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Query: UMLS:C0042373 (
vascular disease
)
17,070
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The principal objective of our experiments was to obtain information on the initial processes involved in the pathogenesis of obliterating arteriopathies or
arteriosclerosis
. We thereby concentrate on the formal pathogenesis, which we intend to elucidate by discussing the basic data and with preliminary radioimmunoassay examinations using
angiopathy
-models on the mini-pig. Very early in artherogenesis, an adhesion of thrombocytes in viscous metamorphose to the apparently intact arterial walls is always detectable and is followed by the formation of an intima-plaque.
...
PMID:[Artherogenesis. Experimental investigations on the pathogenesis of obliterating arteriopathies in mini-pigs (author's transl)]. 11 8
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.
...
PMID:[Disorders of the blood circulation in the gastrointestinal tract]. 32 26
The pathogenetic notion of
arteriosclerosis
and the clinical syndrome of the arterial obstructive diseases are not identical, but interfere in different points which are discussed in detail. Arteriosclerotic changes must be delimitated from pure age-conditioned changes of the arteries, since the two are sufficiently defined and deviate from each other in important characteristics. Only the so-called fibrous thickening of the intima is still doubtful concerning its classification. For the understanding of the severe obliterating
arteriosclerosis
the knowledge of the early stages is necessary. The disease begins with focal proliferations of smooth muscle cells and a disturbance of permeability of the arterial endothelium. The two cell forms are discussed more in detail and estimated in its significance for the
vascular disease
. Particularly the lesion of the endothelium nowadays plays an increasing role as causative factor for the development of an
arteriosclerosis
, since already simple increases of permeability via and edema of the intima may lead to an accumulation of lipoproteins in the vascular wall, also when the lipid level in blood is not increased. At present in clinical practice often the question of the delimitation of an obliterating
arteriosclerosis
from other arteriopathies leading to a vascular obstruction arises. Since a part of these diseases is to be diagnosed by biopsies of the arteries, the histological differential diagnosis of the most important inflammatory arterial diseases is discussed.
...
PMID:[New aspects in the pathologic anatomy of arteriosclerosis obliterans]. 47 29
In a study of 1000 consecutive coronary arteriograms, 12 patients (all men) had coronary artery ectasia. Ectasia was found most frequently in the circumflex or right coronary artery. Only 1 patient had ectasia in the left anterior descending coronary artery. In 11 patients, ectasia of one artery was associated with severe stenosis or occlusion of other vessels, typical of
arteriosclerosis
. Histology from an ectatic segment in one of this group showed changes of severe
arteriosclerosis
with extensive intimal fibrosis and destruction of the media. One patient had a mixed collagen
vascular disease
. Measurement of coronary sinus flow in 2 patients with coronary artery ectasia showed flows in the range of patients with non-ectatic coronary artery disease. At cardiac surgery flows down the graft to ectatic arteries were in the same range as in grafts to non-ectatic vessels. Patients with coronary artery ectasia should be anticoagulated.
...
PMID:Coronary artery ectasia--a variant of occlusive coronary arteriosclerosis. 64 6
Thirty-one growth-hormone-deficient dwarfs were re-examined after a period of 10 to 12 years. These subjects had initially shown glucose intolerance, insulinopenia and hyperlipidemia comparable to those of diabetic patients matched for age and sex, but vascular complications were not present in dwarfs. After 10 years glucose tolerance became progessively more abnormal in dwarfs than could be accounted for by expected deterioration with age, and hyperglycemia after mixed meals remained greater than in control subjects. Serum lipid and serum lipoprotein concentrations were abnormal in over one third of the dwarfs. Despite the metabolic similarity to the diabetic patients, clinical complications of diabetes were absent in dwarfs: retinopathy did not occur, and the prevalence of hypertension and
arteriosclerosis
was considerably lower in dwarfs than in the diabetic subjects in both study periods. The follow-up data support the hypothesis that growth hormone has at least a supportive role in the pathogenesis of
vascular disease
in the diabetic state.
...
PMID:A follow-up study of vascular disease in growth-hormone-deficient dwarfs with diabetes. 65 62
In a large autopsy series of elderly individuals, organic dementia was attributed to (pre-) senile atrophy in 52.8%, to cerebrovascular disease in 22.5%, while 13.6% were of mixed senile and vascular origin, and 1.3% showed communicating hydrocephalus with meningopathies or were of undetermined origin. A survey is given of the morphological criteria of dementia resulting from disorders of cerebral blood supply and CSF circulation. The anatomic basis of vascular dementias are: atherosclerotic encephalopathy with lacunar state or multiple infarcts; granular cortical atrophy resulting from local microcirculation disorders; hypertensive cerebrovascular disease with the common "mixed" cortico-subcortical type, and the rare Binswanger's subcortical type. Atypical cerebral hemorrhage in old individuals rather results from congophilic (amyloid)
angiopathy
than from hypertensive
arteriosclerosis
. Multiple infarct dementia may also result from thrombotic microangiopathy, thromboembolic disease or cerebral vasculitides. The anatomical features of dementia associated with communicating "normal-pressure" hydrocephalus (NPH) are meningopathy at the basis or on the convexity, and fibrosis of the choroid plexus and/or arachnoid villi of post-inflammatory or undetermined origin, and other non-specific changes (periventricular gliosis). This condition is also associated with hypertensive cerebrovascular disease and Alzheimer's disease. Cerebral biopsies in NPH as well as in other types of hydrocephalus show enlarged extracellular spaces with otherwise normal neuropil probably resulting from increased transcapillary filtration. In some cases of "idiopathic" NPH no causative anatomical changes are found. The relationship between cerebral tissue changes, abnormal blood and CSF dynamics in these conditions remains to be clarified.
