Cases reported "Hyperemia"

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1/10. Optimizing revascularization strategies in patients with multivessel coronary disease: impact of intracoronary pressure measurements.

    OBJECTIVES: In patients with multivessel coronary disease, the functional significance of each lesion is often unclear, and preinterventional stress tests may be inconclusive. In this setting, intracoronary pressure measurements may be helpful to define the optimal revascularization strategy. methods: Twenty-five consecutive patients (aged 64 /- 11 years) with multivessel disease, inconclusive stress tests or not performed stress tests, and an angiographically intermediate coronary artery stenosis in at least 1 major vessel underwent intracoronary pressure measurements. Myocardial fractional flow reserve was measured for the intermediate lesions under the condition of maximum hyperemia induced by intravenous adenosine (140 microg x kg(-1) x min(-1). Revascularization strategies based on angiographic information alone were compared with treatment strategies based on fractional flow reserve results. RESULTS: The original recommendation of the revascularization procedure of choice (bypass operation or angioplasty) was changed in 9 patients (36%) on the basis of the results of fractional flow reserve measurements. In 6 more patients, pressure measurements led to a change in the recommended number of anastomoses to be aimed for during the operation. Within diffusely diseased vessels, fractional flow reserve provided an exact segmental resolution of pathologic vessel resistance for optimal graft placement. Significant left main disease was confirmed in 3 of 6 patients and was detected in 3 angiographically unsuspected cases. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with multivessel disease, coronary pressure-derived fractional flow reserve is a valuable tool to guide clinical decision making and support cardiologists and cardiovascular surgeons in the composition of optimal revascularization strategies.
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2/10. Parkinsonism with basal ganglia lesions in a patient with uremia: Evidence of vasogenic edema.

    Parkinsonian syndromes associated with basal ganglia pathology have very rarely been reported in patients with end-stage renal failure. The nature and pathophysiology of the basal ganglia lesion responsible for parkinsonism were unknown. A 48-year-old man who had advanced renal failure developed disturbance of balance and gait and decreased spontaneity. brain magnetic resonance (MR) imaging disclosed bilateral basal ganglia lesions. By the finding of diffusion-weighted image, the apparent diffusion coefficient map, MR angiography, and SPECT, we suggest that the basal ganglia lesions may be the result of vasogenic edema attributable to focal hyperemia secondary to abnormal dilatation of small vessels.
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3/10. Prolonged loss of leg myogenic motor evoked potentials during thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair, without postoperative paraplegia.

    No postoperative paraplegia occurred in a patient whose leg myogenic motor evoked potentials (mMEPs) disappeared during thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair. A 69-year-old man underwent resection and repair of a type III (Crawford classification) thoracoabdominal aneurysm. An epidural catheter was placed into the epidural space for epidural cooling, and a Swan-Ganz catheter was placed into the subarachnoid space for cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage. Continuous CSF pressure and temperature measurement was carried out the day before surgery. The mMEPs gradually disappeared 10 min after proximal double aortic clamping and complete aortic transection. Selective perfusion of intercostal arteries was started about 20 min after the loss of the mMEPs, but the mMEPs were not restored. Possibly, spinal cord hyperemia, induced by selective perfusion of the intercostal vessels, narrowed the subarachnoid space so that CSF could not be satisfactorily drained during surgery. The spinal cord hyperemia may have decreased spinal function and suppressed the leg mMEPs. The persistence of the loss of mMEPs was undeniably due to the influence of the anesthetic agent or a perfusion disorder in the lower-extremity muscles. Of note, moderate spinal cord hypothermia and postoperative CSF drainage probably resulted in improved lower-limb motor function.
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4/10. The case against staged operative resection of cerebral arteriovenous malformations.

    Three cases of large cerebral arteriovenous fistulae are presented in which surgical ablation was complicated by brain swelling from hyperperfusion breakthrough believed to be caused by acute intraoperative hypoperfusion superimposed on chronic preoperative hypoperfusion. On the basis of these cases, experimental data, and theoretical considerations, we seriously question the wisdom of using staged surgical resection of cerebral arteriovenous malformation to prevent complications related to alterations in cerebral hemodynamics. The reasons for this concern are: the repeated occurrence of acute-on-chronic hypoperfusion during staged resection; a lack of understanding of the time course for the correction of a disordered autoregulation; risk of hemorrhage between the initial and final resection; difficulty in assessing and substantiating flow reduction after subtotal resection; the rapidity of collateralization; the divergence of flow from large, readily accessible feeding arteries to deep penetrating vessels; and attenuation of the wall thickness in collateral vessels as a consequence of increased flow.
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5/10. contrast media hyperemia and Doppler measurements in peripheral arterial disease.

