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

A 72-year-old man underwent resection of an infrarenal aortic aneurysm; during postoperative recovery, multiorgan failure developed secondary to cholesterol emboli in several arteries. The initial sign consisted of patches of livedo in the lower limbs with pedal pulses, hematuria and hyperdynamic shock with high cardiac output and reduced vascular resistance. The clinical picture progressed to multiple organ failure with non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema, oliguric kidney failure, coagulopathy, necrotizing pancreatitis and colic ischemia. The patient died 15 days after surgery. The formation of multiple cholesterol emboli is a rare complication after aortic surgery, vascular catheterization or anticoagulant treatment. It is caused by cholesterol crystals measuring 100 to 200 mu that embolize and block small arteries. Diagnosis is difficult because the organs involved can be many and various. No specific treatment is available and the rates of morbidity and mortality are high.
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PMID:[Multiple cholesterol athero-embolisms after resection of an abdominal aortic aneurysm]. 1117 70

Splanchnic arteries aneurysmatic pathology is rare, even if, in the last decades it has been noticed an increase of its incidence, owing to the worldwide use of the recent diagnostic tools as echography, TC, MR and angiography. Among visceral aneurysms those of the superior mesenteric artery (SMA) range the 5.5-8%. In the majority of cases SMA aneurysms are of mycotic etiology (60%), of atherosclerotic ones are less frequent, even if their incidence has increased in the last decades. Other causes are exceptional. Dimensions are generally moderate (1-3 cm.), yet aneurysms of a significant diameter, ranging from 4 to 8 cm., are reported in the most recent literature. Aneurysms can be symptomatic with abdominal upper quadrants pain, due to the compressive mass effect on the contiguous structures. In some cases typical signs of claudication abdominis are present. A pulsating epi-mesogastric abdominal mass is present in the 50% of subjects. In the 20% of the cases the patients come to medical attention presenting a situation of hemorrhagic shock for aneurysmatic rupture in the peritoneal cavity, or in the digestive tract, considering also the possibility of a thrombosis with consequent acute bowel ischemia. Urgent surgical operations, when possible, imply an high mortality rate. For these reasons, there is indication of elective surgery for all SMA aneurysms, both symptomatic and of occasional finding. The performable surgical techniques are: proximal and distal ligation, with or without aneurysmectomy, that is the most utilized because commonly performed during emergency operations. This technique requires the presence of a sufficient collateral vascular supply. Endoaneurysmorraphy can be performed only in the case of mild-dimension saccular aneurysms. Revascularization techniques through substitution or by-pass are mandatory in managing voluminous mass aneurysms. It is reported a case of SMA aneurysm of exceptional dimensions (diameter approximatively 10 cm.) that for its enormous volume substituted completely the mesenteric axis, involving the origin of the jejuno-ileal and ileo-colic branches. In this case it has been mandatory the performing of the aorto-mesenteric by-pass technique, distally patch modelled and sutured to the residual posterior SMA wall, on the purpose to allow the revascularization of the emerging jejunal arteries and adapted to the residual distal stump to irrorate ileo-colic branches.
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PMID:[Aneurysms of the superior mesenteric artery]. 1219 85

Superior mesenteric venous thrombosis (SMVT) is an uncommon but potentially life-threatening disorder. We describe a cirrhotic patient with hepatocellular carcinoma who had partial SMVT for at least 28 months. Our experience may help in the management of such patients. The partial SMVT was not treated at the time of discovery because there was no evidence of bowel infarction. Moreover, the patient had a tendency to bleed severely and was in a poor condition. SMVT was followed using regular ultrasonography and the pattern of SMVT did not change significantly during the follow-up period. A symptom that may have been related to SMVT was abdominal colic pain after meals, which was sometimes followed by diarrhea and / or nausea and vomiting. There was no evidence of bowel ischemia or infarction during follow-up. Abdominal discomfort can be successfully treated using anticholinergic drugs with or without analgesia.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up of partial thrombosis of the superior mesenteric vein in a cirrhotic patient with hepatocellular carcinoma: a case report. 1282 80

