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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Low-velocity gunshot fractures of the forearm are complex injuries and previously published studies have not emphasized the problems particular to these forearm lesions. Of the twenty-nine patients in this series, thirteen had peripheral nerve injuries, three had impending Voklmann's
ischemia
, and ten had delayed union or malunion of fractures after treatment by closed methods. Only thirteen had none of these problems. Eight patients had long-term disability resulting either from permanent nerve damage with loss of sensation or
weakness
of grip, or from significant loss of motion following delayed union or malunion. Although external fixation was adequate for undisplaced fractures, delayed (seven to fourteen days) primary internal fixation after the initial phase of wound healing had proved benign gave superior results in displaced fractures.
...
PMID:Extra-articular low-velocity gunshot fractures of the radius and ulna. 34 6
Selective embolization of the internal carotid artery bifurcation (ICA bifurcation) was performed in monkeys (Macaca mulatta) to study acute regional cerebral ischemia in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory with minimum surgical intervention in the neck under sedated conditions. The anthropomorphic similarity in angio-anatomy of the carotid system of monkeys and the use of silastic spheres, as artificial emboli, of the critical diameter of 1.2 to 1.4 mm resulted in the overall success rate of 87% in localizing the site of embolization to the ICA bifurcation, producing
ischemia
in the whole middle cerebral artery territory. All the animals with ICA-bifurcation embolization had contralateral deep motor
weakness
and conjugate eye deviation with nystagmus toward the site of embolization. Simultaneous EEG recording showed flattening of the basic background activities over the affected MCA area and cerebral arteriograms showed definite retrograde filling of the proximally occluded MCA. Clinical recovery was observed in a few animals within two to five hours of embolization. Gross ischemic swelling in the affected MCA territory, particularly in the gray matter, became obvious in six of eight animals which were exposed to four to five hours of
ischemia
. The angio-anatomical study of the carotid system of this experimental animal as a background for this MCA stroke model confirmed the previous observations of other investigators that the extremely abundant leptomeningeal anastomoses would be one of the major factors leading to the variability in the clinicopathological pictures seen in the models of proximal MCA occlusion. In addition, the pre-parenchymal anastomoses in the base of brain between the medial striate arteries from the proximal anterior cerebral (ACA) and lateral lenticulostriate arteries from the MCA were observed and described as a possible functional collateral to the basal ganglia in case of proximal MCA occlusion.
...
PMID:Experimental regional cerebral ischemia in the middle cerebral artery territory in primates. Part 1: Angio-anatomy and description of an experimental model with selective embolization of the internal carotid artery bifurcation. 40 41
Two cases of angiodysgenetic myelomalacia are presented. Both patients had progressive
weakness
and sensory deficits in the lower extremities and vascular malformations of their spinal cords. The lesions were located on the dorsum of the spinal cord and the dorso-spinal roots. We believe the symptoms that developed later in life were due to spinal cord
ischemia
resulting from late degenerative changes in the vessels of the malformation and an ever increasing spinal "steal".
...
PMID:Vascular malformations of the spinal cord (angiodysgenetic myelomalacia): a critique on its pathogenesis. 42 76
Effects of chronic denervation upon in vivo forearm metabolism were studied in six patients and six controls. The diagnosis was amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in four patients, the neuronal form of Charcot-Marie Tooth disease in one patient, and an unclassified chronic disease of the lower motor neurons in one patient. In all cases the forearm muscles showed clinical
weakness
and electrical evidence of denervation, while muscle biopsy from a proximal muscle of the upper limb showed typical denervation atrophy. At rest there was increased oxygen utilization and lactate output as well as a tendency for increased uptake of glucose and long chain fatty acids from arterial blood per 100 ml of forearm tissue. During exercise the abnormally high lactate output increased further. An increased arterial lactate concentration was present during rest and exercise. Oxidation of fatty acids was not impaired. It is suggested that these abnormalities are consistent with an augmented utilization of blood borne fuels at rest by denervated muscles. A concurrent regional
ischemia
of muscles during rest and exercise, possibly due to defective autoregulation of skeletal muscle blood flow, may explain the abnormally high lactate generation.
