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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
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Our approach to management, both initial and definitive, is summarized in Table 2. Patients with proximal dissection require surgical intervention after medical stabilization, unless prior debilitating illness precludes general anesthesia or prolonged vascular surgery. If myocardial infarction or cerebrovascular accidents has complicated the dissection, results are extremely poor, regardless of therapy. Patients with distal dissection have a good prognosis with medical therapy alone, unless aortic rupture or impending rupture, hematoma progression despite a maximal drug program, vital organ compromise, or inability to control pain or blood pressure medically supervene. Dissecting aneurysm of the aorta, while potentially a promptly fatal event, is amenable to aggressive therapy provided that one is alert to the possibility of this disease. Despite all technical advances, the single most important factor in making the diagnosis of dissecting aortic aneurysm is a strong index of suspicion on the part of the physician.
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PMID:Dissection of the aorta. 43 Nov 89

One hundred and seventy-one patients with dissecting aneurysm seen between 1951 and 1976 at three hospitals in Manchester were studied. There were 60 proximal dissections, 80 distal dissections, 10 abdominal dissections and in 21 the site of origin was uncertain. Pain was the major symptom in 88 per cent of patients; radiation of pain to the interscapular region was much more common in distal dissections. Systemic hypertension was present in 77 per cent, being commoner in distal dissections (83 per cent) than in proximal dissections (70 per cent). Aortic incompetence, hemiplegia and shock were all more common in proximal dissections. Post-mortem examination was performed in 125 patients. Eighty-four per cent of proximal dissections had ruptured, 74 per cent into the pericardium and five per cent into the left pleural cavity. Seventy per cent of distal dissections had ruptured, 11 per cent into the pericardium and 41 per cent into the left pleural cavity. The extent of the dissection was analysed, and it was shown that 25 per cent of distal dissections had extended proximally into the ascending aorta and arch. This implies that diagnosis of the site of origin of dissection from clinical signs and the plain chest-radiograph is inaccurate. Aortography is required for precise assessment. Since treatment often varies with the site of dissection, aortography should be performed in most patients surviving the first few hours. Attention is drawn to the frequency (10.4 per cent) of multiple aortic lesions, and to the occasional aetiological significance of giant-cell arteritis, and, possibly, hypothyroidism.
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PMID:Dissecting aortic aneurysms: a clinicopathological study. I. Clinical and gross pathological findings. 48 91

In patients with chest pain somatic pain (thoracic wall pain) has to be differentiated from visceral pain (organ pain). History and careful physical examination are diagnostic in most cases. Presented are rare and not well-known diseases like valvular aortic stenosis, idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis and the mitral valve prolapse syndrome. Not seldom they are masked by angina pectoris-like symptoms, although in general the coronary arteries are normal. In acute chest pain differential diagnostic considerations have to include lung embolism, acute pericarditis, spontaneous pneumothorax, acute dissecting aneurysm of the aorta and diseases of the gastrointestinal tract as well. Only after exclusion of any organic cause the diagnosis of "effort syndrome" may be made.
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PMID:[Chest pain: differential diagnosis in general practice]. 49 63

Although there is no statistical proof of the efficacy of coumarin drugs in the therapy of acute myocardial infarction, the numbers of patients at risk from thromboembolism are sufficiently great and the favorable clinical and pathologic impressions are sufficiently strong that, conversely, the possibility of benefit cannot be excluded. This delicate balance is indeed a Hobson's Choice. In this therapeutic dilemma, we would interpret one acceptable course in regard to the use of anticoagulants among patients with acute myocardial infarction as follows: all patients with proved acute myocardial infarction should be treated with anticoagulants while hospitalized unless there are relative or absolute contraindications to the therapy or deficiencies in laboratory facilities. Patients with questionable infarcts should be treated with anticoagulants only until the diagnosis is established or rejected. If the latter occurs, the administration of the drug should be discontinued. When, in a patient suspected of having an acute myocardial infarction, there is reason to believe that the pain may be due to pericarditis, dissecting aneurysm, or gastrointestinal abnormalities, anticoagulant therapy should be withheld until this is resolved.
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PMID:Antithrombotic agents are indicated in the therapy of acute myocardial infarction. 84 87

A 20-year-old man suffered head, chest, and abdominal trauma in an auto accident resulting in a traumatic dissecting aneurysm of the thoracic aorta. Hypotension developed. The aneurysm was resected and replaced with a prosthetic graft. Postoperatively, the patient was found to be paraplegic below T-9, areflexic and anesthetic to pain and temperature, with preservation of vibration and position senses. In the ensuing nine months, the patient regained considerable sensory function in his lower extremities and had severe constant hyperhydrosis below the T-9 dermatome. The exaggerated sweating was unaffected by temperature change and anxiety. It was diminished by methantheline bromide treatment but never abolished. The spinal cord lesion is postulated to be anterior horn cell loss, with preservation of interneurons and intermediolateral gray columns. Disinhibition of sympthetic circuits or sprouting of axons are proposed mechanisms.
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PMID:Hyperhydrosis in paraplegia. 88 95

