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

Two thrombolytic agents are mainly used in patients: streptokinase (SK) and urokinase (UK). UK from human origin is an endopeptidase which is able to convert plasminogen into plasmin. UK is only secreted by the kidney and is only found in urine which is presently the only source of extraction. Studies in man have shown that UK produces a highly reproducible state of enhanced plasma thrombolytic activity with a high fibrinolysis/fibrnogenolysis ratio and a lack of toxicity and antigenicity. The half life in Animal is short as well as the duration of fibrinolytic activity in Man. In clinical experience, positive results have been reported in pulminary embolism while the issues in myocardial infarction are controversial. Suggestive results have been registered in deep vein thrombosis, in ophthalmologic field and in desobstruction of arterio-venious shunts. No evident benefit has been noted in cerebral vascular disease. Up to now, UK has been very well tolerated.
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PMID:[Urokinase. Biochemical therapeutical and therapeutical data (author's transl)]. 6 58

Adhesivity and aggregability of blood platelets may reflect normal and diseased states. A quantitative assessment of such reactivity should thus provide further insight into disease mechanism. The well defined conditions of stagnation point flow using platelet-rich-plasma (PRP) as fluid permit quantitative treatment of the formation of platelet microthrombi on the stagnation plate. By measuring the growth kinetics (photometry) and corresponding morphology (light- and electron microscopy) of the microthrombus, platelet adhesion as well as aggregation could be analyzed separately by means of a quantitative procedure. Parameters are evaluated for PRP samples obtained from patients exhibiting deep venous thrombosis, arterial angiopathy or myocardial infarction, respectively. The results obtained demonstrate the usefulness of the proposed method for quantifying platelet reactivity as reflected by type and degree of flow induced platelet deposition. This, in turn, provides a basis for correlating the in vitro findings with the disease state.
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PMID:A method for quantitative determination of flow induced human platelet adhesion and aggregation. 141 19

Homocystinuria is a rare inherited metabolic disease transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait. Arterial and venous thromboembolic events are frequent and life-threatening complications in homocystinuric patients. It has been suggested that mild homocysteinemia could be a risk factor for vascular disease. We measured total plasma L-homocysteine concentrations by radioisotopic assay in 32 subjects with arterial (n = 15) or venous (n = 17) thrombosis. Twelve subjects exceeded the upper normal limit (2.70 SD above the mean), i.e. 14.1 mumol/l. Seven had arterial thrombotic disease and five had deep vein thrombosis. In 18 subjects thrombosis developed in the absence of any of the hitherto recognized risk factors; 6 of these subjects had mild homocysteinemia. Thus, homocysteine metabolism must be investigated in patients with thromboembolism. An increase of homocysteinemia could be a risk factor for thromboembolic events, and the possible benefit of vitamin therapy should be discussed.
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PMID:[Plasma homocysteine assay in the exploration of thrombosis in young subjects]. 182 14

The development and widespread availability of noninvasive testing have revolutionized the approach to the diagnosis of vascular disease. Noninvasive tests are safe, can be performed on an outpatient basis, and are readily repeatable. These tests require skill and experience to perform with acceptable accuracy. In experienced hands, they compare favorably with standard angiography, and, after the initial cost, are less expensive. B-mode ultrasonography provides a gray scale image of the blood vessels. Doppler probes permit analysis of flow patterns and velocity. Color flow imaging, the latest advance, combines high-resolution B-mode and Doppler imaging systems using a computer to provide simultaneous anatomic and physiologic information. This method is a faster and more accurate means of detecting and evaluating the extent of vascular disease. Noninvasive testing is useful in assessing the carotid arteries before vascular or other high-risk operation. Stratification of the risk of future stroke is possible with these tests. This stratification assists in the selection of candidates for carotid surgery among patients with symptomatic carotid disease or asymptomatic bruits in the neck. The hemodynamic significance of obstructive disease in the peripheral arteries can be evaluated and followed by serial noninvasive testing. Noninvasive testing is also of proven value in the surveillance of patients with arterial bypass grafts and in diagnosing local vascular complications of arterial catheterization. Acute and recurrent deep venous thrombosis can be diagnosed accurately by noninvasive testing, greatly reducing the need for venography. In addition, noninvasive testing is particularly suited for screening patients at high risk for developing deep venous thrombosis.
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PMID:Use of noninvasive vascular laboratory in diagnosis of venous and arterial disease. 191 25

