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

Elevated intraabdominal pressure (IAP) occurs with intraabdominal bleeding, with tense ascites, or after application of military anti-shock trousers to trauma patients. While changes in renal perfusion with elevated IAP have been documented, there are no data available on blood flow to other viscera. Under pentobarbital anesthesia an inflatable bag was placed intraabdominally to create graded increases in IAP in 9 adult mongrel dogs (20 kg). Hemodynamic parameters and organ blood flow (OBF) using radioactive microspheres were measured at baseline and after increasing the IAP to 20 and 40 mm Hg. The organ blood flow index (OBFI = OBF/cardiac output) was determined for each organ (stomach, duodenum, jejunum, ileum, colon, pancreas, liver, spleen, kidney, and adrenal gland). Elevated IAP caused a decrease in OBF for all organs measured except the adrenal glands where the OBF was increased. The OBFI was decreased significantly for all intraabdominal viscera except the renal cortex and the adrenal gland. These changes in OBF are more marked than can be accounted for by changes in cardiac output alone, suggesting that local control mechanisms may be responsible for changes in OBF. Our data raise the possibility that elevation in IAP may result in visceral ischemia and organ dysfunction.
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PMID:Changes in visceral blood flow with elevated intraabdominal pressure. 359 81

Significant delay in the washout of intraperitoneal xenon (133Xe) in rats and dogs with decreased splanchnic blood flow (bowel strangulation, superior mesenteric artery and vein occlusion) has been previously demonstrated as the basis for radionuclide imaging to detect early (prenecrotic) intestinal ischemia. In this study, the effect of ascites, adhesions, and misdirected injections on the validity of this technique is evaluated. Xenon-133 (0.6 mCi) in 3 ml saline was injected into the peritoneal cavity of anesthetized rats and the washout of gamma activity monitored externally for 90 min. Gamma camera images were obtained at 30-min intervals. After 60 min, only 12 +/- 2% of injected activity remained in the controls. Sham operation (13 +/- 1%) and simple obstruction (12 +/- 2%) had been previously shown not to significantly slow washout, but segmental strangulation had done so dramatically (32 +/- 2%, P less than 0.0001). In these experiments, ascitic fluid (Ringer's lactate) in volumes of 10 ml (13 +/- 1%), 20 ml (13 +/- 1%), and 40 ml (13 +/- 1%), did not significantly slow washout in nonischemic rats. Sixty and eighty milliliters produced very tense ascites and slight but significant delay in washout (14 +/- 1%, 17 +/- 1%, respectively, P less than 0.05). Moderate (11 +/- 1%) and severe (11 +/- 1%) adhesions produced by serosal scarification did not delay washout nor affect imaging. Injections of isotope intentionally misdirected into the abdominal wall (32 +/- 2%), bowel wall (18 +/- 1%), and bowel lumen (19 +/- 2%), each significantly (P less than 0.001) slowed washout. However, such misdirected injections were easily recognizable as such on the 1-min gamma camera images and could thereby be excluded as artifactual. Therefore, no false positive readings were obtained. It is concluded that the intraperitoneal xenon technique is not invalidated by mild to moderate ascites nor by moderate to severe adhesions. Misdirected injections produce invalid studies that are recognizable as such and thus are not misinterpreted. This approach should therefore be applicable to most patients with suspected intestinal ischemia.
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PMID:Intraperitoneal xenon for the detection of early intestinal ischemia: effect of ascites, adhesions, and misdirected injections. 622 20

Thirty-eight children with hip pain of acute onset were studied by bone scintigraphy. Nine patients had diminished radiotracer deposition involving the entire proximal femoral ossification center. This could be related to infarction or compression of the blood supply by a tense joint effusion. Eight of these patients had joint aspiration confirming the presence of an effusion. Five patients had follow-up studies after aspiration, and femoral-head uptake reverted to normal in all but one which subsequently proved to be infarcted. A photopenic zone was seen on blood pool images in 10 patients, many of whom were also aspirated of fluid. Bone scintigraphy is useful in the diagnosis of joint effusions and can give information as to the state of perfusion of the femoral head. Follow-up studies after aspiration can differentiate infarction from reversible ischemia.
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PMID:Bone scintigraphy of hip joint effusions in children. 660 50

