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

Emergency revascularization for unstable angina (defined according to criteria of the National Cooperative Study Group) was performed in 100 consecutive patients. The mean interval from onset of pain to operation was one day. Nineteen patients had single-vessel narrowing of greater than 70% of lumen diameter, 32 double-vessel obstruction and 49 triple-vessel disease. Fourteen of these patients had left main trunk obstruction. Four patients died within 30 days, three from complications of myocardial infarction. Seventeen of 96 (18%) early survivors sustained perioperative infarction. After a mean follow-up of 42 months, four late deaths and three late infarctions occurred. Postoperative angiography in 47 patients (mean interval 14 months) showed 86% graft patency. Of 92 survivors, 72 are symptom-free. Three of the four operative deaths occurred within 24 hours postoperatively; in each of these, postmortem examination confirmed a recent myocardial infarction which antedated the operation, despite the absence of new infarction in the peroperative electrocardiogram or elevation of cardiac enzymes. Results from this emergency series suggest that, although myocardium may be salvaged in some instances, in other cases infarction has already occurred and treatment might better be directed toward alleviation of acute ischemia to provide a stable period in which diagnostic studies are performed and acute myocardial infarction may be ruled out.
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PMID:Emergency revascularization for unstable angina. 70 72

A new method of providing continence to patients with fecal stomas is presented. The device, used as an artificial sphincter, consists of an inflatable Silastic balloon, which is implanted in the subcutaneous tissue around the stoma; it is easily handled by the patient. The artificial sphincter was used in six patients with colostomies. In all cases, satisfactory continence of the stoma was achieved, obviating the need to use enemas, bags or other appliances. In three patients subcutaneous infections developed around the prosthesis. In two cases, this was readily controlled; in one case, the prosthesis had to be removed. The other five patients are well and continent. None of the patients experienced pain or discomfort during use of the prosthesis. There has been no stomal ischemia.
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PMID:An artificial sphincter: a preliminary report. 73 70

Following total hip replacement, three patients had early and one had late ischemia of the ipsilateral extremity. Three required vascular surgery and one, a lumbar sympathectomy for relief of pain at rest. In each instance there had been multiple previous procedures on the same hip resulting in extensive scarring, shortening, flexion contracture, or fusion. The ischemia after total hip replacement was probably the result of interruption of critical collateral circulation about the hip or of traction on the femoral vessels tethered by scar when the short limb was lengthened or when the hip contracture was corrected. Evaluation by Doppler pressures and arteriography was helpful. Careful preoperative evaluation, early recognition of signs of ischemia, and prompt institution of appropriate management are essential to prevent this complication and to treat it adequately once it occurs.
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PMID:Ischemia of the lower extremity after total hip replacement. 75 31

Unstable angina is a syndrome which comprises a spectrum of symptomatic manifestations of coronary artery disease which lies between stable angina pectoris and acute myocardial infarction. Patients fall into three groups: angina of recent onset (4 weeks), angina of changing pattern, and angina occurring at rest (longer than 15 minutes). The syndrome may presage acute myocardial infarction or sudden death, or may itself be the manifestation of a myocardial infarction. The pathophysiology may involve primary cardiac events or extracardiac precipitating factors, and does not appear to be the consequence of a particular anatomic pattern of coronary artery disease. Pain may occur as a result of regional reduction of coronary flow to pressure-dependent areas of myocardium during states of increased myocardial oxygen demand. Persisting ischemia leads to infarction via a series of events which may include myocardial edema formation, increased beta-sympathetic tone, and others which have been experimentally modified by interventions designed to limit infarct size. Although the incidence of acute myocardial infarction and death was high in early studies, in recent reports acute infarction occurs in under 15.5 per cent and death in under 2 per cent. Patients at high risk are those pain persists with bed rest, and those with preceding stable angina pectoris or myocardial infarction. Prognostic differences among Groups 1, 2, and 3 may exist but cannot be assessed from available studies. Studies of the management of unstable angina have generally been uncontrolled. Hospitalization, bed rest, and short- and long-acting nitrates are generally employed in Groups 2 and 3 patients and the marked reduction in myocardial infarction rates from early to recent studies tends to support these approaches. Anticoagulants are less used now than formerly. Propranolol can produce a significant reduction of myocardial oxygen consumption and may redirect coronary flow to ischemic areas. The drug has effectively controlled pain in several studies and is now widely used to manage unstable angina. Aortocoronary bypass surgery has been extensively employed but there is only one preliminary report of a controlled study available. The role of surgery is not yet defined. The optimal approach to therapy may eventually involve the use of medical therapy, including beta-blockade to stabilize patients, with delayed semielective coronary angiography and surgery in those who respond. Emergency angiography and surgery might then be reserved for the high-risk group of patients whose pain persists during optimal medical therapy.
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PMID:Unstable angina pectoris. 78 21

