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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study presents a technique to correct kinking or coiling of the internal carotid artery using patch angioplasty following endarterectomy, resection, and anastomoses of the vessel. Since 1984, 579 carotid endarterectomies have been performed with 19 patients (3.3%) having arteriosclerotic carotid bulb and internal carotid artery disease associated with a carotid kink or coil. These have been treated successfully using the technique of resection and patch angioplasty. The indications for surgery included seven patients with transient ischemic attacks (36.8%); seven patients who had suffered a
cerebrovascular accident
(36.8%); amaurosis fugax in two patients (10.5%); and one patient each with
Hollenhorst plaque
(5.3%), central retinal artery occlusion (5.3%), and an asymptomatic critical stenosis (5.3%). All patients had successful repair of the vessel using saphenous vein or Dacron patch angioplasty. There were no perioperative strokes or deaths. Follow-up ranged from four months to 58 months (mean 25 months). All vessels are patent with no evidence of stenosis. One patient had an ipsilateral
cerebrovascular accident
but had no evidence of recurrent carotid disease. Surgical correction of the carotid kink or coil can present a difficult surgical problem, and resection, fixation, or transposition can be complicated. The technique of endarterectomy, resection of the redundant vessel with anastomosis of the back wall, and patch angioplasty has been used effectively and safely in this series of patients.
...
PMID:A technique for correction of carotid kinks and coils following endarterectomy. 182 6
The ocular examinations and hospital records of 64 patients with Hollenhorst plaques were retrospectively reviewed to document any associated visual defects and to determine if carotid endarterectomy prevented the occurrence of new plaques or symptoms. One hundred nine Hollenhorst plaques were seen in 75 eyes; 18 had multiple plaques simultaneously. Visual field defects were noted in 14 eyes, four of which corresponded to the location of Hollenhorst plaques. Twenty-eight carotid endarterectomies were performed ipsilateral to a
Hollenhorst plaque
: 24 patients had no symptoms; four patients developed new ipsilateral asymptomatic Hollenhorst plaques at 1 to 50 months after operation. Two late strokes occurred, one of which was ipsilateral to a new
Hollenhorst plaque
, during a mean follow-up of 50 months (range 8 to 102 months). Thirty-seven eyes with asymptomatic Hollenhorst plaques did not undergo ipsilateral operation. Two eyes developed new Hollenhorst plaques during a mean follow-up of 23 months (range 1 to 132 months). Eight eyes in patients with no symptoms had multiple Hollenhorst plaques, one of which was associated with a subsequent
stroke
. Of the 29 eyes with a single
Hollenhorst plaque
, one subsequently experienced an ipsilateral
stroke
, and another had a transient ischemic attack (1 and 3 years later, respectively). Visual field defects infrequently corresponded to locations of Hollenhorst plaques. The cerebral hemisphere ipsilateral to asymptomatic plaques had a slightly increased risk of subsequent transient ischemic attack or
stroke
compared to the contralateral side without Hollenhorst plaques. The number of simultaneous Hollenhorst plaques in the retinal circulation did not predict clinical outcome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hollenhorst plaques: retinal manifestations and the role of carotid endarterectomy. 233 33