Mesenteric vein thrombosis is a rare disorder which can develop rapidly with intestinal infarction or subacutely with abdominal pain due to intestinal ischemia. Despite the availability of modern diagnostic tools, which allow an early diagnosis in most cases, the mortality from this disease has not significantly diminished over the years. The problem is that the syndrome is rare and unusual and the clinical presentation is usually vague or confusing. Particularly in cirrhotic patients, this diagnosis requires the exclusion of several other complications of liver disease, like spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, tense ascites or portal thrombosis. Here, we report the occurrence of acute mesenteric vein thrombosis in two patients with liver cirrhosis. Severe subcontinuous abdominal pain out of proportion to the physical findings and abdominal distension were the major symptoms in both patients. Magnetic resonance imaging in one case and ultrasound scan with color Doppler followed by computed tomography in the other patient confirmed the diagnosis and enabled an appropriate early therapy to be undertaken.
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PMID:Mesenteric vein thrombosis: a rare cause of abdominal pain in cirrhotic patients--two case reports. 949 85

Experimental studies and clinical experience suggest that the combination of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) ventilation and intra-abdominal hypertension might alter splanchnic hemodynamics to a significantly greater degree than the effect of either of them alone. Therefore, we assessed the intestinal and hepatic hemodynamics in two steps of PEEP ventilation, adding tense pneumoperitoneum in a pig model. The hepatic artery, portal vein, and superior mesenteric artery blood flow, as well as the hepatic and intestinal mucosal microcirculation, and the hepatic pO2 and intestinal mucosal pH, were assessed before, then with 5 cmH2O and 10 cmH2O PEEP alone, and in combination with a 12-mmHg pneumoperitoneum, in ten domestic pigs. Statistical analysis of the hepatic and intestinal measurements revealed a significant decrease (P = 0.001) in all parameters in relation to the baseline, during the 5-cmH2O and 10-mmH2O PEEP ventilation period. The addition of 12 mmHg intra-abdominal pressure led to an extreme deterioration in all parameters (P = 0.001), in relation to both the baseline and the 10-cmH2O PEEP measurement. These findings demonstrate that PEEP and intra-abdominal hypertension act cumulatively on the abdominal viscera, producing conditions of extremely low hypoperfusion and ischemia.
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PMID:Deterioration of visceral perfusion caused by intra-abdominal hypertension in pigs ventilated with positive end-expiratory pressure. 1111 Mar 92

The abdominal compartment syndrome (ACS) causes dysfunctions of various organs through a progressive unphysiologic increase of the intraabdominal pressure. While the primary ACS is a result of the underlying disease/injury, secondary ACS is caused by surgical interventions. In the severely injured patient intra- and/or retroperitoneal bleeding, edema of viscera due to systemic ischemia reperfusion injury following hemorrhagic shock, abdominal/pelvic packing, and laparotomy closure under tension lead to ACS. The clinical signs of ACS are a tense abdomen with a decreased abdominal wall compliance. Early signs of ACS are a rise in inspiratory pressure and oliguria. Manifest ACS results in anuria, respiratory failure, reduced intestinal perfusion, and low cardiac output syndrome. If untreated, patients die due to left ventricular failure. Diagnosis of ACS is made using the patient's history including the injury pattern, the symptoms, the time period between injury and the occurrence of organ dysfunctions, and the physiologic response to decompression. Frequent determinations of the bladder pressure represent the "golden standard" for early recognition of ACS. Decompressive laparotomy should be performed with a bladder pressure > or = 20 mmHg and rapidly restores impaired organ functions. In the case of a multiple injured patients in shock or with associated severe head injury decompressive laparotomy may even be carried out at a lower bladder pressure. The abdomen is left open. In most patients staged laparotomy is necessary. The final closure of the abdominal wall is carried out after the edema have resolved between day 6 and 8 after primary laparotomy.
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PMID:[The abdominal compartment syndrome]. 1149 Sep 47

