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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (paresis)
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The value of the vascular examination cannot be over-estimated. Symptoms of vascular disease present in the foot and lower extremity may actually be manifestations of severe life-threatening disease. Symptoms, their location, and the frequency and quality of the patient's pain often provide valuable clues for the clinician's diagnosis. Central nervous system symptoms, ocular disturbances, cardiac symptoms, impotence, or constitutional disturbances may all indicate systemic arterial disease. Risk factors for this disease include smoking, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, genetic predisposition, diabetes, emotional stress, and physical inactivity. Those factors attributable to hypercoagulability and venous disease are birth control pill use, estrogen chemotherapy, obesity, prolonged immobilization, paralysis, previous thrombotic episodes, venous stasis disease, and varicose veins. An accurate bilateral assessment of blood pressure, pulses, and capillary perfusion is of critical importance. Careful inspection of the extremity for trophic changes, skin color, texture, temperature, edema, ulceration, atrophy, or paresis, will provide clues of vasculopathy. A relatively accurate assessment of circulatory status may be obtained without the use of exotic instruments. Simple tests such as the elevation and dependency tests, capillary bed return test, venous filling time test, along with blood pressure, pulse, and possibly oscillometry data are valuable in arterial evaluation. Such venous tests as inspection, percussion, Homan's sign, Trendelenburg, and Perthes' tourniquet are useful in the determination of the presence of venous disease. Fortunately, over the past few years tremendous advances have been made in the technology of the vascular laboratory. If symptoms are discovered during the vascular history and physical examination, the complete noninvasive study will provide impressive data to quantitate and specifically establish the diagnosis.
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PMID:The vascular history and physical examination. 173 54

Acute arterial occlusions of the extremities present with the classical five P's: pain, pallor, pulselessness, paresthesia, paresis. Loss of sensitivity and motility are symptoms of the most severe grade of ischemia. The occlusions are due to embolism in about 70% of subjects and to local thrombosis in 30%. These patients have to be treated immediately with heparin. In the mildest forms, deobliteration is desirable, but in the more severe cases rapid restoration of flow not only saves limbs but also life. Deobliteration may be performed surgically or by means of catheters (local thrombolysis or thrombus aspiration) if available. Deep vein thrombosis, the other kind of emergency situation, requires immediate anticoagulation as soon as pulmonary embolism is suspected. It should be initiated by heparin and followed by oral anticoagulation. In patients presenting without pulmonary embolism but a swollen leg, ruptured Baker cysts or muscle hematomas should be ruled out before anticoagulation is started. Systemic thrombolysis or surgical thrombectomy is reserved for young patients with acute isolated thromboses. Thrombectomy must also be kept in reserve for the most severe form of deep venous thromboses, the phlegmasia cerulea dolens. In thrombophlebitis, no anticoagulation is indicated except in bedridden patients. The others must remain mobile and may be treated by systemic and local antiinflammatory drugs, incision of thrombosed varices, and bandages.
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PMID:[Emergencies in angiology]. 849 73

Seven related Bernese Mountain Dogs developed a syndrome Characterized by progressive cerebellar and hepatic disease. Clinically, stiffness in the hind limbs, mild incoordination, and a slight head tremor were first noticeable when pups were 4 to 6 weeks old. The condition progressed, causing pups to assume a wide-based stance. Other signs included head bobbing, spontaneous nystagmus, and, finally, paresis. Hematologic findings included leukocytosis with a left shift; normocytic, normochromic anemia; hypoproteinemia, low serum creatinine, and urea nitrogen concentrations; excessive fasting plasma ammonia concentration; and an increase in concentration of serum bile acids. Portal venography performed on 1 dog revealed a small liver and extensive extrahepatic varicosities. Necropsy revealed cerebellar hypoplasia, nodular liver, extensive abdominal varicosities, and ascites. Histologically, degeneration and depletion of Purkinje's cells and vacuolation, degeneration, and nodular regeneration of hepatic tissues were evident. Preliminary analysis of the pedigree was suggestive of an autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance.
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PMID:Clinical, hematologic, and biochemical features of a syndrome in Bernese mountain dogs characterized by hepatocerebellar degeneration. 863 71

The incidence of venous thromboembolism exceeds 1 per 1000; over 200,000 new cases occur in the United States annually. Of these, 30% die within 30 days; one-fifth suffer sudden death due to pulmonary embolism. Despite improved prophylaxis, the incidence of venous thromboembolism has been constant since 1980. Independent risk factors for venous thromboembolism include increasing age, male gender, surgery, trauma, hospital or nursing home confinement, malignancy, neurologic disease with extremity paresis, central venous catheter/transvenous pacemaker, prior superficial vein thrombosis, and varicose veins; among women, risk factors include pregnancy, oral contraceptives, and hormone replacement therapy. About 30% of surviving cases develop recurrent venous thromboembolism within ten years. Independent predictors for recurrence include increasing age, obesity, malignant neoplasm, and extremity paresis. About 28% of cases develop venous stasis syndrome within 20 years. To reduce venous thromboembolism incidence, improve survival, and prevent recurrence and complications, patients with these characteristics should receive appropriate prophylaxis.
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PMID:The epidemiology of venous thromboembolism in the community. 1148 36

