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Query: UMLS:C0042373 (vascular disease)
17,070 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of systemic amyloidosis associated with bronchiectasis is presented. At necropsy, contracted kidneys and centrilobular necrosis of the liver were observed. Systemic blood vessels had heavy deposition of amyloid, and the possibility of visceral ischemia and the development of contracted kidneys due to amyloid vascular disease as a pathogenetic relationship, was discussed against the background of a review of the literature.
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PMID:Amyloid vascular disease and contracted kidneys--report of a case with review of literature. 651 15

Percutaneous phenol sympathectomy has been performed under fluoroscopic or CT guidance in 37 patients with extremely advanced vascular disease of the lower extremities. The technique is simple and well tolerated by the patient with a remarkably low incidence of complications. Of the 37 patients, 14 (38%) showed objective improvement and none of the patients experienced worsening of their ischemia. Results to date suggest that this procedure provides a sympathetic blockade as effectively as surgical sympathectomy in these patients with advanced disease.
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PMID:Percutaneous phenol sympathectomy in advanced vascular disease. 660 78

Improved treatment of associated cardiovascular and hematogenous abnormalities has favorably influenced the incidence and outcome of cerebral vascular disease during the past 25 years. Strong evidence now indicates that attention to the carbohydrate content of the brain also may influence outcome from brain ischemia. With brain lactate levels above approximately 16 mmol per kilogram, ischemia produces tissue infarction; ie, the lesion includes astrocytic and endothelial necrosis as well as neuronal death. We find that equal degrees of ischemia accompanied by lower tissue lactate values produce only selective neuronal damage in predictably vulnerable areas; astrocytes and endothelia are spared and extracellular or progressive postischemic cerebral edema fails to develop. The findings suggest that astrocytes can function to defend brain tissue against the damaging effects of acute anoxia but that during such conditions, they are potentially vulnerable to high tissue lactate levels. Initial clinical evidence suggests that scrupulous attention to blood sugar may reduce the risk of human cerebral infarction after ischemia.
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PMID:What causes infarction in ischemic brain?: The Robert Wartenberg Lecture. 668 61

Although the intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP) saves many lives, complication rates as high as 36% have been reported. Many of the complications require surgical attention. In 794 patients of the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, an IABP was inserted into either the femoral or iliac artery between Nov 1, 1968, and June 30, 1981. Eighty-seven major vascular complications occurred in 70 (8.8%) of them. Of those 70 patients, 95% denied previous symptoms of vascular disease, and 78% had had normal pulses before insertion. The two most common complications were limb ischemia (n = 36) and arterial trauma (n = 20). Other complications included sepsis (n = 14), wound problems (n = 10), and hemorrhage (n = 7). No limbs were lost. Analysis of each group of complications allowed specific conclusions to be drawn concerning prevention, early diagnosis, and the most appropriate treatment.
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PMID:Vascular complications of intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation. 687 May 25

A brief review of the pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, and metabolism of buflomedil-HCl is presented providing a pharmacologic basis for buflomedil therapy of ischemia associated with peripheral vascular disease. Buflomedil is readily absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract and has a plasma half-life of approximately 2-3 hours. The para-desmethyl derivative of buflomedil has been identified as a urinary metabolite. Pharmacologically, buflomedil increases perfusion to impaired vascular beds of the microcirculation, increases arterial perfusion with minimal effects on central hemodynamics, exhibits apparent oxygen "sparing" effects in animal experiments, demonstrates inhibitory effects on platelet aggregation, and, in preliminary experiments, appears to improve deformability of erythrocytes with abnormal fluidity. A nonspecific alpha-receptor blocking activity appears to be involved, at least in part, in these pharmacologic effects. The relative importance of these mechanisms/effects in the treatment of symptoms of vascular disease is unknown.
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PMID:An experimental overview of a new vasoactive drug: buflomedil HCl. 703 90

