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Query: UMLS:C0042373 (
vascular disease
)
17,070
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The axillofemoral bypass graft, an extra-anatomic graft, connects the axillary artery to the femoral artery and is used in the treatment of significant aortoiliac occlusive disease in poor-risk patients. A common indication for axillofemoral bypass is a "hostile abdomen" (postoperative adhesions, neoplasms or radiation). Less frequent indications are aortic mycotic aneurysm, infected aortobifemoral bypass graft, aortoduodenal fistula, inflammatory aneurysm and extensive retroperitoneal fibrosis. Spinal cord injured patients with peripheral arterial disease have two problems: 1) lack of premonitory symptoms (absence of claudication, paresthesias or rest pain) and 2) difficulty preventing pressure sores in the already poorly perfused limb. Indications for arterial reconstructive surgery are more drastic in this set of patients (impending
gangrene
and/or ischemic ulcers). Many spinal cord injured patients have sources of possible contamination (cystostomy and/or colostomy) which make intra-abdominal clean surgery impossible. We present a spinal cord injured patient with a permanent cystostomy and impending
gangrene
of the left foot. He underwent a left axillofemoral bypass graft and had a good postoperative course. We conclude that axillofemoral bypass graft is a good alternative for limb salvage in the spinal cord injured patient, especially when there is a source of possible contamination (colostomy and/or cystostomy) that would interfere with more common bypass grafting. The role of the noninvasive vascular laboratory for early detection of
vascular disease
is emphasized.
...
PMID:Axillofemoral bypass graft in a spinal cord injured patient with impending gangrene. 786 60
Symptomatic occlusive disease of the subclavian arteries, not associated with thoracic outlet syndrome, is an uncommon problem with a paucity of literature related to the appropriateness of bypass graft selection and long-term patency for revascularization. Between 1985 and 1993, 9 patients (3 men and 6 women) underwent 13 carotid brachial bypasses for chronic severe upper-extremity ischemia. Ages ranged from 47 to 75 years (mean 65). Three patients had documented collagen
vascular disease
, 1 had radiation arteritis, and 4 had bilateral disease requiring staged arterial reconstruction. Indications for operation included severe exercise-induced ischemia in two limbs (15%), rest pain in eight (62%), and
gangrene
or infection, or both, in three (23%). Two bypasses were performed for failed prior reconstructions. Inflow originated from the carotid artery (4 proximal and 9 bifurcation), and distal anastomoses were made to a disease-free section of brachial artery. Reinforced 6 mm thin-wall polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) grafts were used in all operations. No operative mortality or major upper-extremity amputation was associated with the procedure, although digital amputations were performed in four instances. Follow-up ranged from 4 to 83 months with a mean of 38 months. The 5-year primary patency rate, by life-table analysis, was 92%. Our results showed excellent long-term patency when prosthetic grafts were used for carotid brachial bypass, because of excellent runoff and the relatively short graft length required.
...
PMID:Carotid brachial bypass for treating proximal upper-extremity arterial occlusive disease. 805 29
Approximately 50% of diabetic hospital admissions in the United Kingdom are for foot problems. These relate primarily to neuropathic and
vascular disease
, often presenting as separate entities. Added to these problems is an impairment of the inflammatory response to intercurrent infection. Arterial lesions are those of arteriosclerosis, occurring at a young age. The lesions are more prominent in the calf vessels and distal profunda artery than across the adductor canal or the aorta-iliac segment. Surprisingly, microangiopathy does not present a major problem in digital vessels. Classification of foot problems is based on foot deformity and the degree of ulceration, infection and
gangrene
. Management is most effectively directed at educating doctors, nurses, patients and their carers, on foot care. Established foot lesions are best managed by a team, including chiropodists, orthotists, physicians and surgeons. This combined approach ensures optimal treatment of the diabetes and associated risk factors, such as hypertension. Patients usually have sufficient autonomic neuropathy to negate any advantages of sympathectomy, but temporary improvement of severe ulceration and pain may be obtained by prostaglandin E2 infusions, allowing time for angiographic assessment. Angioplasty provides the first line of vascular reconstruction. Surgical reconstruction may involve bypass to the level of the shin and ankle. Such revascularisations may reduce foot surgery to local amputation and debridement. Major amputation should not be delayed if it provides the most effective means of rehabilitation and return to community life.
