Vascular Obstruction (vascular + obstruction)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Is the recipient vein really the main concern?

MICROSURGERY, Issue 8 2009
A cohort study of head, neck reconstruction
The aim of this study was to verify the role of the venous drainage system in the pathogenesis of complications in microsurgical head and neck reconstruction. In a nonrandomized cohort study, 52 consecutive cases of complex head and neck microsurgical reconstruction were evaluated. The patients were divided in two groups based on the treatment: the deep (DVDG; n = 30) and superficial (SVDG; n = 22) venous drainage groups. The complications evaluated included vascular obstruction with partial or total loss of the microsurgical flap, inadequate healing (fistulas or suture dehiscence), and infections. The arterial anastomotic site, neoplastic recurrence, use of medications and neoadjuvant radiotherapy, flap selection, tumor histology, smoking/alcoholism, and systemic diseases had no effect on postoperative complications, while the venous component influenced the overall complication rate (chi-square test, P = 0.006). A protective effect was achieved in the DVDG when the overall complication rate was considered,relative risk (RR) 0.65, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.45,0.94. The recipient vein should be the surgeon's main concern as it influenced the outcomes of patients undergoing complex microsurgical head and neck reconstruction. A protective effect was observed when the internal jugular vein drainage system was used for this purpose. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. Microsurgery 2009. [source]


Erythropoietic protoporphyria with eye complications

THE JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, Issue 11 2007
Hiromi TSUBOI
ABSTRACT We herein report a case of erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP) complicated by a decrease in eyesight that occurred in a Japanese male. An ophthalmologist initially thought that the eyesight loss might be the result of idiopathic optic nerve atrophy due to a vascular obstruction in the fundus. There are no previous reports of EPP cases with eye complications. However, an eye abnormality has been reported in an animal model of protoporphyria after long-term, low-level exposure to blue light. As a result, in our case, it is therefore possible that a relationship may have existed between EPP and the onset of eye complications. [source]


Prospective Study of the Clinical Features and Outcomes of Emergency Department Patients with Delayed Diagnosis of Pulmonary Embolism

ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 7 2007
Jeffrey A. Kline MD
Objectives:The authors hypothesized that emergency department (ED) patients with a delayed diagnosis of pulmonary embolism (PE) will have a higher frequency of altered mental status, older age, comorbidity, and worsened outcomes compared with patients who have PE diagnosed by tests ordered in the ED. Methods:For 144 weeks, all patients with PE diagnosed by computed tomographic angiography were prospectively screened to identify ED diagnosis (testing ordered from the ED) versus delayed diagnosis (less than 48 hours postadmission). Serum troponin I level, right ventricular hypokinesis on echocardiography, and percentage pulmonary vascular occlusion were measured at diagnosis; patients were prospectively followed up for adverse events (death, intubation, or circulatory shock). Results:Among 161 patients with PE, 141 (88%) were ED diagnosed and 20 (12%) had a delayed diagnosis. Patients with a delayed diagnosis were older than ED-diagnosed patients (61 [±15] vs. 51 [±17] years; p < 0.001), had a longer median time to heparin administration (33 vs. 8 hours; p < 0.001), and had a higher frequency of altered mental status (30% vs. 8%; p = 0.01) but did not have a higher frequency of prior cardiopulmonary disease (25% vs. 23%). Patients with a delayed diagnosis had equal or worse measures of PE severity (right ventricular hypokinesis on echocardiography, 60% vs. 58%; abnormal troponin I level, 55% vs. 24%); on computed tomographic angiography, ten of 20 patients with a delayed diagnosis had PE in lobar or larger arteries and >50% vascular obstruction. Patients with a delayed diagnosis had a higher rate of in-hospital adverse events (9% vs. 30%; p = 0.01). Conclusions:In this single-center study, the diagnosis of PE was frequently delayed and outcomes of patients with delayed diagnosis were worse than those of patients with PE diagnosed in the ED. [source]


Cryptogenic fulminant hepatic failure in infancy: Report of 2 cases with unique vascular obstructive changes in native livers

LIVER TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 9 2006
Naoki Shimojima
Although the causes of fulminant hepatic failure (FHF) remain cryptogenic in many cases, a few reports have reviewed the pathological findings of native livers to evaluate the etiology. We report 2 cases of infantile cryptogenic FHF with unique vascular obstructive changes in the native livers. Clinically, it was notable that these 2 patients developed FHF very early in life, at 2 months and 5 months of age, respectively. One patient died from chronic rejection associated with hepatic veno-occlusive disease 4 months after transplantation. Histologically, hepatocytes in the native livers were completely destroyed in both patients, and vascular findings revealed obstruction of central veins in 1 patient and obstruction of portal veins in the other patient. Although the pathogenesis of vascular obstructions is not yet understood, this study suggests that an obstructive vascular event may be a contributing etiologic factor of FHF in infancy. Liver Transpl 12:1418,1422, 2006. © 2006 AASLD. [source]