Duplex Doppler ultrasound has come to play a central role in the diagnosis of a broad spectrum of vascular diseases such as carotid artery occlusive disease and deep vein thrombosis. The role of duplex Doppler in the evaluation of intra-abdominal vascular disease remains unclear. This article summarizes the current status of duplex scanning in the investigation of the mesenteric arteries, the renal arteries, and the portal venous system. The examination is technically demanding, operator-dependent, time-consuming, and frequently unsatisfactory due to bowel gas, obesity, complex anatomy, or postoperative alterations in the normal anatomic patterns. Its advantages reside primarily in the absence of toxicity and in the generation of physiologic as well as anatomic information. In centers with the proper instrumentation and a skilled technician, duplex examination can be useful in the diagnosis and management of abdominal vascular disease and avoids the inherent dangers of contrast angiography.
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PMID:Current status of duplex Doppler ultrasound in the examination of the abdominal vasculature. 225 21

This study compares the safety and effectiveness of two methods for the prophylaxis of post-operative thromboembolism in neurosurgical patients: A: low-dose heparin (5,000 IU X 2 s.c.) started preoperatively and continued daily for one week post-operatively, and B: per-operative electrical calf muscle stimulation with groups of impulses plus post-operative dextran infusions every other day for one week. Neurosurgical patients aged 40 years or more with normal laboratory coagulation values and operated under general anaesthesia were included. The 125:I-fibrinogen uptake test (FUT) was used for screening and phlebography for verification of deep venous thrombosis (DVT). 122 patients entered the study and 104 completed the prophylactic protocol, 58 in group A and 46 in group B. The two groups were comparable according to pre-operative data and distribution of diagnoses. 89 patients completed screening for post-operative DVT. We found an overall incidence of 5/49 (10 percent) DVT in group A and 5/40 (13 percent) in group B, compared to a frequency of 32-50 percent for controls without prophylaxis reported in the literature, In spite of prophylaxis our patients with intracranial neoplasms and intracranial vascular disease showed a relatively higher incidence of DVT, 4/23 (17 percent) and 4/14 (29 percent) respectively, compared to patients with spinal diagnoses 2/25 (8 percent). In combination with cranial diagnoses paretic lower limbs meant an apparent risk factor, 4/7 (57 percent). However, paretic limbs appearing in cases with spinal disorders did not predetermine an unsuccessful prophylaxis, 2/14 (14 percent). Blood loss, transfusion requirements and post-operative complications did not differ significantly between the two prophylactic groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Post-operative thromboembolism in neurosurgery. A study on the prophylactic effect of calf muscle stimulation plus dextran compared to low-dose heparin. 242 79

In this review of cardiovascular effects of oral contraceptives (OCs), the risks are identified from 2 prospective cohort studies as 19/10,000 woman years for the risk of thrombosis or thromboembolism. 11 of 19 were superficial thrombosis and 8 were deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism. For women with no risk factors, the risk was 2.0 for superficial thrombosis and 4.0 for deep vein thrombosis. Myocardial infarction (MI) risk is estimated at 7/100,000 current users/year for women 30-39 years and 67/100,000/year for women 40-44 years based on combined British and American studies. 37/100,000/year is the estimated risk for women 30-44 years for either thrombotic or hemorrhagic stroke. 50% of the MIs and 10% of the strokes were fatal. The total annual risk of death from any circulatory disease was estimated at 22-24 deaths/100,000 women years based on 2 British cohort studies. Other predisposing factors also contribute to cardiovascular disease, and separating out the effects has been controversial. In 1985, a study refuted that OCs were responsible for any effect on cardiovascular risk, because of flawed case control studies. One such study is cited which shows that only 16.7% of OC users were confirmed by Doppler ultrasound for deep vein thrombosis compared with 30.7% for nonusers. The general trend in the UK is one of reduced death rates from circulatory disease for women in spite of widespread contraceptive use. This relationship between OC use and cardiovascular disease was evidenced in another study of vital statistics from 21 countries. The pathological mechanisms for the association between OC use and vascular disease are discussed for blood clotting with the importance of predisposing factors highlighted, MI and lipid metabolism and other risk factors, stroke, and breakthrough bleeding. The risk is very low for vascular disease with available low- dose preparations. Risk is further reduced with careful screening of high risk women. The side effects of low-dose pills such as breakthrough bleeding can be treated with cautious use of alternative high-dose formulations and patient education. Low-dose OCs with 30-35 mg of estrogen combined with a low-dose and low androgenic progestin are recommended.
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PMID:Cardiovascular effects of oral contraceptives: a review. 257 58

