Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0162871 (abdominal aortic aneurysm)
8,664 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

O2 and CO2 tensions were measured in the gastrocnemius muscles of patients submitted for reconstructive arterial surgery due to obstructive arteriosclerosis (37) or abdominal aortic aneurysm (5). Four patients without signs of arterial ischaemia served as controls. Measurements were carried out by means of implanted silastic tonometers during breathing of air and 100% O2 and immediately after walking on a treadmill. Peripheral blood pressures in the ankles were recorded with a Doppler apparatus. Baseline tissue gas tensions showed no essential differences between the various groups of patients: intermittent claudication, pain at rest, praegangrene, abdominal aortic aneurysm and controls. In contrast, baseline ankle pressures correlated well with the severity of the disease. During breathing of oxygen, the smallest increases of muscle PO2 were observed in extremities with pain at rest or praegangrene and the highest responses were recorded in controls and aneurysm patients. Muscle PCO2 values showed no alterations during oxygen breathing. In physical exercise, muscle PO2 and PCO2 levels as well as ankle blood pressures remained unchanged in controls and patients with aneurysm but no claudication. However, in all groups with arterial ischaemia, the exercise test resulted in a profound fall of muscle PO2 and ankle blood pressure and an increase of muscle PCO2.
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PMID:Tissue gas tensions in the calf muscles of patients with lower limb arterial ischaemia. 43 76

Cigarette smoking is associated with an increased risk and extent of advanced atherosclerotic vascular disease in peripheral as well as coronary arteries. The likelihood of claudication, amputation, stroke, abdominal aortic aneurysm, and failure of vascular reconstruction is higher in smokers than nonsmokers. Smoking exerts its deleterious effects through many interactive mechanisms. Nicotine and carbon monoxide produce acute cardiovascular consequences, including altered myocardial performance, tachycardia, hypertension, and vasoconstriction. Smoking injures blood vessel walls by damaging endothelial cells, thus increasing permeability to lipids and other blood components. Among metabolic and biochemical changes induced by smoking are elevated plasma, free fatty acids, elevated vasopressin, and a thrombogenic balance of prostacyclin and thromboxane A2. Chronic smoking is associated with a tendency for increased serum cholesterol, reduced high density lipoprotein, and other lipid effects that contribute to atherosclerosis. In addition to rheologic and hematologic changes from increased erythrocytes, leukocytes, and fibrinogen, smokers have alterations in platelet aggregation and survival that produce thrombosis. Considering the ubiquitous repercussions of this menace, vascular surgeons should play an active role in motivating their patients to quit smoking.
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PMID:The peripheral vascular consequences of smoking. 206 25

Nalbuphine hydrochloride, an agonist-antagonist opioid, is reported to reverse the respiratory depression of moderate doses of fentanyl (20 micrograms.kg-1) and still provide good analgesia. We report four patients having abdominal aortic aneurysm repair in which we attempted to reverse the respiratory depression of large doses of fentanyl (50-75 micrograms.kg-1) with nalbuphine (0.3 mg.kg-1, 0.1 mg.kg-1 or 0.05 mg.kg-1). Nalbuphine reversed respiratory depression in all four patients and the respiratory rate increased from 10 to 23 breaths per minute, end-tidal CO2 decreased from 7.0 +/- 0.3 per cent to 5.6 +/- 0.7 per cent, and peak inspiratory pressure after 0.1 seconds increased from 4 +/- 1.4 to 13 +/- 2.6 mmHg. However, hypertension, increased heart rate, and significant increase in analogue pain scores accompanied reversal of respiratory depression. Agitation, nausea, vomiting, and cardiac dysrhythmias also were observed frequently. We do not recommend the use of nalbuphine to facilitate early extubation of the trachea after large doses of fentanyl for abdominal aortic surgery.
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PMID:Side effects of nalbuphine while reversing opioid-induced respiratory depression: report of four cases. 165