    The addition of Doppler measurements of ankle/brachial artery pressure ratios just before and after the hyperemia of routine angiography is a simple, quick, and efficient method in the determination of the hemodynamic significance of arterial narrowings. In a series of 21 patients (35 limbs) this test was found to be particularly helpful for those patients who could not undergo stress exercise testing, who had borderline significant physiologic test results, and who had angiographically indeterminate severe vessel narrowings.
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6/10. Elevated transcranial Doppler ultrasound velocities following therapeutic arterial dilation.

    BACKGROUND: Elevated transcranial Doppler (TCD) velocities seen after cerebral angioplasty are commonly interpreted as evidence of residual or recurrent stenosis but may conceivably arise from hyperemia and require different clinical management. SUMMARY OF REPORT: Four cases of abnormally elevated mean TCD velocities obtained after therapeutic arterial dilation with either balloon angioplasty or intra-arterial administration of papaverine are described. In each case, cerebral angiography revealed a dilated vessel, suggesting that hyperemia and impaired autoregulation were the causes of the high velocities. CONCLUSIONS: These examples suggest that high TCD velocities after vessel dilation may be produced by unpredictable amounts of vessel narrowing and flow alteration. Although a normalizing TCD velocity after angioplasty suggests effective vessel dilation, high velocities may be due partly to hyperemia and cannot be interpreted as arising solely from recurrent stenosis.
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7/10. Pulmonary micromorphology in fatal strangulations.

    Pulmonary histopathology was studied in a group of 106 fatal strangulations including cases of hanging (n = 55; typical, n = 20; atypical, n = 35), ligature strangulation (n = 12), throttling (n = 15), combinations of throttling and ligature strangulation (n = 7) and other compressing force against neck (n = 17). The control group (n = 10) consisted of cases of sudden cardiovascular death. The following results were obtained: intra-alveolar edema of different degree and strong hyperemia could be regularly observed in nearly all cases, especially in fatal hanging (apart from the control cases, in this group the highest mean lung weights were observed). Further frequent histological patterns were perivascular and intra-alveolar hemorrhages, local dystelectasis and focal emphysema. Alterations of the lung vessel contents could be detected in a varying extent: fat embolism (n = 7), mainly of minor degree, embolism of bone marrow tissue (n = 5) and intravascular cell accumulations (n = 22). embolism of fat and bone marrow tissue was nearly always restricted to cases with accompanying blunt force or resuscitation measures. Whereas only 4 out of 55 cases of hanging revealed intravascular cell accumulations (including different types of leukocytes and immature bone marrow cells), 18 out of 51 cases with the other forms of strangulation exhibited this phenomenon. These accumulations mainly occurred in a discrete and widely scattered manner, appeared in 3 out of 10 control cases (resuscitation measures) as well, and were limited to cases with either protracted courses or accompanying blunt violence. The following conclusions are drawn: the regularly observed general changes of lung microstructure (e.g. edema, hyperemia) are undoubtedly non-specific for strangulation; the alterations of blood vessel contents may serve as a general vitality marker, if resuscitation measures are excluded, but not as an evidence of strangulating force. In cases without signs of blunt force they point to protracted agony courses (shock equivalents).
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8/10. Quantitative demonstration of dipyridamole-induced coronary steal and alteration by angioplasty in man: analysis by simultaneous, continuous dual Doppler spectral flow velocity.

    In the course of studying the effects of coronary angioplasty on branch vessel flow using two Doppler flow velocity guidewires, we quantitated simultaneous blood flow responses proximal and distal to a stenosis. The alterations of flow documented a horizontal epicardial steal induced during dipyridamole hyperemia, hyperemic flow reversal by intravenous aminophylline, and subsequent normalization of distal hyperemia after endoluminal enlargement by successful angioplasty. The quantitative physiology of the patient described here confirms one postulated mechanism of abnormal myocardial perfusion stress scintigraphy. Continuous dual flowire spectral coronary flow determinations appear to be a valuable method in verifying postulated mechanisms of various pharmacologic and mechanical stimuli influencing coronary blood flow in patients with atherosclerotic coronary artery disease.
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9/10. Glans hyperemia after penile revascularization: a late complication following alpha-1-receptor blockade for benign prostatic hyperplasia.

    Surgical revascularization of the penile vessels is one treatment choice for patients with vasculogenic impotence. hyperemia of the glans is a rare but severe complication which usually occurs early. We report a patient who developed this complication more than 3.5 years after surgery following onset of medical treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia with a vasodilating alpha 1-receptor blocker.
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10/10. Ocular naevus and hyperaemia with dilation of the conjunctival vessels: an early manifestation of Crohn's disease?

    Two cases of male patients with Crohn's disease showing the same neonatal ocular abnormality, a sector hyperaemia with dilation of the vessels of the bulbar conjunctiva surrounding a naevus close to the limbus, are presented. In both cases, this manifestation worsened when Crohn's disease relapsed, and improved when the disease went into remission with steroid treatment. In Crohn's disease, eye involvement is reported in varying percentages, but the condition discussed here does not fit into any of the ocular patterns previously described in this disease, and could represent an early manifestation of Crohn's disease.
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