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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute colonic pseudoobstruction (ACPO) is a clinical condition of acute large bowel obstruction without mechanical blockage. ACPO occurs most often in hospitalized patients with serious underlying medical and surgical conditions. ACPO is an important cause of morbidity and mortality. The pathogenesis of ACPO is not completely understood but likely results from an imbalance in the autonomic regulation of colonic motor function. Metabolic or pharmacologic factors, as well as spinal or retroperitoneal trauma, may alter the autonomic regulation of colonic function, leading to excessive parasympathetic suppression or sympathetic stimulation. This imbalance results in colonic atony and pseudoobstruction. Early recognition and appropriate management are critical to minimizing morbidity and mortality. The mortality rate is estimated at 40% when
ischemia
or perforation occurs. The best documented treatment of ACPO is intravenous neostigmine, which leads to prompt decompression in the majority of patients after a single infusion. In patients failing or having contraindications to neostigmine, colonoscopic decompression is the active intervention of choice. Surgery is
reserved
for those with overt peritonitis or perforation.
...
PMID:Acute colonic pseudoobstruction. 1534 19
Hepatic metastases are frequent in patients with gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) endocrine tumors. The presence of hepatic metastases affects overall prognosis and quality of life especially in the presence of debilitating functional syndromes. Surgery, although the method of choice for hepatic metastases, is usually impossible due to disease extent. Results of systemic chemotherapy are also disappointing especially in patients with metastases from midgut GEP tumors. These latter patients usually have carcinoid syndrome which can be controlled by somatostatin analogues. Other therapeutic options in the treatment of highly vascular liver metastases from GEP tumors are locoregional strategies by inducing vascular occlusion resulting in
ischemia
and necrosis of tumoral tissue. Surgical ligation of the hepatic artery or transient hepatic
ischemia
has been replaced by transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE). TACE has proven effective in controlling symptoms and gives objective tumor response in about half of patients. Other regional destructive methods, used either alone or in combination with surgery, include radiofrequency ablation and cryotherapy. The latter strategies are poorly evaluated to date and are usually adjuncts to surgery and
reserved
for limited disease.
...
PMID:Ablative therapies for liver metastases of gastroenteropancreatic endocrine tumors. 1547 22
Therapeutic angiogenesis aims at restoring perfusion to chronically ischemic myocardial territories by using growth factors or cells, without intervening on the epicardial coronary arteries. Despite angiogenesis having received considerable scientific attention over the last decade, it has not yet been shown to provide clinical benefit and is still
reserved
for patients who have failed conventional therapies. Nevertheless, angiogenesis is a very potent physiologic process involved in the growth and development of every animal and human, and it is likely that its use for therapeutic purposes, once its underlying mechanistic basis is better understood, will one day become an important modality for patients with CAD and other types of organ
ischemia
. This review summarizes current knowledge in therapeutic angiogenesis research.
...
PMID:Protein-, gene-, and cell-based therapeutic angiogenesis for the treatment of myocardial ischemia. 1554 41
Severe
ischemia
of the upper extremity causing tissue necrosis occurs much less frequently than in the lower extremity. The clinical outcome of patients diagnosed with digital nonhealing ulcer or gangrene is largely unknown. A retrospective review of patients with upper extremity tissue loss was performed. Patients with
ischemia
from embolic disease, steal syndromes, and vasospastic or connective tissue disorders were excluded. Thirteen patients with upper extremity ischemic gangrene and/or nonhealing ulcers were treated from January 1995 to June 2002. Comorbid conditions included diabetes mellitus in 10 patients and renal failure in 11 patients. Five patients developed bilateral upper extremity
ischemia
during the period of evaluation, while 8 had unilateral involvement. Nine patients had dry gangrene of a digit, 5 had nonhealing ulcers, and 1 patient developed wet gangrene from an ischemic ulcer. All 13 patients received local wound care and medical treatment with anticoagulants, calcium channel blockers, or antiplatelet agents. Ischemic lesions healed in 3 of the 5 patients with conservative management. Surgical intervention was performed on 6 patients with dry gangrene, and the patient with wet gangrene underwent amputation of the hand (53.8%). Two patients underwent sympathectomy without improvement. In the remaining 3 patients, tissue loss remained stable. Seven patients died within 2 years of presentation with upper extremity
ischemia
, with a survival at 24 months of only 14% by lifetable analysis. The local outcome of severe upper extremity
ischemia
is generally favorable, with good response to either medical management or digit amputation. However, the life expectancy of the patients with upper extremity
ischemia
from true atherosclerotic disease is dismal. Therefore, surgical intervention should be
reserved
for infection control or pain relief only.
