Angiology
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Isolated arterial dissection, which occurs with the absence of aortic dissection, has been reported in carotid and renal arteries but rarely in visceral arteries. A case of isolated celiac artery dissection is reported here. A healthy 58-year-old man experienced sudden upper abdominal pain, which continued for several days. ⋯ Splenic infarction was probably due to the embolism from the thrombus in the dissected celiac artery. The absence of other vascular lesions and causes or risks for the arterial dissection would suggest the occurrence of spontaneous dissection. The dissection of visceral arteries should be considered in diagnosing acute abdominal pain.
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The authors report a case of bilateral pulmonary artery aneurysm in a patient with chronic Chagas' disease and compensated congestive heart failure in whom clinical clues suggested pulmonary thromboembolism, and the actual nature of the lesions was discovered at the time of conventional imaging investigations. This case shows the rarity of bilateral pulmonary aneurysm associated with bilateral pulmonary thromboembolism and the importance of an awareness of this condition in the differential diagnosis for lung masses.
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Comparative Study
Retrospective analysis of Rt-pa thrombolysis combined with PGE1 in patients with peripheral arterial occlusions.
Although thrombolysis has been established for recanalization of acute and in part chronic peripheral artery occlusions, only smaller studies exist regarding the use of long-term rt-pa infiltration-thrombolysis. The objective of this study was to evaluate the benefit of additional long-term thrombolysis in patients with peripheral arterial occlusions for whom acute thrombolysis failed. From 1992 to 1997, 323 patients with peripheral arterial occlusions were treated with rt-pa (recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator). ⋯ Patency rates in patients with acute or long-term thrombolysis were not different. A composite thrombolytic treatment using low-dose rt-pa in combination with PGE1 offers significantly better results than an acute thrombolytic treatment alone. It can be an effective and practicable regimen in about 60% of patients in whom acute thrombolysis fails.
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Neurofibromatosis is a dominantly inherited, progressive, generalized dysplasia of mesodermal and neuroectodermal tissues. Vascular lesions associated with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF-1) are mainly characterized by stenosis, occlusion, aneurysm, pseudoaneurysm, and rupture or fistula formation of small, medium, and large-sized arteries. The authors hereby present a rare case of NF-1 with bilateral aneurysms and large pseudoaneurysms of the femoral and popliteal arteries and occlusion of the left superficial femoral artery.
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Air plethysmography in chronic venous insufficiency: clinical diagnosis and quantitative assessment.
To define the role of air plethysmography (APG) in the clinical diagnosis and quantitative assessment of chronic venous insufficiency (CVI), APG studies were performed on 582 limbs in 291 patients with signs and symptoms of CVI. One hundred and thirty-one limbs were classified into group I (no evidence of CVI), 291 into group II (mild CVI), and 160 into group III (advanced CVI). On APG, the mean venous filling index (VFI) was 1.45 mL/s, 3.90 mL/s, and 5.25 mL/s in groups I, II, and III respectively (p<0.05). ⋯ In conclusion, APG is a simple and noninvasive test for quantitative assessment of the different components of CVI, valvular reflux, and calf muscle pump function. However, only VFI correlated significantly with the severity of CVI. VFI, with its high positive predictive value, may be useful in diagnosis of CVI, and it may serve as an objective quantitative measurement for monitoring the effect of treatment.