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Blood flow in the vertebral artery and the upper extremity was studied in five cases of Takayasu's arteritis with subclavian steal by use of ultrasonic Doppler flowmetry and finger plethysmography. The diagnosis of subclavian steal was made by observation of flow reversal in the vertebral artery on the subclavian steal side during grip exercise and, in addition, the vertebral flow change with brachial artery occlusion. The blood flow increase of both internal cartotid and non-affected (non-subclavian steal side) vertebral arteries during a common carotid compression was almost normal in patients with Takayasu's arteritis in this study. During carotid compression on the side of the subclavian steal, ipsilateral vertebral blood flow greatly decreased, and the amplitude the ipsilateral finger plethysmogram decreased slightly or moderately. It is suggested that there are significantly important factors in suppressing sumptoms of vertebrobasilar ischemia in these patients with Takayasu's arteritis with subclavian steal. These factors are believed to be (1) good function of the circle of Willis, (2) good blood supply to the brain stem, and (3) collateral circulation to the distal subclavian artery not via the vertebral artery.
Stroke
PMID:Subclavian steal in Takayasu's arteritis. A hemodynamic study by means of ultrasonic Doppler flowmetry. 1 35

Takayasu Arteritis is a vasculitis of the giant cell type which affects young people. Complications of this disease can include myocardial infarction, stroke, limb loss, renal failure, and mesenteric ischemia. A case study demonstrates some of the complexities of diagnosis and treatment for this condition. Nursing care should be directed toward the alteration in tissue perfusion, prevention of infection in a patient on immunosuppressive therapy, and a variety of potential problems with coping.
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PMID:Takayasu arteritis. 134 36

Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging play an important role in the diagnosis of cerebrovascular disease, but only in the morphological aspect. To assess changes in cerebral perfusion are necessary functional images techniques such as positron emission tomography (PET) and single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). By these methods we can evaluate the cerebral hemodynamics to better understand the significance of chronic ischemia as a stroke risk factor for patients with carotid stenosis. A case of improvement of cerebral blood flow demonstrated by SPECT after carotid revascularization in a young woman with Takayasu's disease is described.
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PMID:[The SPECT demonstration of an improvement in cerebral perfusion in a female patient with Takayasu's disease following carotid revascularization]. 135 24

From 1980 to 1990, 18 patients underwent trans-sternal repair for occlusive disease of the brachiocephalic artery. The mean age was 57 years (43-72). Most of the patients were women (n = 10). All but two patients had one or more symptoms related to the stenosis of the brachiocephalic trunk: right-sided upper limb ischemia (n = 7), transient ischemic attacks (n = 8), vertebrobasilar insufficiency (n = 6), left sided minor stroke (n = 1). Only two patients were asymptomatic before operation. Angiography revealed a tight stenosis (n = 14) or an occlusion (n = 3); in one patient it concerned an ulcerated non-stenotic plaque of the brachiocephalic artery. Eleven patients had coexistent involvement of other supraaortic vessels. Angiographically, clinically and intraoperatively, there was evidence of Takayasu arteritis in three female patients. All patients had direct repair by trans-sternal approach. Six patients with short lesions had thromboendarterectomy with patch angioplasty of the innominate artery. In eleven cases, aorto-brachiocephalic bypass grafting was performed. In one patient, aortic calcification precluded proximal anastomosis, and a carotid-to-carotid bypass was done. In five patients, simultaneous revascularization of subclavian (n = 3), left common carotid (n = 2) or internal carotid artery (n = 2) completed the procedure. In one patient, concomitant coronary revascularization was done. There was no operative mortality. Postoperative morbidity was limited to pulmonary infection (n = 2), transient neurologic deficit (n = 1) and renal insufficiency (n = 1). All patients had relief of symptoms. Duplex echo scan confirmed patency of all reconstructions at a mean follow-up of 46 months.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Brachiocephalic arterial reconstruction. 155 48

Arteritis is a complex and totally underestimated clinical entity that may present in several ways. Due to the diversity of clinical features and the frequent overlapping of clinical syndromes, many different classifications are available for arteritides, but the simplest classification for the practicing physician is the broad division of arteritis into giant cell arteritis and non-giant cell arteritis. Giant cell arteritis encompasses two distinct clinical entities that are pathologically indistinguishable from each other; but both involve arteritis of median and large-sized arteries characterized by an infiltration of giant cells. These include temporal arteritis and Takayasu's arteritis. The non-giant cell arteritis encompasses a greater variety of uncommon diseases that are often associated with other systemic processes such as systemic lupus erythematosus or periarteritis nodosa, and it generally results in ischemic organ dysfunction that is amenable only to medical treatment. Less commonly, however, non-giant cell arteritis may become manifested as acute arterial occlusion caused by circulating anticoagulants, abdominal apoplexy as intra-abdominal bleeding from rupture of micro aneurysms of artery branches, gastrointestinal bleeding from local necrosis of the gastrointestinal tract, or deep-vein thrombosis secondary to hypercoagulable states. Although temporal arteritis has generated a voluminous body of literature, its precise etiology remains elusive. This study summarizes our experience in 15 cases of temporal arteritis and one case is presented to increase knowledge about this disease entity.
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PMID:Diagnosing giant cell temporal arteritis. 160 68