In 10 patients without and 20 patients with various degrees of angiographically proven CAD 93 pacing runs were studied. Changes of PAm, of ECG, and of anginal pain serving as parameters of myocardial ischemia were correlated to the rate-pressure-product. In patients without CAD no correlations could be ascertained. In each patient with CAD determination of ischemia was achieved reproducibly. Ischemia threshold is represented by a sharp increase of PAm. Ischemia threshold seems a parameter to be preferred as compared to pain threshold. The extent of CAD (angiographically estimated) correlates well with the pacing test especially when collaterals are taken into account. After NG no substantial improvement of ischemia can be detected: Ischemia threshold before and after NG was reached at same rate pressure in each case. We conclude the atrial pacing test to be an excellent test for the provocation of myocardial ischemia. The test is also useful for estimation of the extent of CAD.
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PMID:Pacing-induced myocardial ischemia in spite of nitroglycerin. Correlations regarding the extent of coronary artery disease. 80 82

Nitroglycerin (NTG) traditionally has bben avoided in the treatment of pain caused by acute myocardial infarction because of the belief that NTG-induced decrease in arterial pressure and concomitant reflex increase in heart rate might extend the ischemic process. However, recent experimental and clinical investigations cast doubt on this concept. For example, when the left anterior descending coronary artery is acutely occluded in normal dogs or in dogs when chronic coronary occlusions and extensive collaterals, NTG reduces ST-segment evevation (and presumably myocardial ischemia). This salutary effect occurs despite lowering of systemic arterial pressure, as long as excessive reflex tachycardia does not result; the magnitude of ischemia reduction is potentiated when methoxamine or phenylephrine are administered simultaneously to abolish the NTG -induced hypotension and reflex tachycardia. NTG and methoxamine treatment also results in 1) reduction of infarct size as (as assessed by gross morphologic examinations and myocardial CPK levels) in dogs subjected to 5 hours of coronary occlusion, and 2) increase in ventricular fibrillation (VF) threshold and reduction of the incidence of spontaneously occurring VF in dogs with acute coronary occlusion. Finally, the effectiveness of NTG during acute myocardial iinfarction (AMI) in man has been studied. Multiple precordial electrodes were used to measure changes in the degree of ST-segment elevation; these changes were used as an index of alterations in myocardial ischemic injury. Patients with normal pulmonary capillary wedge pressures ( less than 15 mm Hg) did not benefit consistently from NTG alone; however, when phenylephrine was administered with NTG (to abolish NTG-induced arterial pressure reduction and reflex increase in heart rate), ST-segment elevation diminished consistently. In patients with elevated wedge pressures ( greater than 15 mm Hg), NTG alone consistently reduced ischemia; addition of phenylephrine often partially reversed this benefit. Thus, administration of NTG, alone or with phenylephrine, appears to reduce myocardial ischemic injury during AMI in man; however, the response to phenylephrine depends upon the presence or absence of LV failure prior to treatment. These experimental and clinical results suggest this form of therapy may be use in reducing infarct size in man, although additional studies are necessary to determine the functional significance of these acute electrophysiologic alterations.
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PMID:Protection of ischemic myocardium by nitroglycerin: experimental and clinical results. 81 59

In 26 patients endoscopic-radiologic pancreography routinely performed caused severe pain with certain origin from pancreatic glan. Pain could be stopped immediately and with constant effect by lingual application of nitroglycerine. According to these informations we suppose that pancreatic pain is started by vascular reactions and ischemia. The good effect of nitroglycerine is worth a control in patients with common acute pancreatitis.
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PMID:[Pancreatic pain: a clinical-experimental study]. 82 30

Sonography gives a characteristic picture of popliteal aneurysms, with an easily demonstrable connection of the sonolucent aneurysmal sac with the popliteal artery. It is a good screening procedure for suspected aneurysms and for patients with popliteal pain, mass, or sudden distal ischemia. Three case reports of five popliteal aneurysms diagnosed by ultrasound are presented. A case of neurofibrosarcoma occurring in the popliteal fossa is shown for comparison.
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PMID:B-scan ultrasound in the diagnosis of popliteal aneurysms. 84 52

Forty-five limbs varying clinically from normal through moderate to severely ischemic were studied by noninvasive measurements of both arterial blood pressure and perfusion. From the values plotted on a two-coordinate system, they arranged themselves well into three clinical categories: (1) normal, (2) intermittent claudication, and (3) ischemia or ulceration and rest pain. Good clinical responses to arterial reconstruction were corroborated by postoperative measurements. Reinforcing the results of one measurement with those of the other has provided an objective, numerical, and graphic basis for decisions regarding the advisability of angiography or arterial reconstructive procedures or both. To date, almost 400 patients have been evaluated by these techniques.
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PMID:Noninvasive assessment of the peripheral vascular system. 87 Dec 45

Three patients with clinical diagnosis of myocardial infarction are described, whose cardiograms are characterized by a transitory positivation of the negative T-waves. The confrontation of those changes with the clinical picture reveals that the transitory positivation of the T-wave coincides with the clinical and paraclinical signs of intensification of the myocardial hypoxia (pain, collapse, enzyme positivation). The possible electrophysiological mechanisms are discussed that could explain the transitory positivation of the negative T-waves, as a manifestation of the intensified ischemia.
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PMID:[Atypical hypoxic changes in the T wave]. 89 10


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