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Query: UMLS:C0920646 (
renal ischemia
)
2,515
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Spontaneous renal artery dissection is an uncommon cause of renovascular hypertension, usually associated with fibromuscular
dysplasia
. Among reported nonautopsy cases (N = 80), arterial reconstruction has seldom been attempted (N = 21) and the outcome has frequently been poor (48% clinical failure rate). This is attributed in part to the frequent involvement of renal artery branches by the dissection. Furthermore, the report of spontaneous reversion to normotension among patients treated medically has also clouded the role of surgery in this disease. Since progress in the technique of renal artery repair now allows successful treatment of anatomically complex lesions, we reviewed our experience with arterial reconstruction in the management of spontaneous renal artery dissection to determine the frequency of and factors correlating with cure after operative repair. Ten patients (eight men, two women; mean age, 39.3 +/- 5.9 years) were admitted with severe hypertension (10/10), often associated with neurologic symptoms, hematuria, or flank pain (8/10). Serum creatinine was elevated in only two patients. Angiography demonstrated changes consistent with fibromuscular
dysplasia
in 7 of 10 patients and evidence of dissection in 6 of 10. Bilateral disease was present in three patients. Only five patients had a single renal artery on the involved side. The dissection extended into the primary branches in 8 of 10 patients and involved both renal arteries in four of the five patients with two arteries. Histologic study confirmed fibromuscular
dysplasia
in six and intramural dissection in all operative specimens. Five patients underwent revascularization (in one case requiring the ex vivo technique), with use of hypogastric artery as a conduit in four of five or resection and primary reanastomosis in one of five. Three patients became normotensive, and two returned to their previous level of blood pressure control. Follow-up averaged 14.5 years. Two patients underwent nephrectomy after exploration demonstrated nonreconstructible vessels, and two underwent nephrectomy when intraoperative assessment of the kidney showed that revascularization had failed to adequately reverse extensive
renal ischemia
. After a mean follow-up of 14.6 years these patients remain normotensive, although two require antihypertensive medications. One patient was treated medically and is currently hypertensive off all medications. Nine of 10 patients have maintained a normal serum creatinine during follow-up. We conclude that renal revascularization is frequently successful in spontaneous renal artery dissection (five of seven, 71.4%) and results in sustained relief of hypertension with maximal conservation of renal tissue. This is important because of the young age at onset and the not infrequent occurrence of bilateral fibromuscular
dysplasia
, and even of dissection.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:The role of arterial reconstruction in spontaneous renal artery dissection. 192 Jun 44
Renovascular hypertension is caused by two distinct conditions with different causes, fibromuscular
dysplasia
and atheroma. Diagnosis of the former is both simpler and more rewarding, whereas atheromatous lesions of the renal artery may be secondary to essential hypertension. It is therefore important to establish existence of functional
renal ischemia
as well as an anatomical lesion. Universal screening of all hypertensive patients is not recommended because of the relatively low prevalence of the disease and insufficient accuracy of available screening tests. When renovascular hypertension is clinically suspected, an oral captopril test is the most reliable office screening test. After this, digital subtraction angiography with renal vein renins or captopril renography are appropriate steps. However, the latter procedure, while promising, requires further evaluation. Duplex scanning of the renal arteries also comes into this category. Arteriography is done last, so that if
renal ischemia
is indicated, angioplasty can be attempted at the same time as arteriography.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and evaluation of renovascular hypertension. Indications for therapy. 199 96
Renovascular hypertension is one of the more common causes of secondary hypertension. The true prevalence of this condition is not known, because only a selected few with hypertension are considered for thorough diagnostic work-up. The higher incidence figures come from centers with a special interest in this disease. The ability of a clinician to detect renovascular hypertension has improved substantially, thanks to the advances in radiology. The predominant mechanism of blood pressure elevation from
renal ischemia
is activation of the renin-angiotensin system. Clinically, the pathological lesions that cause renal artery stenosis are atherosclerosis and fibromuscular
dysplasia
; the former is typically seen in older men, and the latter is typically found in young women. Suspicion of the presence of renovascular disease should prompt the physician to obtain appropriate screening and confirmatory tests. Once diagnosed, the management of patients with renovascular hypertension requires a carefully planned multidisciplinary approach to offer the patient a best possible therapeutic option, with surgical revascularization or balloon angioplasty, or chronic medical therapy. However, these options are not mutually exclusive. The best long-term results are obtained with surgical therapy. Although balloon angioplasty is being increasingly used perhaps as the preferred initial therapeutic procedure for many patients with renal artery stenosis, long-term results comparable with surgery are not yet available. The ideal rational therapy for patients with renal artery stenosis is reperfusion of the ischemic kidney either by surgical correction or by balloon dilation. The aim is not only to improve the blood pressure control, but also to prevent and at times to reverse renal failure. Although effective antihypertensive drugs have become available, the role of medical management of renovascular hypertension is shrinking and should be limited to patients who have contraindications to or unwilling to undergo corrective procedures to relieve
renal ischemia
.