...
PMID:Outcomes of patients with atherosclerotic upper extremity tissue loss. 1569 46
Transient ischemic attack (TIA) and ischemic stroke are both characterized by sudden onset of neurological symptoms due to focal cerebral ischemia, but they are distinguished by the duration of neurological symptoms, with TIA traditionally defined by resolution of symptoms within 24 hours and stroke
reserved
for symptoms of longer duration. Because TIA and ischemic stroke share etiologies, it is not surprising that the recommended evaluations and secondary prophylaxis are identical. However, recent studies suggest that optimal management of TIA and stroke may differ more than previously recognized. The short-term risk of ischemic stroke after TIA is very high, which may be because rapid recovery from neurological symptoms is indicative of reversal of
ischemia
and tissue still at risk. Regardless of whether residual symptoms or infarction are present, rapid recovery appears to predict a greater short-term risk of subsequent ischemic stroke and is more likely to reflect a distinct, unstable pathophysiology. Therefore, it may be more useful to characterize acute ischemic cerebrovascular syndromes on the basis of the extent of rapid recovery (i.e., on the inferred reversal of
ischemia
) than on the completeness of recovery at 24 hours. Patients with substantial rapid recovery may be those for whom acute intervention is most warranted.
...
PMID:Transient ischemic attack: a dangerous Harbinger and an opportunity to intervene. 1634 92
One of the most controversial topics in clinical cardiology is the extent of preoperative studies that is required among patients scheduled for major elective noncardiac operations. Patients in need of an elective operation for either an expanding aortic aneurysm or lower limb
ischemia
have the highest risk of postoperative cardiac complications because of the high prevalence of coronary artery disease and the hemodynamic stresses associated with the vascular procedures. The decision to perform preoperative coronary angiography should be
reserved
for only those patients who are deemed clinically unstable or are functionally limited by cardiac symptoms. Among patients with minimal symptoms, preoperative coronary artery revascularization with either coronary artery bypass graft surgery or percutaneous coronary interventions delays the needed operation and does not improve short-term outcomes or long-term survival.
...
PMID:Preoperative evaluation and treatment of stable CAD in patients scheduled for major elective vascular surgery. 1640 84
Managing patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) requires an accurate assessment of the severity of the condition and the risk factors likely to predict disease progression. The spectrum of patient presentation ranges from asymptomatic to critical limb
ischemia
. Because about half of patients with PAD have coronary or cerebrovascular disease, the examination of presenting patients should be directed toward the entire cardiovascular system. The main diagnostic goal is to establish whether the symptoms are predominantly caused by PAD and to what degree the presenting problem is compounded by other comorbidities, such as diabetic neuropathy, arthritis, or venous disorders. The diagnostic process includes history taking, physical examination, noninvasive diagnostic testing, differential diagnosis, laboratory studies, and the use of the various imaging modalities, which in general are
reserved
for those PAD cases in which the clinician has already decided to intervene.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and risk assessment of lower extremity peripheral arterial disease. 1647 8
The aims of this study were to review the prevalence and outcome of all surgically treated upper and lower limb emboli presenting to one vascular unit in the last 3 years and to compare transthoracic with transesophageal echocardiography for defining the source of the embolus. All patients who underwent surgical embolectomy for acute limb
ischemia
from January 2001 to June 2004 were reviewed. Transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography were carried out on a subset of consecutive unselected patients. Forty-two patients, with a mean age of 80 years, underwent surgical embolectomy from January 2001 to June 2004 (M/F 1:1.8): 27 for lower limb
ischemia
and 15 for upper limb
ischemia