The complication rate in varicose vein surgery has not been viewed separately for the sapheno-femoral and the saphenopopliteal junction. From 1.10.1988 to 31.12.99 we prospectively registered the major vascular and neural complication rate. A total of 31,838 ligations of the saphenofemoral junction and 6,152 ligations of the saphenopopliteal junction were performed. There were seven major vascular injuries (0.017%) and three major neural injuries (0.0074%). The specific risk at the saphenofemoral junction amounts to: major venous injury n = 4 (0.013%) without development of a postthrombotic syndrome (PTS); no arterial injury and no major neural injury. At the saphenopopliteal junction we found three major venous injuries (0.049%) with development of PTS in all cases. There were three major neural injuries (0.049%) with complete regeneration in two cases and one permanent paresis of digit V. Since operations on the saphenopopliteal junction show a higher risk of major vascular und major neural injury, flush ligation of the saphenopopliteal junction should not be forced in every case.
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PMID:[Major vascular and neural complications in varicose vein surgery. Prospective documentation of complication rate in surgery of the V. saphena magna and V. saphena parva]. 1159 72

Venous thromboembolism is a major health problem, with an incidence that exceeds 1 per 1000. Over 200,000 new cases occur in the United States annually. Of these, 30% of patients die within 30 days; one-fifth suffer sudden death due to pulmonary embolism. Despite improved prophylaxis, the incidence of venous thromboembolism has not changed significantly since 1980. Independent risk factors for venous thromboembolism include increasing age, male gender, surgery, trauma, hospital or nursing home confinement, malignancy, neurologic disease with extremity paresis, central venous catheter/ transvenous pacemaker, prior superficial vein thrombosis, and varicose veins; among women, the risk factors include pregnancy, oral contraceptives, and hormone replacement therapy. About 30% of surviving patients develop recurrent venous thromboembolism within 10 years. Independent predictors for recurrence include increasing age, obesity, malignant neoplasm, and extremity paresis. About 28% of patients develop venous stasis syndrome within 20 years. To reduce venous thromboembolism incidence, improve survival, and prevent recurrence and complications, patients with these characteristics should receive appropriate prophylaxis.
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PMID:Venous thromboembolism epidemiology: implications for prevention and management. 1207 75

Deep vein thrombosis is a frequent disease with an annual incidence reaching 5 per thousand among subjects over 75 years. Major acquired risk factors for venous thrombosis include surgery, neoplasm, reduced mobility or paresis, and a previous episode of deep vein thrombosis. Among women, hormonal status (pregnancy, oral contraceptive, hormone replacement therapy) is responsible for the majority of all venous thrombotic events. The impact of other factors is controversial: obesity, tobacco use and varicose veins. Venous thrombosis is a multifactorial disease and analysis of the interactions between acquired and inherited risk factors is an extremely interesting field of investigation.
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PMID:[Deep venous thrombosis: epidemiology, acquired risk factors]. 1247 41

A 49-year-old male presented with a rare case of acute lower extremity paresis caused by spontaneous thrombosis of a spinal conus perimedullary arteriovenous fistula (AVF) after a subacute myelopathic course. Magnetic resonance imaging obtained after deterioration showed that the flow voids around the conus medullaris had changed from hypointense to hyperintense lesions. Surgery with thoracic laminoplasty was performed to determine the nature of the lesion because angiography was negative. During surgery, thrombosed abnormal vessels were observed, consistent with thrombosis of a spinal conus perimedullary AVF. Histological specimens of the thrombosed vessels exhibited vascular wall injury such as intimal alteration, wall dissection, and mural thrombus. Hemorrhage and infection were excluded. Vascular wall injury of draining veins and varices were probably one of the causes of thrombosis in the present case. Spinal arteriovenous malformation generally causes progressive venous congestive myelopathy, but the congestive myelopathy may rarely rapidly deteriorate with spontaneous thrombosis, known as Foix and Alajouanine syndrome.
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PMID:Spontaneous thrombosis of a spinal conus perimedullary arteriovenous fistula. Case report. 2236 94

The patient was a 56-year-old man with microscopic polyangiitis and symmetrical peripheral polyneuropathy of the extremities who was positive for p-ANCA, EMG pattern of mononeuritis multiplex and skin biopsy showing the presence of nonspecific vasculitis. He had phlebectasia with plethora and tortuous vessels on dorsum of the fingers on both hands, paresis and hypoesthesia of fingers and toes with functional limitations. The administration of prednisone, azathioprine and a cyclophosphamide pulse achieved rapid improvement in the general symptoms, but the changes in the neuropathy occurred very slowly. After 47 months of treatment, he had mild phlebectasia in fingers and slight hypoesthesia in hands and feet, with normal laboratory tests. Phlebectasia was probably the result of an autonomic dysfunction due to vasculitis of the vasa nervorum and could be a sign to look for in similar cases.
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PMID:Phlebectasia in a finger in a case of microscopic polyangiitis with peripheral polyneuropathy. 2883 24