...
PMID:Renovascular hypertension. 777 25
Typical causes of renovascular hypertension include intramural atherosclerotic lesions of the main renal arteries or their branches and fibromuscular
dysplasia
of the renal arterial wall with luminal narrowing. We report a patient with new-onset, accelerated hypertension (blood pressure 220/140 mm Hg, status epilepticus, retinal hemorrhages) secondary to a dissection of the anterior division of the right renal artery that was accompanied by hyperreninemia, hyperaldosteronism, and hypokalemia. At presentation in the untreated state, unstimulated plasma renin activity and the serum aldosterone level were markedly elevated. Following right nephrectomy, blood pressure levels normalized without antihypertensive therapy, and plasma renin activity, serum aldosterone and potassium levels normalized. Histologic study of the right renal artery showed an isolated dissection of the anterior branch of the vessel between the muscularis and adventitia that created marked reduction in luminal diameter and
renal ischemia
. There was no evidence of any other vascular abnormalities, atherosclerosis, or fibromuscular
dysplasia
. These findings demonstrate that an isolated dissection of a branch of the renal artery may induce profound hyperreninemia and represents a rare, reversible etiology for accelerated hypertension associated with acute encephalopathy.
...
PMID:Accelerated hypertension with encephalopathy due to an isolated dissection of a renal artery branch vessel. 820 71
Hyponatremic hypertensive syndrome is a manifestation of severe hypertension related to
renal ischemia
. The most common underlying cause of hyponatremic hypertensive syndrome in adults is severe atherosclerotic reno-vascular disorder while in children the most common cause of hyponatremic hypertensive syndrome is unilateral congenital renal artery stenosis due to some form of arterial
dysplasia
. An excessively stimulated renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system is mainly responsible for heavy polyuria, renal electrolyte loss and proteinuria. The neurological manifestations of hyponatremia and/or hypertensive encephalopathy are the main presenting symptoms, and they are not always in linear correlation with the degree of hyponatremia and/or hypertension. The cornerstone of management is the treatment of underlying hypertensive disease, but the correction of hyponatremic dehydration and safe decrease of blood pressure are essential in the emergency phase of hyponatremic hypertensive syndrome. The optimal antihypertensive therapy depends on the underlying condition. Revascularization, either surgical or by percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, is recommended for children with renal artery stenosis. Pharmacological treatment based on ACEI and/or ARB is the most efficient antihypertensive therapy for those with ischemic reno-parenchymal disorder. Nephrectomy is required if an affected kidney contributes less than 10% of the global renal function, if percutaneous transluminal angioplasty fails and the operative risk is too high, or in the case of extensive tumorous lesions.
...