The authors reviewed 3133 consecutive autopsies performed in the 5 year period from 1986 to 1990 in Queen Mary Hospital (Hong Kong), and 96 cases of aortic aneurysms were found. The incidence was 1 in 33 autopsies. The ratio of male to female was 1.8 to 1, and the disease was most common in the eighth decade of life. The majority of death was due to rupture (70%) or related atherosclerotic diseases (14%), and the majority of aneurysms were not suspected before autopsies (62%). Most of the non-dissecting aneurysms were found in the abdominal aorta, the infra-renal portion. For dissecting aneurysms, Daily's type A was much more common. Hypertension was recognized in a high proportion of cases. Accompanying diseases like syphilis, Takayasu's disease, ischemic heart disease, cerebrovascular accident, diabetes mellitus, peripheral vascular disease, and chronic obstructive airway disease were also noted.
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PMID:Aortic aneurysm at autopsy: a five year survey in Hong Kong. 162 28

We reviewed 28 patients with Takayasu's disease to determine the incidence of stroke and its relationship to the involvement of the thoracic aortic arch and its branches. We describe surgical experiences with 10 of the 28 patients who required 21 vascular surgical procedures for critical thoracic aortic arch arterial stenoses, upper and lower extremity ischemia, and renal artery stenoses. Four of the 28 patients initially had a stroke caused by occlusion of one or more thoracic aortic arch arteries. Six of the 10 patients underwent 7 bypass procedures for critical thoracic arch stenoses. All have remained free of stroke for 5 or more years. Four patients had five anastomotic stenoses or graft occlusions in late follow-up; the development of these stenoses did not relate to disease activity at the time of the operative procedure. All bypass grafts originating from the subclavian axillary artery developed anastomotic stenoses; no anastomotic stenoses occurred in bypass grafts originating from the ascending aorta. In contrast to other reports, no anastomotic false aneurysms occurred. Occlusions of major aortic arch arteries in Takayasu's disease cause stroke. Bypass of critically stenoses aortic arch arteries protects against stroke and is best performed with grafts originating from the ascending aorta. Anastomotic stenoses but not anastomotic aneurysms are common. This study suggests that aggressive surgical treatment can be performed with good results.
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PMID:Experience with surgical treatment of Takayasu's disease. 167 48

A 26-year-old Ethiopian woman with past history of stroke, presented with complaints of weakness, dyspnea on exertion, headache, and orthopnea. She had severe hypertension, asynchronous pulses, radial-femoral lag, cardiomegaly, and left ventricular hypertrophy. Blood studies were normal. Arteriogram in America showed aortic and mitral incompetence, bilateral subclavian occlusion distal to the origin of the vertebral arteries, with occluded hepatic and superior mesenteric arteries. The infrarenal abdominal aorta and common and external iliac arteries were occluded bilaterally. Renal arteries were normal. Takayasu's arteritis, inactive, was diagnosed. She underwent bilateral carotid-subclavian bypass, thromboendarterectomy of the abdominal aorta, and aorto-iliac bypass grafts. 3 years later she is greatly improved. This is the first report of Takayasu's arteritis from Ethiopia. International studies on the disease are summarized.
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PMID:Takayasu's disease in an Ethiopian. 198 1

This study reports on 13 cases of extra-intracranial bypass procedures using saphenous vein grafts. Ten patients had arteriosclerotic occlusive vascular disease, one patient had a giant aneurysm of the internal carotid artery, another 2 females, 18 and 28 years of age, respectively, suffered from Takayasu's disease. Preoperatively all patients had severe neurological symptoms. To keep the venous graft as short as possible, as a first choice the carotid artery, in case of occlusive disease of the latter as a second choice the ipsilateral subclavian artery, or as a third choice the ascending aorta, were used as donor vessels. Perioperatively, one patient sustained an intracerebral/intraventricular hemorrhage and, despite immediate reoperation, died in a vegetative state early postoperatively. Another patient had a minor perioperative cerebral stroke with complete recovery. None of the other patients had any additional neurological deficit perioperatively, and they had complete relief from ischemic attacks postoperatively. There was one early occlusion due to high competitive collateral flow, and one late occlusion due to technical problems. The overall patency rate of surviving patients was 83.3% (follow-up 3 to 23 months).
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PMID:Extra-intracranial bypass procedure with saphenous vein grafts. 242 52

A 34-year-old, single Japanese woman with active Takayasu's disease presented with stenosed bilateral common carotid arteries, subtotal occlusion of the left subclavian artery, and complete occlusion of the ipsilateral proximal vertebral artery, as demonstrated by angiography. A right subclavian-left vertebral bypass using an autologous saphenous vein graft was successfully performed after 36 days of corticosteroid therapy. Subsequently, warfarin was administered in addition to prednisolone. After 32 months of treatment with a gradual reduction from 50 to 3.75 mg of prednisolone daily, angiography revealed a functioning bypass graft and regression of bilateral common carotid stenoses.
Stroke
PMID:Regression of carotid stenoses after corticosteroid therapy in occlusive thromboaortopathy (Takayasu's disease). 288 60


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