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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thirty-five patients with occlusive disease of the arteries underwent metabolic studies. The arteriovenous differences of lactate, glucose and oxygen varied with the severity of the ischemic process, as assessed clinically. Lactate release and glucose extraction were significantly different from control values of patients with rest pain or with ischemic gangrene, while values in patients with claudication were comparable with those in the control group. Percutaneous muscle surface pH measurements, which reflect lactate release, decreased directly with diminished perfusion. Metabolic assessment of arterial occlusive disease may prove to be a useful clinical approach.
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PMID:A metabolic approach to the evaluation of peripheral vascular disease. 1 79

Geriatric patients are preferentially involved in ischemic bowel disease. The sudden occlusion of the large mesenteric arteries (a. mesenterica superior (more frequently) and inferior) is followed by intestinal gangrene and peritonitis with a poor prognosis and a high letality (greater than 90%). In chronic intestinal ischemia the leading clinical symptom is postprandial pain ('claudicatio intestinalis'). In some cases of acute mesenteric artery occlusion no embolus or thrombus will be found. In these cases the circulation in the arteriosclerotic vessels falls below a critical value due to cardiac insufficiency, shock, digitalis overdose and others. In less severe ischemia the mucosa is involved being most sensitive to O2 deprivation. It usually regenerates within a few days. This form is found more frequently in the colon than in other parts of the gut (about 40%): ischemic colitis. The therapy - if possible in acute, fulminant ischemia or if necessary in chronic intestinal ischemia - is surgical consisting in reconstructive procedures of the mesenteric circulation.
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PMID:[Ischemic bowel disease (author's transl)]. 1 31

To examine the possible relationship between Doppler pressures (DP) and pulse volume amplitude (PVR) with muscle surface pH (pHm), we studied 20 patients before, during, and after arterial reconstruction. The mean pHm for the claudication, rest pain, and ischemic gangrene groups differed from a control group and from each other. The pHm varied directly with DP and PVR for the 20 patients as a whole. After reconstructive surgery, improvement in pHm seemed to precede changes in DP and PVR in six patients with combined segment disease. Although pHm correlates generally with DP and PVR, it is invasive. Therefore, pHm should not be used as a routine screening test. Whereas DP and PVR may reflect the anaerobic activity of peripheral tissue, they may be less prompt than pHm in responding to acute changes in blood flow.
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PMID:Relationship of muscle surface pH to noninvasive hemodynamic studies in arterial occlusive diseases. 3 56

By means of a recently developed technique, red-cell deformability was measured in 44 patients with peripheral vascular disease and in 44 age and sex matched normal control subjects. 28 patients had intermittent claudication and 16 rest pain or gangrene. The ability of the red cells to deform was significantly reduced in patients and significantly less in patients with rest pain or gangrene than in those who only had intermittent claudication. A reduction in red-cell deformability by retarding blood-flow through the microcirculation may be an important factor in states of peripheral vascular insufficiency.
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PMID:Impaired red cell deformability in peripheral vascular disease. 7 40

Vascular surgeons are in agreement that autogenous saphenous veins are best suited for bypasses from the common femoral artery to the distal popliteal artery in the management of femoropopliteal occlusive disease associated with the severely ischemic foot. Such a graft should be of adequate size (more than 3 mm in diameter) throughout its length for a successful outcome. In some patients the vein is of good size for 15 or 20 cm then branches into several small veins. Reports by most surgeons are unfavorable concerning the use of prostheses and bovine heterografts for anastomosis to the distal popliteal artery or to one of its branches. Our experience with composite dacron vein graft bypasses employing a fluted end-to-end anastomosis had been unfavorable and was similar to the experience of Dale (1962). In July 1973 we were forced to improvise the technique of end-to-side anastomosis joining the end of a dacron prosthesis to the side of the vein graft for a femorodistal popliteal bypass. During the ensuing 15 months we have carried out this composite graft only when the greater saphenous vein was not of adequate size throughout. In 17 limbs the composite graft was placed between the common femoral artery and the distal popliteal artery and on 6 occasions to the posterior tibial and peroneal arteries. Nineteen limbs exhibited either gangrene, impending gangrene, ischemic ulceration or severe rest pain. In four extremities intermittent claudication of a progressive and disabling degree was the indication for operation. Eleven of the 22 patients were diabetic. Run-off beyond the popliteal artery was poor in 16 of the 23 limbs and inflow was subnormal in three patients. During the followup period, 10 grafts have occluded, one day to 6 1/2 months postoperatively, two due to inflow deficiency, 5 due to poor outflow, one to an error in technique, and two occluded without known cause. Two patients came to major amputation following closure of their grafts, 3 and 7 months postoperatively. Results with the composite graft are compared with the bovine heterograft and the homologous vein graft.
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PMID:New technique for construction of coposite Dacron vein grafts for femoro-distal popliteal bypass in the severely ischemic leg. 12 61

