Cases reported "Constriction, Pathologic"

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1/134. Rotational atherectomy for left anterior descending artery septal perforator stenosis.

    Stenosis in large septal perforators can result in significant clinical ischemia. The distribution of the septal arteries is as large as many more commonly treated branch vessels. The interventricular septal blood supply has been ignored as a target for revascularization due to its inaccessibility for surgical revascularization, and the elastic recoil associated with balloon angioplasty in this location. Rotational atherectomy is a new therapeutic option for revascularization in this previously difficult location. The septal perforator ostium is the most common site of lesions and is functionally a branch ostial stenosis. We describe four cases in which rotational atherectomy was performed in patients with reversible ischemia due to septal artery stenosis. The acute angiographic results were stable, without evidence for immediate recoil. By debulking, facilitated angioplasty can yield stable acute results in this location. The small size of most septal branches and their angulated origin make rotational atherectomy challenging, and cases must be selected carefully. This previously ignored lesion location can be considered for revascularization in patients with suitable lesion and vessel morphology.
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2/134. Anterior mediastinal masses: an anaesthetic challenge.

    A patient with a large anterior mediastinal mass with minimal respiratory symptoms presented for a diagnostic biopsy of the mass. A pre-operative thoracic computed tomographic scan demonstrated narrowing of the distal trachea, and right and left main stem bronchi. An awake intubation was done. Thiopentone and muscle relaxant were given and surgery commenced. High airway pressure developed and ventilation became difficult, although oxygenation remained satisfactory throughout. Anaesthetic implications are discussed. We recommend that patients with more than 50% obstruction of the airway at the level of the lower trachea and main bronchi have their femoral vessels cannulated in readiness for cardiopulmonary bypass.
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3/134. Relief of coronary artery spasm by nitroglycerin: time-dependent variability in drug action.

    The arteriographic distinction between a fixed atheromatous obstruction and localized vasospasm in the coronary artery is often decided by the response of the lesion to nitroglycerin. We studied the time course of nitroglycerin in four patients with coronary artery spasm as revealed by selective angiography. Following complete dissolution of a 0.6 mg tablet of nitroglycerin sublingually a slight increase in heart rate occurred as early as two minutes, variable changes in overall vessel diameter were observed within four minutes, but the localized spasm remained fixed. It was not until six minutes had elasped that reinjection showed disappearance of spasm and uniform patency of the vessel in all cases. These observations stress the importance of waiting an appropriate period of time (at least six minutes) following complete absorption of sublingual nitroglycerin before any conclusion can be rationally drawn regarding the nature of a stenotic lesion as seen angiographically.
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4/134. Intravascular ("intimal") epithelioid angiosarcoma: clinicopathological and immunohistochemical analysis of three cases.

    Angiosarcomas are rare malignant mesenchymal tumours, characterized morphologically by anastomosing vascular channels lined by atypical and proliferative active endothelial cells. An epithelioid cytomorphology of tumour cells is often seen focally in angiosarcoma, whereas purely epithelioid angiosarcomas are rare. Although angiosarcomas show a vascular differentiation they are almost never confined to pre-existing blood vessels. We describe three cases of intravascular epithelioid angiosarcoma arising in the carotid artery of a 60-year-old man, in the infrarenal part of the abdominal aorta and both renal arteries of a 69-year-old woman, and in the abdominal aorta of a 68-year-old man. In all cases malignant tumour tissue was found incidentally after disobliteration of thrombosed vessels. Histologically, purely epithelioid angiosarcoma composed of solid sheets of epithelioid tumour cells was seen; immunohistochemistry confirmed the endothelial differentiation of neoplastic cells. The reported cases show that angiosarcoma can occasionally arise within a pre-existing vessel.
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5/134. The prepuce flap in the reconstruction of male anal stenosis.

    Circumferential stenosis of the male anal canal was repaired using a subcutaneous prepuce flap. The stenosis was released to create a rhomboid defect. Then, to cover the defect a rectangular flap was designed on the hairless ventral side of the penis. The flap was raised over the Buck's fascia while preserving the subcutaneous vessels in the dartos fascia, which formed the pedicle of the flap. The flap was transposed to the defect by passing it through a tunnel in the perineum. The postoperative course was uneventful and the result was good. The flap had reliable vascularity, was very thin, and pliable so that it could adapt to the rhomboid defect in the anal canal.
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6/134. Cerebral vasculopathy secondary to leptomeningeal gliomatosis: angiography.

    We describe a young woman with a glioblastoma multiforme in whom angiography showed multiple intracranial stenoses. The resected tumour was found to be invading cerebral vessels.
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7/134. Endovascular treatment of noncarotid extracranial cerebrovascular disease.