Anuria resulting from obstruction of the renal arteries to both Kidneys or to a solitary kidney is unusual. The tolerance of the kidney to this ischemia is largely dependent upon the presence of collaterals, stimulated by pre-existing arterial disease. Our experience with six patients with anuria caused by renal artery occlusion supports the role of revascularization in the recovery of significant renal function. Four of these patients had hypertension, impaired renal function, and the existence of collateral circulation to an ischemic kidney, prior to occlusion, while two patients had normal renal function (serum creatinine = 0.5 and 0.9 mg/dl) before occlusion. The intervals of anuria for the two previously normal kidneys were six hours and five days, and 2 to 14 days in the four patients with vascular disease. Isotope scanning suggested renal artery occlusion in two patients, but arteriograms confirmed the diagnosis in all six. A thrombectomy restored blood flow through the two previously normal renal arteries. Grafts from the aorta or celiax axis were used for three patients and the splenic artery was used for the sixth patient. Urine flow began during or soon after operation in all patients. Dialysis was necessary for 30 and 45 days in the two patients with normal kidneys, but in only one of the four patients with previous disease (for ten days). Serum creatinine decreased to <2.0 mg/dl after operation, except in the man with a solitary kidney, who five years later has a creatinine of 3 mg/dl. All four patients with previous arterial disease died from cardiac failure within 1 to 30 months after operation. Therefore, anuria of acute onset should be evaluated by renal scan and arteriogram to detect those patients with proximal renal artery occlusion in preparation for revascularization.
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PMID:Successful surgical treatment of anuria caused by renal artery occlusion. 705 45

Nine patients, seven women and two men, ranging in age from 21 to 86 years, had generalized vascular disease and significant deficits in choroidal perfusion but no retinal vascular changes. Because these perfusion abnormalities can be identified only by fluorescein angiography and the fundus appears to be normal, choroidal ischemia may be more common than has been realized. Infarction of the choroid, retinal pigment epithelium, and outer retina are usually unassociated with retinal detachment; even ischemia severe enough to induce retinal detachment seldom produces significant atrophy.
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PMID:Choroidal ischemia. 713 73

Twelve patients with transient global amnesia (TGA) had prior migraines (six classical and six common). In three patients, classic migrainous phenomena accompanied TGA, and in nine patients severe headache accompanied the amnestic attack. Migrainous vascular dysfunction in the dominant posterior cerebral artery territory could explain TGA: (1) The pathophysiology and transient nature of TGA have led many to postulate posterior circulation vascular disease; migraine is a vascular disorder with a posterior circulation bias. (2) TGA and migraine share common precipitants. (3) Migraine differs from arteriosclerotic ischemia; the repetitive queries of TGA are absent in amnestic stroke. (4) TGA and migraine are usually benign.
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PMID:Transient global amnesia and migraine. 719 42

Twenty-six cases of carcinoid-related mesenteric angiopathy and intestinal infarction (three from our institution and 23 previously reported cases) were reviewed. Twenty patients presented with acute abdominal findings, including peritonitis (13 cases), intestinal obstruction (five cases), and bleeding per rectum (two cases). Fifteen patients (75%) experienced antecedent symptoms of abdominal pain and/or diarrhea, averaging 2.5 years in duration. Twelve patients (46%) exhibited symptoms of carcinoid syndrome. Mesenteric angiography in three cases demonstrated encasement and segmental branch narrowing or occlusion of major mesenteric vessels. Eleven patients underwent resection and primary bowel anastomosis with an early survival rate of 91%. Four additional patients who underwent lesser surgical procedures and five patients who did not undergo operation all died. Elastic vascular sclerosis (EVS) was identified in 19 of 22 cases with available histologic material (86%). These changes were observed in proximity to as well as distant to the primary tumor. In general, the severity of EVS did not correlate with the likelihood of gut ischemia. Although not the sole cause of intestinal gangrene in patients with midgut carcinoids, EVS may contribute significantly to the evolution of these ischemic changes.
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PMID:Mesenteric angiopathy, intestinal gangrene, and midgut carcinoids. 728 Oct 10

Evanescent colitis was first reported in 1971. This clinical entity is manifested by abrupt onset of colicky abdominal pain usually out of proportion to the physical findings, loose stools progressing to hematochezia, and segmental colonic involvement with spontaneous resolution in a matter of days. The diagnosis can be suggested by abdominal flat plate; confirmation depends upon barium-enema examination early in the course of the illness. The clinical presentation is identical to that of colonic ischemia with one remarkable exception: while colonic ischemia has come to be regarded as a disease of the elderly, usually with underlying vascular disease, evanescent colitis occurs in young people who are otherwise free of disease. In this report the authors present nine cases whose course is classic for colonic ischemia except that they are all less than 50 years of age and free of underlying vascular disease. Two of the patients were on oral contraceptive medication. A review of the literature revealed 15 additional cases. Five of these cases were associated with oral contraceptives. Conditions to be excluded in the differential diagnosis of this disease are the specific infectious colitides, idiopathic ulcerative colitis, granulomatous colitis and antibiotic-related pseudomembranous colitis.
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PMID:Evanescent colitis. 729 67


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