cord deficits associated with a consistent portion of the menstrual cycle should alert the physician to the possibility of an arteriovenous malformation of the spinal cord.
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PMID:Spinal cord vascular malformations with symptoms during menstruation. Report of two cases. 90 18

Paraplegia from spinal cord ischemia during thoracoabdominal aneurysm repair remains an unpredictable and unpreventable complication. In an effort to prevent spinal cord ischemia during aortic cross-clamping, preoperative angiographic localization of the blood supply to the spinal cord was performed in dogs. Sixteen animals underwent 60 minutes of thoracoabdominal aortic cross-clamping either without (control, n = 8) or with (shunted, n = 8) a selective shunt. Shunting was performed from the aortic arch to that isolated aortic segment angiographically shown to supply the thoracolumbar anterior spinal artery. Spinal cord blood flow was measured with microspheres just prior to cross-clamping, at 5 and 60 minutes after cross-clamping and at 5 minutes after restoration of aortic blood flow. Functional neurologic outcome was evaluated in animals at 24 hours postoperatively. Shunting did not decrease spinal cord injury. Seven of the 8 animals in the control group and 7 of the 8 in the shunted group developed paraplegia or paraparesis. Thoracic, but not lumbar spinal cord blood flow, was significantly increased in shunted animals. Spinal cord blood supply in dogs may be more segmental than previously believed. Technical problems in angiographic localization, spinal artery spasm, loss of spinal cord autoregulation or poor collateral circulation from the distal thoracic to the lumbar cord may also account for these results. Although shunting to aortic segments supplying the anterior spinal artery during thoracoabdominal aortic clamping may be attractive in humans, no benefit could be shown in this experimental model.
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PMID:Failure of selective shunting to intercostal arteries to prevent spinal cord ischemia during experimental thoracoabdominal aortic occlusion. 129 34

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

Three patients with spinal dural arteriovenous fistula presented with acute and/or progressive myelopathy. The thoracic cord was focally enlarged and poorly defined on MR images in two of the patients. One individual showed focal cord atrophy, and one demonstrated abnormal intrathecal vessels. In all patients MR studies revealed cord enhancement after IV administration of gadopentetate dimeglumine. The MR findings are believed to represent disruption of the blood-cord barrier associated with cord ischemia and/or infarction, which, in turn, is caused by venous stasis resulting from the fistula. The diagnosis in each case was confirmed by the combined results of myelography, spinal arteriography, and surgery. Surgical excision or embolization of the fistula produced a poor return of lost function but an arrest in the progression of paresis. One of the patients had constant severe back and leg pain postoperatively, and a follow-up MR study 5 months after surgery showed focal atrophy and persistent enhancement of the thoracic cord. The patient with preoperative focal cord atrophy had an MR examination 1 year prior to surgery, which revealed enhancement of the cord similar to that seen on the immediate preoperative MR study. This patient also had severe pain in the back and lower extremities preoperatively, which accompanied her progressive paraparesis. It is believed that long-standing enhancement of the spinal cord in patients with dural arteriovenous fistula probably results from chronic progressive venous ischemia, which may be irreversible and cause pain of a central type.
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PMID:Venous infarction of the spinal cord resulting from dural arteriovenous fistula: MR imaging findings. 188 56

Permanent ligation of arteries supplying blood to the spinal cord in operations for aortic aneurysm can lead to spinal cord ischemia, which can result in either paraparesis or paraplegia. This report describes a rapid method of intraoperative identification of those arteries that supply the spinal cord by use of an intrathecal platinum electrode to detect hydrogen in solution that has been injected into the aortic ostia. Preservation or perfusion of those identified arteries supplying the spinal cord may decrease the rate of postoperative neurologic complications. Of 28 porcine experiments with postoperative observation for 24 hours, there were 3 initial pilot experiments in which saline saturated with hydrogen was injected into the temporarily cross-clamped aorta. Twenty animals were then randomized to (1) preservation of only the vessels sequentially identified to supply blood to the spinal cord from T-13 to L-5 (n = 10); (2) division of the vessels supplying the spinal cord (n = 10). A further five animals underwent perfusion experiments wherein the identified cord arteries were perfused by a shunt, the other nonsupply arteries were divided, and the aorta was kept clamped for 45 minutes. Spinal motor evoked potentials were elicited with an intrathecal electrode and were highly sensitive for paralysis. Paralysis occurred in 0/3 pilot (p less than 0.013 vs division); 8/10 division; 1/10 preservation (p less than 0.0017 vs division); and perfusion 1/5 (p less than 0.025 vs division). Results of a pilot study in eight humans shows that the technique can be used to rapidly identify segmental arteries supplying the spinal cord, to determine if distal perfusion is supplying the spinal cord with blood flow, and if reattached segmental arteries are patent.
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PMID:Influence of preservation or perfusion of intraoperatively identified spinal cord blood supply on spinal motor evoked potentials and paraplegia after aortic surgery. 199 54

Widening of the mediastinum, when seen on radiographs of the chest in victims of trauma, is usually attributed to injury to the aorta. An aortic injury, when not lethal, often causes paraparesis or paraplegia due to ischemia of the spinal cord. A fracture of the upper thoracic spine can produce similar clinical and radiographic findings. The cases of three patients who had those findings are presented; in all three, the differential diagnosis between the vascular and skeletal injuries was difficult. Fracture of the thoracic spine should be included in the differential diagnosis whenever mediastinal widening is seen on radiographs.
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PMID:Mediastinal widening associated with fractures of the upper thoracic spine. 200 82

Fifty-seven patients underwent repair of atherosclerotic thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms between 1978 and 1990. Five patients had urgent surgery for rupture. The 30-day operative mortality rate for the entire group was 18% (10 patients). Before July 1987, 19 patients (group 1) were operated on by use of a technique previously described. In these earlier patients the peritoneum was routinely entered, the diaphragm was divided radially, and no heparin was given. Among patients in group 1 there was a 30-day operative mortality rate of 42% (8 patients), and morbidity included myocardial infarction 4 (21%), respiratory failure 9 (47%), renal failure 12 (63%), bleeding requiring reoperation 4 (21%), and intestinal ischemia 3 (16%). Since July 1987 a standardized approach to all elective thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms has been used in 38 patients (group 2). This method uses a left thoracoabdominal incision, circumferential division of the hemidiaphragm, retronephric totally extraperitoneal aortic exposure, single lung anesthesia, full heparinization, the graft inclusion technique, and liberal use of visceral endarterectomy. Patients in group 2 sustained a 30-day operative mortality rate of 5% (2 patients) and morbidity included myocardial infarction 2 (5%), respiratory failure 10 (26%), renal failure 11 (29%), bleeding requiring reoperation 1 (3%), paraplegia 6 (16%), and paraparesis 4 (11%). Modern surgery for repair of thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm results in acceptably low operative mortality rates. Spinal cord ischemia remains an unresolved source of morbidity.
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PMID:Evolving experience with thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair at a single institution. 203 2

Spinal cord ischemia complicating resuscitative aortic occlusion is reported in a patient requiring emergency thoracotomy and aortic cross-clamping following a stab wound to the heart. Paraparesis and ischemic myelopathy were documented in the absence of associated injury. The possible contribution of systemic hypotension to spinal cord ischemia following aortic occlusion is suggested.
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PMID:Paraparesis following emergency room thoracotomy: case report. 231 63


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