In four patients with ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms increased intra-abdominal pressure developed after repair. It was manifested by increased ventilatory pressure, increased central venous pressure, and decreased urinary output associated with massive abdominal distension not due to bleeding. This set of findings constitutes an intra-abdominal compartment syndrome caused by massive interstitial and retroperitoneal swelling. The purpose of this report is to establish criteria for this syndrome and suggest a method of treatment. The syndrome developed within 24 hours; in one patient within 5 hours postoperatively. All four patients received more than 25 liters of fluid resuscitation (electrolyte and blood) during and within 16 hours after operation and had massive abdominal distension. Decompressive laparotomies were performed in the Intensive Care Unit with placement of Marlex (Bard Corp., Billerica, MA) mesh. In two additional patients, at the completion of the aneurysmectomy the abdominal incision was left open with interposition Marlex mesh. Opening the abdominal incision was associated with dramatic improvements in central venous pressure, urinary output, ventilatory pressure, arterial carbon dioxide tension, and oxygenation. The authors conclude that some patients with ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm do not tolerate the closure of the abdominal wall, as manifested by increased ventilatory pressures, decreased oxygenation, and decreased urinary output. Opening the abdominal wound or delayed closure may reverse the oliguria and improve oxygenation. Recognition and treatment of this condition by opening the abdominal wound or delayed closure may affect outcome in some cases.
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PMID:Intra-abdominal compartment syndrome as a complication of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm repair. 272 80

In anesthetized patients, acute decreases in cardiac output (CO) are often reflected as decreases in end-tidal CO2 tension (PETCO2), but the quantitative relationship between the changes in CO and the changes in PETCO2 is uncertain. We hypothesize that a quantitative relationship can be demonstrated if timing of the measurements in each episode of hemodynamic perturbation is standardized. In 24 patients undergoing abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery with constant ventilation, we prospectively performed 33 measurements of CO, PETCO2, and CO2 elimination (VECO2) within 10 min of hemodynamic changes. The percent decrease in PETCO2 directly correlated with the percent decrease in CO (slope = 0.33, r2 = 0.82). Also, the percent decrease in VECO2 correlated with the percent decrease in CO similarly (slope = 0.28, r2 = 0.84). The changes in PETCO2 and VECO2 following hemodynamic perturbation were parallel. This finding suggests that decreases in PETCO2 quantitatively reflect the decreases in CO2 elimination.
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PMID:Do changes in end-tidal PCO2 quantitatively reflect changes in cardiac output? 797 95

We report on endovascular repair of a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. A bifurcated stent graft was inserted under local anesthesia. Aortic clamping is rapidly provided by percutaneous placement of an aortic occlusion balloon catheter. Carbon dioxide can usually replace conventional contrast in patients with renal insufficiency. This minimally invasive procedure may reduce perioperative morbidity and mortality in patients with ruptured aortic aneurysms. The advantages and limitations of this novel technique are discussed.
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PMID:[Ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. Endovascular treatment under local anesthesia]. 1178 51

The abdominal compartment syndrome (ACS) is a clinical entity that develops after sustained and uncontrolled intra-abdominal hypertension. ACS has been demonstrated to affect multiple organ systems including the cardiovascular, respiratory, gastrointestinal, genitourinary, and neurologic systems. To date most descriptions of ACS are found in the trauma literature, but the development of ACS in the general surgical population is being increasingly observed. In this study the development of ACS in a nontrauma surgical population is described and examined. The records of 18 surgical intensive care unit patients with documented ACS were reviewed retrospectively. Data acquired included demographics, urine output in mL/hour, cardiac index in L/m2/min: systemic vascular resistance index in mm Hg/L/m2/min: and pulmonary artery occlusion pressure, peak inspiratory pressure, partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood, pH, partial pressure of carbon dioxide, and intra-abdominal pressure (all in mm Hg). When they were available values were obtained before and after decompression. Data are presented as mean +/- standard deviation and are analyzed by Student's t-test; significance was accepted to correspond to a P value <0.05. Nineteen episodes of ACS were identified in 18 patients. The average age was 69.2 years, and the observed mortality of the group was 61.1 per cent (11 of 18). Diagnoses included abdominal aortic aneurysm (eight), postoperative laparotomy (six), pancreatitis (three), and cerebral aneurysm (one). Of the parameters examined urine output, peak inspiratory pressure, and cardiac index demonstrated a significant change before and after decompression. The average intra-abdominal pressure was 43.4 mm Hg. Five of 18 patients (two with abdominal aortic aneurysm, two with postoperative laparotomy, and one with pancreatitis) were found to have necrotic bowel on decompressive laparotomy. The development of ACS is described in a surgical intensive care unit. ACS is the end result of uncontrolled intra-abdominal hypertension and results in systemic derangements. Surgical decompression of ACS significantly reduces peak inspiratory pressure while increasing urine output and cardiac index. The observed association between ACS and ischemic bowel may result from decreased mucosal perfusion as a direct result of abdominal hypertension. In our patient population ACS resulted in a 61.1 per cent mortality.
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PMID:Abdominal compartment syndrome in the surgical intensive care unit. 1246 11