...
PMID:Vascular management of the diabetic foot--a British view. 812 56
Historically sympathectomy has been employed in the treatment of a variety of disparate disorders but in most there is little if any objective clinical evidence of its efficacy. Review of the literature confirms that sympathectomy provides an effective and permanent cure for hyperhidrosis of the hands and feet, and at present palmar hyperhidrosis is the major indication for its regular use. Sympathetic denervation of the hands is currently most easily achieved with minimal morbidity by thoracoscopic ablation of the second thoracic ganglion. Some evidence testifies to the efficacy of sympathectomy in the rare patients with true major causalgia. Clinical experience suggests that Raynaud's phenomenon in the feet can be usefully ameliorated by sympathectomy but in the hands any benefit is short lived and there is no effect on the prognosis of the disease. A weak case can be made for sympathectomy for ischaemic rest pain when arterial surgery is impractical but there is no reliable evidence to support its use in Buerger's disease, intermittent claudication, diabetic
vascular disease
or ischaemic ulceration or
gangrene
.
...
PMID:The role of sympathectomy in current surgical practice. 818 4
Vascular surgeons are being asked to manage
vascular disease
in an increasingly elderly population, and advanced age may be considered a relative contraindication to limb salvage surgery with an amputation seeming the preferred option. We present a review of 50 patients over the age of 80 years, presenting with ischaemic rest pain, ulceration or
gangrene
of the lower extremity. Six patients were treated conservatively, four of whom died during the same admission. Only two patients proved suitable for transluminal angioplasty as the sole curative procedure. Twelve patients (24%) underwent primary amputation with a perioperative mortality of 3/12 (25%). Five patients (10%) had an iliac bypass procedure, and 25 patients (50%) were considered suitable for infrainguinal bypass. Of the latter group 14 had femoropopliteal bypasses, and 11 had femorodistal bypasses with an overall perioperative mortality of 3/25 (12%). Mortality at 6 months was high (33%) and was similar in both the grafted and amputation groups. Patients having reconstruction fared well in terms of independent mobility, use of long-term care, and length of hospital stay. Patients over 80 years of age with critical ischaemia should not be denied the opportunity of vascular reconstruction.
...
PMID:Lower limb ischaemia in the octogenarian: is limb salvage surgery worthwhile? 828 51
We report severe organophosphate poisoning complicated by hypotension and ischemic sequelae in two patients with pre-existing
vascular disease
. Both patients had a low total peripheral resistance and high cardiac output that were significantly reversed by doses of atropine in excess of those required to control other muscarinic symptoms. Cerebral infarcts and
gangrene
requiring a below knee amputation were complications of the poisonings. It is proposed that the ischemic complications are due to paradoxical vasoconstriction by acetylcholine at sites of endothelial injury. One patient, who had taken fenthion, also had a significantly delayed peak and prolonged, 2-3 week, systemic toxicity. We propose that stability of the plasma cholinesterase at 6 to 8 h after temporarily suspending oxime provides a rapid guide to the duration of therapy, especially in patients whose complications make clinical assessment difficult.
...
PMID:Organophosphate poisoning: peripheral vascular resistance--a measure of adequate atropinization. 830 50
We examined factors which may lower the mean amputation age and factors which may serve as predictors of success or failure of amputations in the lower extremities for
vascular disease
in 177 consecutive amputees. Smoking lowered the mean amputation age by 9 years and diabetes by 3 years. Preoperative absence of
gangrene
in the ischemic limb predicted a higher risk of failure compared to patients with
gangrene
. Also preoperative hemoglobin > 120 g/L gave a higher risk of failure. Failure to heal was not correlated with age, sex, diabetes, level of amputation, previous vascular surgery, smoking, preoperative blood pressure, serum creatinine, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, blood glucose or temperature.