...
PMID:Neuropathological aspects of dementias resulting from abnormal blood and cerebrospinal fluid dynamics. 96 75
The isolated left lower lobes of 15 dogs' lungs were perfused by means of a roller pump with blood at hematocrit values ranging from 31 to 80 per cent. Pressure-flow curves were constructed at blood flow rates from one half to three times the normal flow for the left lower lobe at each hematocrit level. The perfusion pressure was normalized with reference to the normal hematocrit(38 to 48 per cent) and normal blood flow for the left lower lobe (20 ml. per kilogram per minute). From these normalized pressure-flow curves, normalized resistance-flow curves were constructed at different mean hematocrit levels. Regression lines were drawn relating normalized pulmonary vascular resistance to hematocrit at different rates of pulmonary blood flow which might be found in patients with congenital heart disease. It was found that pulmonary vascular resistance rose in an exponential fashion as the hematocrit was increased, and that the blood viscosity determined both the shape of the resistance-flow curve and magnitude of the increase in resistance to pulmonary blood flow, especially when the pulmonary blood flow was less than normal and the hematocrit was greater than 54 per cent. The family of regression lines relating pulmonary vascular resistance to hematocrit at different flow rates may be used clinically in patients with congenital heart disease and polycythemia to determine if an elevated pulmonary vascular resistance is due to increased blood viscosity or obstructive pulmonary
vascular disease
. It is concluded that an increased blood viscosity due to polycythemia significantly alters the pulmonary hemodynamics of patients with congenital heart disease with either increased or decreased pulmonary blood flow. Increased blood viscosity may play an important part in the early initiation and development of pulmonary
arteriosclerosis
in patients with transposition of the great arteries.
...
PMID:The effects of increased blood viscosity on pulmonary vascular resistance. 96 77
Twelve patients who had no evidence of arteriosclerotic cerebral
vascular disease
, lacked hypertension or coagulation defect, and had not been receiving contraceptive therapy had recurrent transient cerebral ischemic attacks (TIAs) and partial nonprogressive strokes. All had prolapsing mitral valve proved by angiocardiography. The average age was 38 years, compared with 62 years in a larger series of patients with TIA associated with
arteriosclerosis
. We propose that the ischemic events are related to emboli emanating from the abnormal mitral valve with or without an associated paroxysmal cardiac arrhythmia.
...
PMID:Cerebral ischemic events associated with prolapsing mitral valve. 98 56
The frequency and distribution of risk factors of
arteriosclerosis
were determined in 405 patients with implanted cardiac pacemakers and compared with the corresponding results of patients with cardiac infarction. The most frequent risk factors were smoking (43,5%), hypertension (35,2%), and diabetes (34,3%) in males, hypertension (52,3%) and diabetes (49,7%) in females. The frequency of cardiac infarction was in average 19,5%. In the infarction group diabetes was lower in both sexes (23,5% and 35,8%), respectively), hyperlipoproteinemia and smoking were more frequent. From the different distribution of risk factors it is suggested, that coronary
arteriosclerosis
is not the most important etiologic factor in the development of bradycardic dysrhythmias. The higher percentage of diabetes in the pacemaker group could point to metabolic disturbances or specific diabetic
vascular disease
as harmful factors to the conduction system.
...
PMID:[Risk factors of arteriosclerosis in patients with severe bradycardia arrhythmias]. 99 7
Macroscopic and light microscopic features of regional ischemic infarcts of retina in autopsy eyes are described. Lesions were found throughout life span, most patients having significant primary or secondary
vascular disease
(younger had systemic hypertension, rheumatic heart disease, vasculitis or sickle hemoglobinopathy; most older patients had
arteriosclerosis
). Diabetes mellitus and infarction of other organs (including brain) also were common. Topographically almost all lesions were found in posterior fundus; most were temporal and involved anatomical macula. Microscopically there was destruction of inner retinal layers with preservation of outermost cells of inner nuclear layer; occasionally ganglion cell layer was relatively spared.
...
PMID:Regional ischemic infarcts of the retina. 108 10
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