...
PMID:The effects of partial chronic denervation on forearm metabolism. 48 96
The effects of the beta-adernergic blocking drug acebutolol were studied in 23 patients with angina pectoris and angiographically documented coronary artery disease. Patients were evaluated clinically, by graded treadmill testing and by 24-hour Holter monitoring in the control state, after 2 weeks treatment with placebo, and after 2 weeks treatment with 600 mg. and then 1,200 mg. of acebutolol. Acebutolol (in a daily dose of 600 mg.) was an effective antianginal drug: the number of clinical attacks of angina pectoris (p less than 0.001) and the consumption of sublingual nitrate decreased (p less than 0.01), there was a significant increase in the treadmill effort tolerance as measured by the time to appearance of ischemic ECG changes (p less than 0.001) and the total work performed (p less than 0.001), and there was also a significant decrease in ischemic ST segment depression on 24-hour Holter monitoring. Treatment with 1,200 mg. acebutolol was associated with a further decrease in heart rate and a further improvement in effort tolerance on treadmill testing (p less than 0.05). On the large dose of the drug, however, there was no further clinical improvement, and no further improvement on 24-hour ECG monitoring; several patients complained of
weakness
and fatigue. Graded treadmill testing was an excellent objective method for assessing physical effort tolerance and its improvement after treatment with the beta-blocking drug. Twenty-four-hour Holter monitoring was a useful and complementary test, especially in patients who stopped exercising on the treadmill because of fatigue or
weakness
, and especially for assessing the efficacy of beta-blockade in controlling emotionally induced tachycardia and
ischemia
in the patient's own daily environment.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the beta-blocking drug acebutolol in angina pectoris. 49 6
Symptoms, signs, hemodynamic and electrocardiographic responses of 12 patients with acute myocardial infarction were studied before, during and after three activities: activity I, sitting upright; activity II, walking to the adjacent toilet; and activity III, walking on a treadmill set at 1.2 mph (1.9 km/hr) at 0, 3 and 6% successive gradients. The three activities were studied respectively at three, six and ten days (means) after infarction.
Weakness
was the most commonly occurring symptom. Mean systolic blood pressure fell 9 mm Hg upon assumption of the upright position (activity I) and was sustained for the five minutes of sitting. The systolic blood pressure drop was only 3.5 mm Hg with activity II. During activity III, one patient developed angina. Between rest and the 6% treadmill gradient, systolic blood pressure, heart rate and pressure-rate product rose 29 mm Hg, 26 beats/minute and 64 units, respectively. Electrocardiographic evidence of
ischemia
was observed in two patients during activity I, in two patients during activity II, and in one patient during activity III, but was insufficient for stopping the activities. Similarly, two patients developed minor arrhythmias, one with activity I and one with activity III. The use of this low-level treadmill test before discharging the patient from the hospital proved to be safe and feasible for obtaining objective data to assess the patients' ability to perform activities requiring equal exertion at home. Successful performance of these three activities before leaving the hospital should provide useful criteria for discharge of a patient with myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:Progressive ambulation and treadmill testing of patients with acute myocardial infarction during hospitalization: a feasibility study. 87 Dec 37
Adverse effects occurred in four youths after intravenous injection of an aqueous cannabis-seed tea, which was prepared by boiling the seeds. The effects were immediate and included nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, watery diarrhea, chills, fever, hypovolemic shock, hypotension, and non-oligemic transitory renal failure. Other manifestations included persistent hypoglycemia, tachycardia, gastrointestinal bleeding, conjunctival hemorrhage, injury, jaundice, splenomegaly, leucocytosis, myalgia, arthralgia, motor
weakness
, and prostration.
Ischemia
was noted on electrocardiogram (EKG). All manifestations appeared to reverse within weeks, but these effects had been potentially fatal.
...
