Occlusion Test (occlusion + test)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Ruptured symptomatic internal carotid artery dorsal wall aneurysm with rapid configurational change.

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 10 2010
Clinical experience, management outcome: an original article
Background:, Aneurysms located at non-branching sites, protruding from the dorsal wall of the supraclinoid internal carotid artery (ICA) with rapid configurational changes, were retrospectively reviewed in effort to identify and characterize these high-risk aneurysms. Methods:, A total of 447 patients with 491 intracranial aneurysms were treated from March 2005 to August 2008, and of these, eight patients had ICA dorsal wall aneurysms. Four of them suffered subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), and all had aneurysms undergoing rapid configuration changes during the treatment course. Digital subtraction cerebral angiography (DSA) performed soon after the SAH events. Data analyzed were patient age, sex, Hunt and Kosnik grade, time interval from first DSA to second DSA, aneurysm treatment, and modified Rankin scale score after treatment for 3 months. Success or failure of therapeutic management was examined among the patients. Results:, Digital subtraction cerebral angiography showed only lesions with small bulges in the dorsal walls of the ICAs. However, the patients underwent DSA again for re-bleeding or for post-treatment follow-up, confirming the SAH source. ICA dorsal wall aneurysms with rapid growth and configurational changes were found on subsequent DSA studies. Conclusions:, Among the four patients, ICA dorsal wall aneurysms underwent rapid growth with configurational change from a blister type to a saccular type despite different management. ICA trapping including the lesion segment can be considered as the first treatment option if the balloon occlusion test (BOT) is successful. If a BOT is not tolerated by the patient, extracranial,intracranial bypass revascularization surgery with endovascular ICA occlusion is another treatment option. [source]


Presumed hypoplastic intrahepatic portal system due to patent ductus venosus: Importance of direct occlusion test of ductus venosus under open laparotomy

PEDIATRICS INTERNATIONAL, Issue 4 2004
Yuka Takehara
No abstract is available for this article. [source]


Detection of inner tube defects in co-axial circle and Bain breathing systems: a comparison of occlusion and Pethick tests

ANAESTHESIA, Issue 10 2008
K. A. Szypula
Summary The performance of the occlusion and Pethick tests in detecting faulty inner tubes in co-axial circle and Bain systems was compared. Twelve co-axial circle and 12 Bain anaesthetic breathing systems were tested using the occlusion and the Pethick tests. For each system, three tubes were intact, and the remaining nine had a defect deliberately created in the inner tube (three proximal, three middle and three distal). The investigators were blinded to which of the tubes were defective, and to each other's results. The results showed 100% specificity for both tests. The sensitivity of the occlusion test for detecting faulty breathing systems was found to be good (98%). Our results suggest that the occlusion test should be performed in preference to the Pethick test when testing co-axial circle and Bain systems. [source]


Abnormal peripheral vascular response to occlusion provocation in normal tension glaucoma patients

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 2007
J WIERZBOWSKA
Purpose: To assess peripheral vascular reactive hyperemia in response to occlusion provocation test, using two-channels laser Doppler probe in patients with normal tension glaucoma (NTG) and normal subjects. Methods: 15 patients with NTG (12 women and 4 men), mean aged 58,9 and 15 control subjects (13 women and 2 men), mean aged 60,6 were subjected to an occlusion test. The experiment comprised following steps: 1/ a 5-minute baseline-period 2/ a 2-minute occlusion of the left hand using a 15 cm wide cuff located directly over the elbow (the pressure in the cuff was 50 mmHg higher than the systolic pressure measured on the arm 3/ a 15- minute final recovery period after occlusion. Finger hyperemia was assessed by two-channels laser-Doppler flowmeter MBF-3d, Moor Instruments, Ltd., continuously during the experiment. For measurements of hyperemia two surface probes were attached to the pulp of the second finger (mean probe) and third finger (basic probe) of the left hand. The following hyperemia parameters were measured: RF (rest flow), BZ (biological zero), TM (time to peak flow), TH (half-time of hyperemia), MAX (maximum of hyperemia) and hyperemia amplitude (MAX-RF)/RF 100% was calculated. Kruskal-Wallis test analysis was used to test the differences between the group of patients and normal subjects for TM1,MXF1 (basic probe) and TM2, MXF2 (mean probe) parameters. Results: In NTG patients, TM1 was significantly higher comparing with healthy subjects whereas MAX was significantly lower as compared to the control group. Conclusions: Occlusion provocation test elicits a different systemic hyperemia response in patients with NTG compared with healthy subjects. [source]