Laparoscopy-assisted abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair consists of retroperitoneal laparoscopic dissection of the AAA and graft replacement performed via a mini-laparotomy. Two patients with infrarenal AAA underwent successful straight graft replacement using this hybrid approach. The retroperitoneal space was bluntly dissected under carbon dioxide pneumoretroperitoneum and further dissection was performed laparoscopically. This enabled proximal and distal control of the aneurysm, and occlusion of the lumbar arteries and the inferior mesenteric artery with hemoclips. A 7 cm mini-laparotomy was sufficient for the straight graft replacement. Laparoscopy-assisted repair is a less invasive technique for the treatment of AAA and can be regarded as the initial step towards totally endoscopic repair.
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PMID:Laparoscopy-assisted abdominal aortic aneurysm repair: first case reports from Japan. 1252 Jan 62

Photosynthetic organisms require chlorophyll and bacteriochlorophyll to harness light energy and to transform water and carbon dioxide into carbohydrates and oxygen. The biosynthesis of these pigments is initiated by magnesium chelatase, an enzyme composed of BchI, BchD, and BchH proteins, which catalyzes the insertion of Mg(2+) into protoporphyrin IX (Proto) to produce Mg-protoporphyrin IX. BchI and BchD form an ATP-dependent AAA(+) complex that transiently interacts with the Proto-binding BchH subunit, at which point Mg(2+) is chelated. In this study, controlled proteolysis, electron microscopy of negatively stained specimens, and single-particle three-dimensional reconstruction have been used to probe the structure and substrate-binding mechanism of the BchH subunit to a resolution of 25A(.) The apo structure contains three major lobe-shaped domains connected at a single point with additional densities at the tip of two lobes termed the "thumb" and "finger." With the independent reconstruction of a substrate-bound BchH complex (BchH.Proto), we observed a distinct conformational change in the thumb and finger subdomains. Prolonged proteolysis of native apo-BchH produced a stable C-terminal fragment of 45 kDa, and Proto was shown to protect the full-length polypeptide from degradation. Fitting of a truncated BchH polypeptide reconstruction identified the N- and C-terminal domains. Our results show that the N- and C-terminal domains play crucial roles in the substrate-binding mechanism.
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PMID:Substrate-binding model of the chlorophyll biosynthetic magnesium chelatase BchH subunit. 1826 81

Cardiovascular disease accounts for 1 of every 2.9 deaths in the United States, thus the burden of the disease remains high. Given the high mortality and escalating healthcare cost for the disease, it is of urgent need to treat cardiovascular disease effectively. Heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) catalyzes the oxidation of heme to generate carbon monoxide, biliverdin, and iron. These reaction products of HO-1 have potent anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative functions. Although HO-1 is expressed at low levels in most tissues under normal basal conditions, it is highly inducible in response to various pathophysiological stresses. Numerous studies have indicated that HO-1 induction is an adaptive defense mechanism to protect cells and tissues against injury in many disease settings. This review highlights the role of HO-1 in inflammation and several cardiovascular diseases-atherosclerosis, myocardial infarction, graft survival after heart transplantation, and abdominal aortic aneurysm. Given that inflammation and oxidative stress are associated with development of cardiovascular disease and that HO-1 has anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative properties, HO-1 is emerging as a great potential therapeutic target for treating cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Heme oxygenase-1 in inflammation and cardiovascular disease. 2225 94


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