This report reviews the present status of cardiovascular surgery in West Africa and highlights some of the constraints of development in this field.Rheumatic heart disease is still endemic in the tropics, where it constitutes about 20 percent of all cases of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in Nigeria. Endomyocardial fibrosis is a disease of unknown etiology accounting for 10 to 20 percent of cases. Purulent pericarditis is a common complication of pyomyositis and osteomyelitis found in 5 percent of patients. Chronic constrictive pericarditis is a sequela of infective pericarditis found in 5 percent of all cases of CVD. Calcification is found in 30 percent of cases and pericardiectomy can be performed successfully without cardiopulmonary bypass. Infective endocarditis is equally rare, occurring in 2.5 percent of cases; it is a common source of septic emboli to coronary artery and a very difficult disease to treat in the West African environment.Ischemic heart disease is relatively uncommon, accounting for less than 0.5 percent of patients. The rarity of the disease in black Africans has been attributed to dietary habits and environment rather than to racial and psychosocial factors. Congenital heart disease accounts for 5 percent of all cases of CVD in this review. Ventricular septal defect and patent ductus arteriosus are the most common acyanotic defects, while tetralogy of Fallot and transposition of the great arteries are the most common cyanotic defects.Vascular diseases are uncommon in this series, with traumatic injuries accounting for most of the cases. Abdominal aortic aneurysms, peripheral occlusive vascular disease, and atherosclerotic aortic aneurysms are quite rare. This review further confirms the rarity of deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism in Africans.
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PMID:The status of cardiovascular surgery in West Africa. 331 74

Arterial embolism is usually caused by cardiac disease, and atherosclerotic coronary vascular disease is the primary precursor. Other cardiac states, as well as several uncommon causes, are part of the etiologic spectrum. The earliest signs are pain, paresthesias, pallor, and pulselessness. Severe ischemia is indicated by paralysis, a late feature. Arterial embolism and acute thrombosis can be difficult to distinguish, and deep venous thrombosis may also be suspected in the differential diagnosis. To restore arterial flow, anticoagulation treatment with heparin (Lipo-Hepin, Liquaemin) is given and surgical embolectomy is performed. Heparin infusion is continued until the patient is ambulatory, and then warfarin sodium (Coumadin, Panwarfin) is given over the long term. Fibrinolysis has also been used to treat acute arterial occlusion. Complications of embolism must be carefully guarded against, and additional procedures are sometimes necessary.
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PMID:Management of arterial emboli. Gleanings from 20 years of experience. 357 97

The combined estrogen/progestogen oral contraceptive (OC) is the most common form of contraception that is used by sexually active women who are between the ages of 15-35 years. Serious side-effects are infrequent, and the failure rate is exceedingly low. The major side-effects of OC administration are seen in 4 distinct areas: subsequent fertility; the cardiovascular system; metabolic effects; and malignancy. Approximately 1% of women experience persistent amenorrhea after they cease to take OCs, but considerable doubt exists as to whether this is purely an effect of OC or is due to other factors such as weight change, excessive exercise, or psychological disturbances. The major cardiovascular problems are those of hormone-induced hypertension, deep vein thrombosis, coronary artery disease, and stroke. It is not possible to predict which patients will develop hypertension while taking OCs, and all patients should have their blood pressure checked within 6 months of starting OC use and then approximately once a year. There is little doubt that the increased risk of deep vein thrombosis that was observed in women using OCs in the 1960s was related to the high estrogen content of the early OCs. As the dose of estrogen has been reduced progressively, the incidence of deep vein thrombosis has decliined. It is now a rare occurrence in clinical practice. The association between coronary artery disease and cerebrovascular disease and OCs has been known for the last 5-6 years. It is evident that the risk is increased in women who smoke, especially when they are over age 35. The main predictor of the risk of coronary artery disease and stroke appears to be a reduction of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels. In the combined OC preparations, the action of 1 steroid is variably balanced by the other, and the overall effect on HDL cholesterol levels is often minimal. The major metabolic side-effects concern the changes in gluclose tolerance and an apparently increased risk of gall bladder disease. Low-dose OCS have virtually no effect on glucose status and, providing that diabetic patients are supervised adequately and have no evidence of vascular disease, low-dose OC preparations can be used safely. The question of whether the steroidal components of OCs may have initiating or promoting effects in relation to the development of cancer continues to be debated. The major concern recently is in relation to breast and cervical malignancies.
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PMID:Beneficial and adverse side-effects of hormonal contraception. 394 15


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