PMID:Adverse effects of intravenous cannabis tea. 87 75
Seven patients of temporal arteritis with eye involvement have been presented. These cases represent a spectrum of disease from intermittent diplopia with minimal 6th nerve
weakness
through mild retinal
ischemia
with recovery to permanent bilateral blindness. Temporal arteritis should be suspected when any form of ocular
ischemia
is suspected by history or found on examination of an elderly person. An early diagnosis may protect the vision in both eyes if vision is normal at the time of diagnosis. If vision in one eye is decreased because of
ischemia
, the vision in the other eye can usually be retained if proper therapy is instituted. Furthermore, adequate therapy may even result in improvement in vision in the involved eye. Patients with biopsy proven temporal arteritis should be continued on steroid therapy until the active disease is quiescent. Inactivity should be determined by carefully monitoring the ESR while steroids are being tapered. If the ESR rises, it is indicative of continued inflammation and if steroids are not continued, the eyes remain at risk as seen in Case 5. If the ESR remains elevated for a year or more despite continuation of high steroid levels, consideration should be given to repeating the temporal artery biopsy. Temporal arteritis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of any multisystem disease in older patients. Even central nervous system involvement may occur concomitantly, since the intracranial vessels are not immune from the disease process. Tuberculosis, systemic syphilis and more recently the collagen vascular diseases have been dubbed the "great imitators" and "the protean diseases." We suggest that the same terminology can be applied to temporal arteritis. Temporal arteritis can affect any organ. Moreover, there is a wide spectrum of variation in the degree of involvement of any particular tissue as illustrated by these 7 cases of ocular involvement.
...
PMID:Temporal arteritis: a spectrum of ophthalmic complications. 118 Apr 60
The cervical spinal cord was compressed at one (C5) or two (C4,C5) levels in eight awake dogs by advancing screws through the vertebral bodies into the spinal canal until minimal limb
weakness
occurred.
Ischemia
of the cervical cord was produced by ligation of vertebral and spinal arteries in four anesthetized dogs, of which two had previously undergone cord compression at two levels. The neurological and histological findings were studied. By means of antipyrine [14C]autoradiography, qualitative changes of blood flow in dogs with compression and/or
ischemia
of the cervical spinal cord were compared to flow patterns in normal dogs. The authors conclude that the neurological and histological changes produced by spinal cord compression,
ischemia
and their combination correlate with altered patterns of blood flow within the cervical spinal cord.
...
PMID:Experimental cervical myelopathy: autoradiographic studies of spinal cord blood flow patterns. 126 34
Spontaneous perforation of colon is a rare disease and physiopathologic basis are actually unknown. Surgical treatment is standardized and post-operative survival is over 60%, morbidity and mortality rate depends on peritoneal contamination. In 1984 J.A. Berry classified spontaneous perforations into "stercoral" and "idiopathic" perforations on the basis of etiopathogenetical causes of lesions. Anatomopathologically stercoral and idiopathic perforations present different characteristics. Macroscopically stercoral perforation origines from an ulcerative lesion often situated on the sigmoid colon or rectum. Microscopical characteristic is represented by a superficial ischemic necrosis of mucosa (caused by fecalomas) followed by an extension to sub-mucosa and muscular tissues of the colonic wall. On the contrary, "idiopathic perforation", frequently situated on the sigma, is a linear laceration of anti-mesenteric side of the colon without pathologic modifications of the colon. Physiopathologic basis of spontaneous perforations of the colon were also discussed. Stercoral perforation is often a consequence of chronic constipation. Instead, two hypoteses are advanced as regards idiopathic perforations. S.V. Kessing e coll. (1962) hypotized a parietal suffering caused by
ischemia
of anti-mesenteric side of the colon, depending on ipoperfusion of colonic tissues; they also hypotized a constitutional
weakness
of colonic wall as a cause of idiopathic perforation. Others hypotized an intraluminal hypertension caused by intestinal hernias (J.W. Eadie, 1955; K. Cronin, 1959), rectal prolapse or abnormal depth of Douglas cavity (D.C. Lyon, 1969). In these cases, lesion is caused by contraction of abdominal muscles during defecation, which presses colonic wall during distension.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Spontaneous perforations of the large intestine]. 129 Mar 69
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