The experience in treatment of 236 patients with primary injuries of major vessels is presented. A pressure dressing and tense surgical pack of the wound were used in a prehospital treatment. Use of a hemostatic tourniquet (37.3%) led to increased ischemia of injured extremity tissues. Maximal shortening of evacuation time is another important factor. Time to qualified surgical care was 3.2 +/- 0.4 hrs from injury moment, specialized--5.5 +/- 0.7 hrs. Shock was seen in 94.9% wounded. It is necessary to begin anti-shock treatment immediately after injury. Surgery was started only after shock compensation. If shock was caused by continued bleeding, surgery was started at the same time with anti-shock treatment (5.7%). Temporary shunt was used in field conditions in 35.9% wounded. In 11 (19.7%) cases endoprosthesis of original construction (two-lumen tube with microirrigator) was used. If this device was used there were no cases of arterial or venous thrombosis at the stage of specialized treatment. Since using of temporary endoprosthesis leads to delay of evacuation for specialized care it was performed only in cases of gangrene's threat when arrest of bleeding could not be performed with other methods.
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PMID:[Organization of treating patients with major vessel injuries at stages of evacuation]. 1286 21

We carried out a study on elderly people (70 +/- 2,2 years old) operated on as an acute occlusion of the femoral artery at its different anatomical levels. In those people, development of oxidative stress has been shown in injured lower extremity in the process of restoring of circulation. Marked increase in catalase activity in the blood gives evidence for work of the anti-oxidative defence system with tense. We determined an increase in aspartataminotransferase, alaninaminotransferase and creatininkinase in ischemia/reperfusion which are widely used to identify injures in muscular tissues. It has been shown that NO(2-) content in the blood at reperfusion depended on the level of nitrites and the duration ofischemia. Significant changes in NO metabolite content in the blood of the patients suffering from acute occlusion injures of the arteries in the lower extremities could be related with endothelial dysfunction.
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PMID:[Study of changes in the parametres of oxidative stress, anti-oxidative defence and endothelial dysfunction in acute ischemia-reperfusion of the lower extremities in humans]. 2216 9

Ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) is a severe iatrogenic complication of ovulation induction, which has a very serious impact on the patient's health, as it is often associated with a high morbidity and mortality risk. Indeed, patients classified as having severe OHSS presented with liquid imbalance signs (such as rapid weight gain, tense ascites, respiratory difficulty and progressive oliguria), which are related to the fluid shift from the intravascular space to third space compartments subsequent to an increased capillary permeability. In this way, cardiovascular system findings include decreased intravascular volume, decreased blood pressure, decreased central venous perfusion, and compensatory increased heart rate and cardiac output with arterial vasodilation might be found concomitantly. Notwithstanding that venous thromboembolic phenomena are a possible complication in advanced phases of OHSS, arterial ischemia involving the cerebral circulation is a rare but recently reported problem. The pathogenesis of thromboembolism in OHSS is not fully understood, even though hemoconcentration and blood hyperviscosity seem to play a role in developing thrombotic changes into both venous and arterial system. Interestingly, the presence of cardiac abnormalities in combination with inherited or acquired hypercoagulable state seems to increase the risk of cerebral infarct in these subjects, as recently shown by our group. This review is aimed at investigating the pathomechanism and the management of neurovascular complications related to OHSS, including new treatment options.
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PMID:Neurovascular complications of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS): from pathophysiology to recent treatment options. 2490 9

Acute compartment syndrome (ACS) is an uncommon complication of uncontrolled hypothyroidism. If unrecognized, this can lead to ischemia, necrosis and potential limb loss. A 49-year-old female presented with the sudden onset of bilateral lower and upper extremity swelling and pain. The lower extremity anterior compartments were painful and tense. The extensor surface of the upper extremities exhibited swelling and pain. Motor function was intact, however, limited due to pain. Bilateral lower extremity fasciotomies were performed. Postoperative Day 1, upper extremity motor function decreased significantly and paresthesias occurred. She therefore underwent bilateral forearm fasciotomies. The pathogenesis of hypothyroidism-induced compartment syndrome is unclear. Thyroid-stimulating hormone-induced fibroblast activation results in increased glycosaminoglycan deposition. The primary glycosaminoglycan in hypothyroid myxedematous changes is hyaluronic acid, which binds water causing edema. This increases vascular permeability, extravasation of proteins and impaired lymphatic drainage. These contribute to increased intra-compartmental pressure and subsequent ACS.
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PMID:Hypothyroid-induced acute compartment syndrome in all extremities. 2800 19


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