. Two thirds of these patients were found to be in atrial fibrillation at presentation (n = 28), of whom less than a third were receiving anticoagulants or antiplatelet agents (n = 8). The mean hospital stay was 15 days with 36 patients (86%) being fully anticoagulated before discharge from hospital. The 30-day mortality rate was 11% (n = 3/27) with 5 patients requiring fasciotomies (12%) and 3 patients requiring an amputation of the lower limb (11%). Postoperatively, 34 patients (81%) had transthoracic echocardiography (TTE), which demonstrated a source or potential source for thrombus in 19 (56%). Fifteen patients (36%) had transesophageal echocardiography (TEE), which changed the subsequent management in 3 patients. All patients in whom TEE altered clinical management would have required this investigation if standard clinical guidelines were followed. TEE did not identify any additional patients with cardiac embolic sources that were not detected by TTE. Arterial limb emboli are still prevalent, but limb salvage and mortality rates appear to be improving. Despite clear guidelines on anticoagulation for patients in atrial fibrillation, many are not receiving appropriate treatment. Transthoracic echocardiography is a good screening tool for detecting a potential cardiac source for peripheral embolism, with transesophageal echocardiography being
reserved
for specific indications.
...
PMID:Peripheral arterial embolism: prevalence, outcome, and the role of echocardiography in management. 1695 21
The preconditioning effects of levosimendan were investigated on
ischemia
-reperfusion induced morphological and functional cardiac damage. Langendorff-perfused rabbit hearts were
reserved
as controls or subjected either to global myocardial ischemic preconditioning or to perfusion with levosimendan (0.1 micromol/l) for two 5-minute cycles. After a washout period, all hearts were then subjected to 30 minutes of global
ischemia
and 120 minutes of drug-free reperfusion. Intraventricular pressure and coronary flow were measured, and infarct size determined after nitroblue-tetrazolium staining on completion of the experiments. Levosimendan pretreatment resulted in a significantly smaller elevation from the preischemic level in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure during reperfusion (37 +/- 17 mm Hg) compared with controls (56 +/- 14 mm Hg) and
ischemia
-preconditioned hearts (53 +/- 34 mm Hg). The left ventricular developed pressure-representing the functional recovery of the heart after
ischemia
-that was significantly improved by levosimendan pretreatment (38 +/- 6% vs 16 +/- 5% in controls, P < 0.05). In addition, contractility and relaxability parameters (+dP/dt and -dP/dt, respectively) were better preserved in the levosimendan hearts. The volume of infarcted myocardium after global
ischemia
-reperfusion was significantly (P < 0.05) decreased by both ischemic preconditioning (38 +/- 2%) or levosimendan pretreatment (45 +/- 2%) versus controls (52 +/- 2%). The results of this study suggest that levosimendan pretreatment is capable of decreasing infarct size in an
ischemia
-reperfusion model and improving recovery of cardiac function following ex vivo global
ischemia
.
...
PMID:Preconditioning effects of levosimendan in a rabbit cardiac ischemia-reperfusion model. 1708 92
Ischemic colitis is the most frequent form of intestinal
ischemia
and arises when the colon is temporarily deprived of blood supply. Diagnosis of this entity requires a high index of clinical suspicion. To achieve this, the chronology of the symptoms (abdominal pain followed by defecatory urgency and rectorrhagia) and the clinical context in which these symptoms appear (> 90% affect persons especially at risk for vascular accidents) must be taken into account. Although diagnosis requires early colonoscopy (< 48 h), this procedure should not be performed if peritonitis is present. In severe forms, other imaging techniques, such as Doppler ultrasound or abdominal computed tomography, provide information with diagnostic -and even prognostic- value. Angiography is
reserved
for patients in whom there is doubt about the presence of acute mesenteric
ischemia
. Thrombophilia should be investigated in persons aged less than 60 years old.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic approach to ischemic colitis]. 1719 42
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