The results of extended deep femoral angioplasty (EDFA) have been alaysed for 74 legs in 72 patients. In 69 per cent a femoropopliteal bypass would have been possible, so DEFA is considered here as an alternative operation. The success rate was 66-9 per cent, the failure rate 25-6 per cent and no effect was achieved in 7-5 per cent. Diabetes adversely affected the results. Of the failures, 45 per cent were diabetic, while the incidence of diabetes was only 14 per cent in the group where the operation was successful. The long term results of the operation were reasonable, 75 per cent being successful for 10-39 months. Age had no bearing on success or failure. The effects of EDFA were most dramatic on intermittent claudication. In 52 per cent it was abolished and in 92 per cent claudication distance was increased to over 200 yards. Good results were achieved after failed lumbar sympathectomy and failed femoropopliteal bypass. Successful results of EDFA could be predicted best by inspection of angiograms. Success or failure could have been predicted from the state of the run-off in 81 per cent of the cases. Claudication and rest pain were the most relieved by EDFA, followed by isachaemic ulceration of the leg. Gangrene of digits was helped but less than had been hoped. We conclude that the indications for femoropopliteal bypass are limited to cases of digital gangrene where angiography shows that bypass is possible or where an EDFA operation has failed.
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PMID:Extended deep femoral angioplasty: an alternative to femoropopliteal bypass. 12 11

A series of 75 patients, with an average age of 65 years, underwent the following extra-anatomic bypasses involving the crossover femorofemoral principle: femorofemoral (F-F), 54 patients; aortofemorofemoral (A-F-F), 12 patients; common iliac-femorofemoral (CI-F-F), six patients; and axillofemorofemoral (Ax-F-F), three patients. Fifty eight of the 75 patients (77 percent) initially presented with rest pain or gangrene. The operative mortality rate in this high-risk group of patients was 4 percent. Analysis by the life-table method showed the graft patency rate to be 91.1 percent at one year and 87.4 percent at 18 months. There have been no graft failures or deaths in the series of 20 patients followed longer than 18 months. Two amputations followed graft failures and nine of the remaining 11 amputations were done in patients with patent grafts during the same period of hospitalization, reflecting the severity of their gangrene upon admission. High-risk patients who are not suitable for crossover F-F grafts without an inflow procedure may be suitable for a CI-F-F or A-F-F bypass before being considered for an Ax-F-F bypass.
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PMID:Extra-anatomic bypasses for aortoiliac disease in high-risk patients. 13 65

175 by-pass operations were performed for femoro-popliteal atherosclerosis during the period January 1967-April 1975. 154 were femoro-popliteal vein by-pass grafts. The material in addition includes 12 distal tibial arterial by-pass grafts, 6 homologous vein grafts, 2 Sparks prosthesis and 1 dacron graft. In the femoro-popliteal vein by-pass group 51% were operated for rest-pain or distal gangrene, while 49% had intermittent claudication. The 4 year patency rate in the two groups was 54% and 66% resepctively and was more favourable when the distal anastomosis was placed above than below the knee. However, the latter group had more severe ischaemic symptoms and the difference is probably in part due to case selection. The results were also more favourable when the proximal anastomosis was placed on the common femoral artery. The operative mortality was 38%. Vein by-pass to the lower leg arteries had a 2 year patency of only 34%. Semi-closed endarterectomy is preferred to homologous vein, Sparks prosthesis or dacron grafts where no sufficient vein for grafting exists. It is concluded that saphenous vein by-pass is the method of choice in patients where femoro-popliteal reconstruction is indicated.
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PMID:By-pass grafting for femoro-popliteal atherosclerosis. 14 81