In a series of 24 cases of acute dissecting aneurysm of the aorta (not including Marfan's disease) the diagnosis was usually suspected on the basis of the clinical picture and plain chest roentgenograms. The most consistent clinical sign was severe pain. Absent pulses and a neurological deficit were each noted in only five patients. In many cases there was no correlation between the clinical picture and the type or the extent of the dissection. Widening of the aortic arch and obliteration of the aortic knob with displacement of the trachea to the right are the most common signs in plain chest roentgenograms. A barium swallow examination in these cases reveals an elongated compression and displacement of the esophagus by the aortic arch. Calcification in the area of the aortic arch is the exception rather than the rule in dissecting aneurysms. Angiography is essential for the definitive diagnosis of dissecting aneurysms. The diagnosis is based on the demonstration of two channels, either by the presence of a linear radiolucency separating the two lumens, or by differences in flow that present as delayed opacification or delayed washout. If only the true lumen is opacified, widening of the outer extraluminal border of the aorta or narrowing of the lumen indicates the presence of a dissection. Abnormal catheter recoil and position were helpful in only two cases, and are not informative when the false lumen is catheterized. Failure to visualize main aortic branches was not always due to involvement by the dissection. It can also be caused by reduced flow due to severe proximal compression of the main lumen. The exact location of the intimal tears is usually not demonstrated unless additional injections are made in the area assumed to contain the tear. If only the false lumen is opacified in the ascending aorta, this can be recognized by the demonstration of a blind end, by failure to visualize the sinuses of Valsalva, from flattening of the medial border of the opacified channel, and from delayed washout in the blind end.
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PMID:Dissecting aneurysm of thoracic aorta: reappraisal of radiologic diagnosis. 120 71

In its acute phase, aortic dissection (a term that is now preferred to dissecting aneurysm of the aorta) is a medico-surgical emergency. The diagnosis is suspected on clinical data: intensive thoracic pain with recently appeared diastolic murmur and abolition of a peripheral pulse, contrasting with an electrocardiogram that is either normal or not suggestive of acute coronary thrombosis. It is confirmed by imaging methods, notably echocardiography and/or angiography. These methods, rapidly performed in all circumstances, provide the surgeon with useful information on the size and extent of the dissection and on its complications. Surgery still is the only effective treatment of dissections involving the ascending aorta. In dissections of the descending aorta it may or may not be envisaged, depending on the results of medical treatment. In chronic aortic dissections, which may have a long course, surgery is not mandatory, byt it is necessary in case of mediastinal compression or severe aortic insufficiency.
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PMID:[Dissecting aneurysms of the aorta: from causes to therapeutic indications]. 192 55

A 42-year-old woman developed an abrupt onset of severe headache, nausea, vomiting, unstable gait and numbness around the right side of her mouth and in her right hand. Neurological examination revealed bilateral pyramidal tract signs and hypesthesia of her right palmar tip and the right side of her mouth. However, pain and temperature sensibility was preserved. Cerebrospinal fluid was clear and colorless. CT scan showed an enhancing mass in the prepontine cistern compressing the pontine base. Vertebral angiography revealed irregular narrowing of bilateral vertebral arteries (string sign) proximal to a fusiform aneurysm on the entire length of the basilar artery. MRI showed double lumina in the wall of the aneurysm. The medial lemniscus conducts the discriminatory tactile and the deep sensory impulses from the extremities. The ventral ascending tract of the trigeminal nerve conducts the discriminatory tactile sensory impulses from the face. These two tracts lie close together in the pontine tegmentum, which is also a watershed area of the paramedian branches and circumferential branches of the basilar artery. We suggest that in this case the dissecting aneurysm caused ischemia of these two tracts in the left pontine tegmentum, presenting right cheiro-oral syndrome.
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PMID:[A mechanism of cheiro-oral syndrome due to brainstem lesions, a case of a dissecting aneurysm of the basilar artery]. 193 69

Although it is well known that Wallenberg's syndrome is caused by occlusion of the vertebral artery (VA) or the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA), the etiology of the occlusion is rarely documented. During the course of Wallenberg's syndrome, patients often complain of headache. We thought that these headaches might be caused by dissecting aneurysm (DA) of the vertebral artery, and so we studied the incidence of DA in our cases with Wallenberg's syndrome. Although many variants exist, Wallenberg's syndrome encompasses several neurological symptoms due to a disorder of the nucleus and nerve tracts located in the lateral part of the medulla. We diagnosed our patients as having Wallenberg's syndrome on the basis of symptoms such as loss of pain and temperature sensation in the unilateral face and contralateral body, cerebellar ataxia, and dysphasia. We investigated 22 cases of Wallenberg's syndrome over a five-year period, and excluded patients who developed subarachnoid hemorrhage upon onset of the syndrome. Our cases can be divided into two groups; one with severe stenosis or occlusion of VA (n = 15) and the other with occlusion of PICA (n = 5). The angiograms of the two remaining patients showed no abnormal findings. The mean age of the VA group (42.5 yrs.) was younger than that of the PICA group (64.2 yrs.). The age distribution of the PICA group is similar to that of other occlusive cerebrovascular diseases. Seven cases of the VA group demonstrated aneurysmal dilatation and luminal stenosis, and so they were diagnosed as having dissecting aneurysm of VA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Dissecting aneurysm of the vertebral artery as a cause of Wallenberg's syndrome]. 221 65

In 2 cases of dissecting aneurysm of the internal carotid artery the only clinical sign was a Claude Bernard-Horner's syndrome, with pain in the neck and face.
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PMID:[Dissecting aneurysm of the internal carotid artery and isolated Claude Bernard-Horner syndrome]. 273 22


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