Acute disorder of mesenteric circulation (ADMC) is an emergency pathology of the abdominal organs. It occurs in 0.2% of general surgery patients. A total of 346 patients with verified (before, during operation and/or on autopsy) diagnosis of ADMC were analyzed retrospectively. There were 217 (62.7%) women and 129 (37.3%) men. The mean age of the patients was 68.4+/-3.6 years. In 50.7% of patients, ADMC was induced by thrombosis of the unpaired visceral branches of the abdominal aorta, in 29.1% -- by embolism of the superior mesenteric artery (SMA), in 7.8% -- by thrombosis of the portomesenteric bed, in 7.5% -- by non-occlusion mesenteric ischemia (NOMI), and in 4.9% by diseases of the parietal vessels of the bowel. The most prevalent risk factors of ADMC were: atherosclerosis of the aorta and its branches, previous reconstructions for occlusion-stenotic arterial lesions, episodes of arterial embolism in the anamnesis, congenital and acquired hemostatic disorders, oral contraception, thromboses of the deep veins and/or pulmonary embolism in the anamnesis, operations on the abdominal organs, different types of acute end chronic heart failure. In SMA thrombosis, occlusion most frequently affects the orifice (93.5%) and initial segment of the great vessel, In embolism it occurs before or at the level of the middle colic artery (in 57.9%). Disseminated bowel necroses are more frequently encountered in occlusions of the arterial bed (87.7% in thromboses and 83.3% emdolism) than in the venous system (8.3%).
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PMID:Acute disorders of mesenteric circulations: the etiology, risk factors and incidence of lesions. 1562 45

A 55-year-old man with an acute Stanford type B aortic dissection presented with clinical signs of mesenteric ischemia. Computed tomography (CT) revealed a thrombosed false lumen in the superior mesenteric artery. At laparotomy, the dissection was found to be extending into the jejunal branches and medial colic artery. Thrombus was removed from the false lumen, and perfusion was restored with an iliomesenteric bypass, with the dissected layers tacked together in the suture line. A postoperative CT scan showed a stable diameter of the thoracoabdominal aorta and a patent iliomesenteric bypass.
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PMID:False lumen thrombectomy of the superior mesenteric artery followed by iliomesenteric bypass after Stanford type B aortic dissection. 1576 15

Multivisceral transplants are gaining acceptance worldwide for patients with chronic gastrointestinal failure with or without irreversible total parenteral nutrition (TPN)-related liver failure. We describe our experience with nine multivisceral harvests reporting our in vivo technique. Multivisceral grafts included stomach, duodenum, pancreas, small bowel, and part of large intestine with or without the liver. After a careful evaluation of the liver and the bowel, we isolated the superior mesenteric artery origin. Then we identified the distal part of the graft isolating the middle colic vein and stapling the transverse colon to its left. After esophagus isolation and stapling, we mobilized the graft, starting from the spleen to the pancreaticoduodenal block, near the celiac trunk. After cross-clamping and cold perfusion, we created an aortic patch including the superior mesenteric artery and celiac trunk as a multivisceral harvest without the liver. A total hepatectomy is added for a liver multivisceral graft. We harvested four multivisceral grafts without the liver and five multivisceral grafts with the liver. We performed seven multivisceral transplants on adult recipients, four without the liver and three with the liver, as well as two liver and one isolated small bowel transplants. Postreperfusion hemostasis was always satisfactory with a mean ischemia time of 6.5 hours. Four recipients died: there was one intraoperative death due to disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. Another patient underwent graftectomy 1 day after transplantation due to vascular thrombosis. In conclusion, our in vivo technique allows a shorter ischemia time with a minimal postreperfusion bleeding and reduced production of lymphatic ascites, without jeopardizing organ function.
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PMID:Multivisceral harvest with in vivo technique: methods and results. 1618 98

The aim of this study was to describe all levels of the intermesenteric communications because of their importance in vascular diseases of the colon. The connections of superior and inferior mesenteric networks are very important in cases of acute or chronic obstruction to prevent ischemia and necrosis. Angiograms of mesenteric arteries were studied (40), cadaverous large intestine samples with mesentery and feeding vessels were dissected (36) or injected with India ink solution (24) or methylmetacrylate Mercox (41). In 7.9 % of cases an intermesenteric connection was described, named anastomosis intermesenterica accessoria and classified according to Pikkieff's(1) proposal. The marginal artery in the left colic flexure forms an arch called Riolan's arcade(2) or Haller's anastomosis(3) and is present in 95 % of cases. Infrequent anastomosis between straight vessels and mighty plexuses in the intestinal wall were registered. There are no regional differences when compared to the rest of colon.
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PMID:Macroscopic and microscopic intermesenteric communications. 1693 14