...
PMID:Risk factors for failed healing in amputation for vascular disease. A prospective, consecutive study of 177 cases. 832 2
Over a period of 6 years, 9 patients with diabetic nephropathy received renal allografts at Groote Schuur Hospital. This low figure represents 2.8% of the total number of renal transplants done at our institution, and is evidence of concern about the apparent poor results of transplantation in these patients. After 2 years, patients and graft survival rates in diabetics were 87% and 62% respectively.
Vascular disease
was a major problem. Six patients developed limb
gangrene
, and symptomatic coronary and cerebrovascular disease developed in 2 patients. Infections were common and included wound sepsis, cellulitis, candidiasis and urinary tract infections. Diabetes was poorly controlled after transplantation in 5 patients. Proliferative retinopathy was present in 6 patients but remained stable after transplantation. Despite very strict selection criteria, the results of renal transplantation in diabetic patients remain poor. Better treatment strategies are needed to justify acceptance of these patients for transplantation.
...
PMID:Transplantation for diabetic nephropathy at Groote Schuur Hospital. 845 9
The timely detection of peripheral vascular disease (PVD) in spinal cord injury (SCI) patients is difficult because the usual symptoms of claudication and rest pain are absent. In fact, the initial manifestation of PVD in SCI patients is often advanced
gangrene
, so that healing, primarily or following major amputation, is either difficult and prolonged or impossible. In addition, sacral and ischial pressure sores common among SCI patients may be exacerbated and reconstruction made more difficult by PVD. Five SCI patients presented with lower extremity
gangrene
as the initial recognized manifestation of PVD at our institution between January 1992 and January 1994. All 5 patients had risk factors for PVD. Four out of ten limbs in these patients required amputation, either above the knee or below the knee. Three patients required concurrent vascular reconstruction of the aortoiliac segments, including an aortobiprofunda femoral bypass, an iliac embolectomy with femoral-femoral bypass, and iliac angioplasty. Three patients had ischial and/or sacral pressure sores that had recurred following multiple musculocutaneous flap reconstructions before
vascular disease
was recognized. The timely diagnosis of PVD involving the iliac segment in the SCI patient is sometimes overlooked and is often necessary to optimize the treatment of both lower extremity ulcers and sacral/ ischial pressure sores common among these patients.
...
PMID:Peripheral vascular disease in spinal cord injury patients: a difficult diagnosis. 893 2
Peripheral vascular disease (PVD) is a widespread condition, the most common manifestation being a gradual occlusion of the arteries of the legs due to atheroma, which results in symptoms of ischaemia such as intermittent claudication or rest pain, ulceration and
gangrene
. Treatment of the condition is palliative and reconstructive, and aims to salvage the limb, restore mobility and function, and relieve pain. It usually involves attempts to revascularize the affected limb, either by surgical procedures such as bypass grafting, or by percutaneous transluminal angioplasty or thrombolysis. In some cases, it may be necessary to amputate the limb or part of it. Despite the chronicity of PVD, little is known about the ways in which individuals with
vascular disease
cope with their condition and about the effect it has on their life. In this context the aims of this study were to explore the lived experience of peripheral vascular disease, in order to identify key themes and categories, using a phenomenological grounded theory approach. A sample of nine individuals was drawn from patients who had had vascular bypass surgery within the past 18 months. Data were collected using audiotaped one-to-one interviews and the researcher's field notes, and were validated with a group of experienced vascular nurses. Transcripts were analysed using open and axial coding techniques, and major and minor categories were identified and related to other data collected. It appeared that vascular patients experienced powerlessness in relation to the direct effects of their condition and in relation to its treatment modalities. The findings suggested that the 'acute' style of management of PVD often led to unrealistic expectations on the patient's part, which gave rise to the experience of powerlessness. The implications of these findings for the management of patients with PVD are discussed.
...
PMID:Pain and powerlessness: the experience of living with peripheral vascular disease. 957 3
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