PMID:Hyponatremic hypertensive syndrome. 1892 57
Antioxidants specifically addressed to mitochondria have been studied to determine if they can decelerate senescence of organisms. For this purpose, a project has been established with participation of several research groups from Russia and some other countries. This paper summarizes the first results of the project. A new type of compounds (SkQs) comprising plastoquinone (an antioxidant moiety), a penetrating cation, and a decane or pentane linker has been synthesized. Using planar bilayer phospholipid membrane (BLM), we selected SkQ derivatives with the highest permeability, namely plastoquinonyl-decyl-triphenylphosphonium (SkQ1), plastoquinonyl-decyl-rhodamine 19 (SkQR1), and methylplastoquinonyldecyltriphenylphosphonium (SkQ3). Anti- and prooxidant properties of these substances and also of ubiquinonyl-decyl-triphenylphosphonium (MitoQ) were tested in aqueous solution, detergent micelles, liposomes, BLM, isolated mitochondria, and cell cultures. In mitochondria, micromolar cationic quinone derivatives were found to be prooxidants, but at lower (sub-micromolar) concentrations they displayed antioxidant activity that decreases in the series SkQ1=SkQR1>SkQ3>MitoQ. SkQ1 was reduced by mitochondrial respiratory chain, i.e. it is a rechargeable antioxidant. Nanomolar SkQ1 specifically prevented oxidation of mitochondrial cardiolipin. In cell cultures, SkQR1, a fluorescent SkQ derivative, stained only one type of organelles, namely mitochondria. Extremely low concentrations of SkQ1 or SkQR1 arrested H(2)O(2)-induced apoptosis in human fibroblasts and HeLa cells. Higher concentrations of SkQ are required to block necrosis initiated by reactive oxygen species (ROS). In the fungus Podospora anserina, the crustacean Ceriodaphnia affinis, Drosophila, and mice, SkQ1 prolonged lifespan, being especially effective at early and middle stages of aging. In mammals, the effect of SkQs on aging was accompanied by inhibition of development of such age-related diseases and traits as cataract, retinopathy, glaucoma, balding, canities, osteoporosis, involution of the thymus, hypothermia, torpor, peroxidation of lipids and proteins, etc. SkQ1 manifested a strong therapeutic action on some already pronounced retinopathies, in particular, congenital retinal
dysplasia
. With drops containing 250 nM SkQ1, vision was restored to 67 of 89 animals (dogs, cats, and horses) that became blind because of a retinopathy. Instillation of SkQ1-containing drops prevented the loss of sight in rabbits with experimental uveitis and restored vision to animals that had already become blind. A favorable effect of the same drops was also achieved in experimental glaucoma in rabbits. Moreover, the SkQ1 pretreatment of rats significantly decreased the H(2)O(2) or ischemia-induced arrhythmia of the isolated heart. SkQs strongly reduced the damaged area in myocardial infarction or stroke and prevented the death of animals from
kidney ischemia
. In p53(-/-) mice, 5 nmol/kgxday SkQ1 decreased the ROS level in the spleen and inhibited appearance of lymphomas to the same degree as million-fold higher concentration of conventional antioxidant NAC. Thus, SkQs look promising as potential tools for treatment of senescence and age-related diseases.
...
PMID:An attempt to prevent senescence: a mitochondrial approach. 1915 10
Renal artery stenosis (RAS) is caused by a heterogenous group of diseases with different pathophysiology, clinical manifestations, treatment approaches, and outcomes. The 2 most common forms of RAS are fibromuscular
dysplasia
(FMD) and atherosclerosis (ARAS). Renovascular syndromes are broadly classified into renovascular hypertension and ischemic nephropathy, but these terms are misleading, because they imply a causal relationship between RAS, hypertension, and renal dysfunction, which is difficult to prove in humans. Data supporting renal revascularization are limited by heterogeneous causes of hypertension and renal dysfunction, insufficient understanding of the relationship between RAS and nephropathy, inconsistent techniques for revascularization, ambiguous terminology and end points to assess benefit, and lack of large-scale randomized trials. The purpose of this review is to enhance understanding of the epidemiology, clinical markers, and diagnosis of RAS; the relationship between RAS and important disease states; the distinction between
renal ischemia
and nephropathy; optimal revascularization techniques; and avoidance of renal injury.