Crohn's disease is an inflammatory chronic intestinal disease characterized of an high level of postoperative recurrence. Actually surgical treatment is not decisive; patients can undergo several operations during their lives, running the risk of coming up against the syndrome of short bowel. The main disease frequently appears in the segment ileo-caecal, while the site more often affected by the recurrence seems to be the stump close to the anastomosis. General, local and not specific factors should influence the recurrence level. Among the general factors, cigarette smoking would have a leading role in the recurrences onset. Giving up smoking and a treatment with 5-ASA (amino-salicylic acid) help to reduce the risk of Crohn's recurrences after surgery. During the treatment of this pathology the wide intestinal resections are not justified because the anastomotic recurrence after resection seems to be influenced not by the presence of remaining lesions but by the type of realized anastomosis. Although they disagree about the type of anastomosis to adopt, the authors agree identifying the anastomotic stenosis as the main factor which determines the recurrences. Stenosis, in fact, determining fecal stasis and, therefore, the increase of the pressure at the intestinal wall level, causes ischemia of this same wall. Ischemia puts up the risk of fistulas and anastomotic dehiscence. The mechanical or manual ileo-colic side-to-side anastomosis, assuring a wide lumen, drops to the minimum the risk of stenosis compared with the end-to-end and end-to-side configurations. And then, the side-to-side ileo-colic anastomosis avoiding the intestinal compartmentation between ileo and colon, guarantees less reflow in the small bowel of bacteria and colic metabolite. In this way the inflammatory process which brings to the fresh outbreak of the disease on the mucosa of the near anastomotic head faints. In the light of this thesis, most of the authors, including the writer, agree about making the side-to-side anastomoses in the intestinal resections for the Crohn's disease.
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PMID:[Anastomotic configuration as a risk factor in the recurring onset after intestinal resection for Crohn's disease: our point of view]. 1728 97

Middle mesenteric artery has been described in 1923. We report the observation of a patient with an abdominal aortic aneurysm who had this rare artery arising from the anterior wall of the aneurysmal sac. His inferior mesenteric artery was occluded at its origin from the aorta and the middle and the distal colon was vascularized only by the middle mesenteric artery. Occlusion of this artery would have been necessary before endovascular repair of the aneurysm. We were concerned about the risk of colic ischemia after the occlusion of the middle mesenteric artery, so we abandoned this approach and operated on the patient via a laparotomy. Based on a case report, we here report a literature overview on the repair of abdominal aortic aneurysm in the presence of a middle mesenteric artery.
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PMID:Middle mesenteric artery: contraindication to endovascular repair of an abdominal aortic aneurysm? 1732 97

Henoch-Schonlein Purpura (HSP) is the most common systemic vasculitis in childhood. The diagnostic criteria include palpable purpura with at least one other manifestation -- abdominal pain, IgA deposition, arthritis or arthralgia, or renal involvement. Immune complex deposits result in necrosis of the wall of small- and medium-sized arteries with infiltration of tissue by neutrophils and deposition of nuclear fragments, a process called leukocytoclastic vasculitis (LCV). It is often associated with infections, medications, or tumors. It may coexist with or mimic Crohn's disease. Periumbilical and epigastric pain worsens with meals, from bowel angina. Bleeding is usually occult or, less commonly, associated with melena. Intussusception, the most common surgical complication, is usually ileo-ileo or ileo-colic. Perforations, usually ileal, may occur spontaneously or be associated with intussusception. Ultrasound, recommended as the first diagnostic test, and CT scans may show intussusception and asymmetric bowel wall thickening mainly involving the jejunum and ileum. There are a range of endoscopic findings including gastritis, duodenitis, ulceration, and purpura, with the second portion of the duodenum characteristically being involved more than the bulb. Intestinal biopsies show IgA deposition and LCV in the submucosal vessels. Superficial biopsies may show inflammation, ulceration, edema, hemorrhage, and vascular congestion, presumably due to vasculitis-induced mucosal ischemia. The efficacy of corticosteroids in preventing severe complications or relapses is controversial. The majority of patients, however, improve spontaneously.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal manifestations of Henoch-Schonlein Purpura. 1835 68


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