    The last two decades have witnessed a growing application of endovascular techniques for the treatment of atherosclerotic disease of the extracranial vertebral arteries, subclavian arteries, and brachiocephalic artery. Beginning with simple balloon angioplasty, these minimally invasive techniques have now progressed to the use of stent-supported angioplasty. Stent-supported angioplasty is currently providing a therapeutic alternative to traditional methods of open surgery for revascularization of these vessels and increasing the therapeutic options available for patients who have failed maximal medical therapy. Additionally, endovascular techniques are also being used successfully to treat a variety of nonatherosclerotic diseases affecting the noncarotid extacranial arteries, such as inflammatory, radiation, and anastomotic-graft strictures; acute intimal dissection; traumatic and spontaneous arteriovenous fistulas; and aneurysms or pseudoaneurysms. Continued innovation and refinement of endovascular devices and techniques will inevitably improve technical success rates, reduce procedure-related complications, and broaden the endovascular therapeutic spectrum for extracranial cerebrovascular disease.
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8/134. Stenting of stenosed aortopulmonary collaterals and shunts for palliation of pulmonary atresia/ventricular septal defect.

    patients with unrepaired pulmonary artery atresia and ventricular septal defect (PA/VSD) depend on aortoplumonary collaterals and surgically created shunts for pulmonary blood flow. These vessels frequently develop stenoses with time, leading to hypoperfusion of lung segments and systemic hypoxemia. The purpose of this article is to describe catheter palliation of hypoxemic patients with PA/VSD who were not candidates for surgical repair. We present our experience with stent implantation for stenosis of aortopulmonary collaterals and shunts in these patients. Three patients with hypoplastic pulmonary arteries underwent stent placement in aortopulmonary collateral arteries (APCAs) or their shunts. Technical aspects of the interventional catheterization procedure are discussed in detail. Case 1 underwent placement of five stents in collateral vessels and one stent in the Blalock-Taussig shunt (BT) with dramatic increase in vessel size and improvement in saturations from 70% to 89%. Case 2 underwent placement of two overlapping stents in a collateral vessel with an increase in diameter of the collateral vessel from 2.3 to 6 mm and an improvement in saturation from 68% to 88%. Case 3 underwent placement of three overlapping stents in a BT shunt with an increase in diameter of the shunt from 2.2 to 6.6 mm and an improvement in saturation from 71% to 89%. All three patients had excellent clinical improvement and stable saturation at follow-up. Stent placement for maintaining patency of APCAs and aortopulmonary shunts is feasible and safe.
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9/134. Insidious symptomatology and misleading physical findings in popliteal artery entrapment syndrome. A case report.

    A patient presented with an ischemic right forefoot. She suffered rest pain but had relief on walking and on flexing her leg. Popliteal and pedal pulses were palpable. The underlying condition was popliteal artery entrapment. Compression of the popliteal artery occurred with extension of the knee and additional contraction of the gastrocnemius muscles only and was released with flexion. Distal embolizations into all three lower leg arteries had caused acute ischemia. As the emboli had travelled through both tibial vessels very distally pedal pulses were found to be normal. Treatment was operatively by resection of a tiny lateral portion of the medial gastrocnemic tendon which crossed the artery dorsally as the vessel pierced the tendon.
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10/134. popliteal artery entrapment syndrome: diagnosis and management, with report of three cases.

    popliteal artery entrapment syndrome is an important albeit infrequent cause of serious disability among young adults and athletes with anomalous anatomic relationships between the popliteal artery and surrounding musculotendinous structures. We report our experience with 3 patients, in whom we used duplex ultrasonography, computed tomography, digital subtraction angiography, and conventional arteriography to diagnose popliteal artery entrapment and to grade the severity of dynamic circulatory insufficiency and arterial damage. We used a posterior surgical approach to give the best view of the anatomic structures compressing the popliteal artery. In 2 patients, in whom compression had not yet damaged the arterial wall, operative decompression of the artery by resection of the aberrant muscle was sufficient. In the 3rd patient, operative reconstruction of an occluded segment with autologous vein graft was necessary, in addition to decompression of the vessel and resection of aberrant muscle. The result in each case was complete recovery, with absence of symptoms and with patency verified by Doppler examination. We conclude that clinicians who encounter young patients with progressive lowerlimb arterial insufficiency should be aware of the possibility of popliteal artery entrapment. early diagnosis through a combined approach (careful physical examination and history-taking, duplex ultrasonography, computerized tomography, and angiography) is necessary for exact diagnosis. The treatment of choice is the surgical creation of normal anatomy within the popliteal fossa.
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