Bypassing aortoiliac stenosing lesions to the profunda femoria alone, even with extensive end-arterectomy and angioplasty of the latter, will not provide predictable excellent results in the presence of gangrene and occlusion in the femoral popliteal system. With severe pregangrene and rest pain, residual ischemic complaints are also common, and if lesions are present, healing is incomplete or, at best, delayed. Alternatively, femoropopliteal or tibial bypass, in the presence of even moderately diminished inflow, is subject to either early or delayed closure, unless proximal repair is also performed in appropriately selected patients. Synchronous correction of tandem lesions involving the aortoiliac and femoropopliteal segments should, therefore, be considered for limb salvage only and particularly in the presence of focal gangrene, excision or debridement of which can be anticipated to heal after successful bypass. Major diminution in femoral inflow usually indicates the need for proximal repair only, even in the presence of distal lesions. Noninvasive studies and intraoperative flow determinations are not uniformly helpful in patient selection. Synchronous aortofemoral or iliofemoral and femoropopliteal or tibial reconstructions were performed upon 38 patients, 15 of whom had no prior vascular operation and 23 of whom had previously undergone either aortofemoral or femoropopliteal bypasses that had failed. Graft patency for all patients was 76 per cent, and although it was better for the patients in group 1 than for those in group 2, no statistical significance existed between the two groups. Improved patient selection and criteria for performing synchronous reconstructions might originally have been of benefit for the patients in group 2, avoiding more difficult secondary repairs. It must be emphasized, however, that synchronous reconstructions should not be done routinely in the presence of multilevel disease. Rather, specific indications do exist and should be considered on an individual basis.
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PMID:Synchronous aortofemoral or iliofemoral bypass with revascularization of the lower extremity. 15 5

Blood flow disturbances in the gastrointestinal tract can lead to serious illness. They can be acute or chronic, their cause may be arterial or venous occlusion or hypotonia. Lesions of the gastrointestinal tract caused by ischemia depend on localisation, acuteness and degree of the blood flow disturbance. They may reach from focal and segmental ischemic lesions to extensive necroses of the entire intestinal tubes. The most serious ischemic disease is the embolic and thrombotic occlusion of the arteria mesenterica superior due to previous arterosclerotic damage. Infarction of a large part of the intestines and peritonitis can be the consequence. These patients' only chance of survival is early diagnosis--as a rule exclusively via angiography--and immediate surgery. Chronic occlusion of the arteria mesenterica superior leads to angina abdominalis which mainly occurs after food intake and can last for hours. The reason may also be a general arteriosclerosis. Men are affected more frequently and at a younger age than women. As a consequence of lowered intestinal blood flow these patients suffer from malabsorption and heavy weight loss. Conservative therapy is not effective. These patients, too, will have to be treated surgically after previous angiography. Vascular disease with decreased blood flow as its consequence can be found in a number of inflammatory diseases, in malign hypertensian, in collagen disease and in other more rare diseases as pseudoxanthoma elasticum or Ehlers-Danlos-syndrome. In the case of ischemic colitis arterial and more rarely venous occlusions cause decreased blood flow in the big bowel. A frequent consequence is colitis in the left colon which is characterized by acuteness, pain in the left side of the abdomen and by heavy rectal bleeding. Diagnosis is established by means of endoscopy, barium enema and angiography. Primarily therapy of ischemic colitis is of the conservative type. In severe cases with gangrene and peritonitis the colon has to be resected.
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PMID:[Disorders of the blood circulation in the gastrointestinal tract]. 32 26


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