...
PMID:Refining the approach to renal artery revascularization. 1946 23
Renovascular hypertension is usually due to an atherosclerotic artery stenosis or a fibromuscular
dysplasia
. We describe an uncommon cause of
renal ischemia
. A 66-year-old woman was admitted for severe hypertension. During her stay, she presented an acute myocardial infarction with normal coronary angiography. After a flank pain, a contrast-enhanced abdominal computed tomography scan was performed which revealed a stenosis of the left main renal artery. However, renal angiography displayed a thrombosis. Transesophageal echocardiography showed a mobile mass attached to the mitral valve. A diagnosis of renal artery thrombosis and acute myocardial infarction both resulting from a cardiac tumour embolism was established.
...
PMID:An uncommon cause of renovascular hypertension. 2250 78
Spontaneous renal subcapsular fluid collection may occur as a rare presentation of nephritic syndrome, and distension of the renal capsula and Gerota fascia due to massive fluid accumulation may cause pain. In addition, hypertension secondary to
renal ischemia
and activation of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system may also occur. The objective of this study is to evaluate the surgical outcome of retroperitoneal laparoscopic renal capsulectomy for patients with this disease.We retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of 10 female patients with spontaneous renal subcapsular fluid collection, diagnosed with B ultrasound and enhanced computed tomography (CT) scan. Eight patients first underwent percutaneous renal subcapsular drainage, which seemed to be less effective, and then all patients underwent retroperitoneal laparoscopic renal capsulectomy. The volume of renal subcapsular fluid was documented, the fluid was examined by routine biochemical tests, and the excised renal capsules underwent pathological examination individually. The postoperative drainage time for each patient was documented, and follow-up was conducted 1, 3, 6, 12 months, and 2 years postoperatively.Retroperitoneal laparoscopic renal capsulectomy was successfully performed in all patients with no major complications. The average volume of renal subcapsular fluid was 436 milliliter (mL, 180-880 mL) in light yellow color, and the concentration of creatinine and urea nitrogen was quite similar to that of serum. The pathological findings revealed fibrous
dysplasia
of the renal capsule with chronic infiltration of inflammatory cells. The average drainage time was 11.5 days (5-30 days) postoperatively. All patients recovered 1 month after the operation and there were no recurrences with a mean follow-up period of 12 months (6-24 months).The reason for spontaneous renal subcapsular fluid collection is unknown, and the aim of treatment is mainly to alleviate symptoms. In our experience, retroperitoneal laparoscopic renal capsulectomy is an effective surgical treatment, especially for patients who were refractory to percutaneous renal subcapsular drainage, with no observed recurrence.
...
PMID:The Retroperitoneal Laparoscopic Renal Capsulectomy for Spontaneous Renal Subcapsular Fluid Collection: A Case-Series Report and Literature Review. 2722 41
We report the case of a young woman treated with selective renal embolization for renovascular hypertension caused by intrarenal artery stenosis and show follow-up imaging of the treated kidney. An 18-year-old woman had renin-dependent hypertension with intrarenal artery stenosis caused by fibromuscular
dysplasia
. A middle branch artery was nearly occluded, resulting in segmental
renal ischemia
with excessive renin secretion. Because our angioplasty attempt for revascularization failed as a result of technical difficulty, we performed selective embolization of the diseased vessel by anhydrous ethanol. The embolization promptly ameliorated hyperreninemia and resistant hypertension without deterioration of renal function. Findings from magnetic resonance imaging showed disappearance of the blood flow in the embolized area corresponding to the ischemic lesion that had been revealed by diffusion-weighted imaging. Thus, selective embolization can be effective in treating renovascular hypertension by intrarenal stenosis for which angioplasty is not feasible. Additionally, renal magnetic resonance imaging is useful for evaluating the causative ischemic lesion and embolized area.
...
PMID:Selective embolization therapy for intrarenal artery stenosis causing renovascular hypertension: Efficacy and follow-up renal imaging. 2856 Jul 52
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