1/34. Mucoid degeneration of the brachial artery: case report and a review of literature.Cystic adventitial disease (CAD) is a rare cause of intermittent claudication, occurring in approximately 1:1200 claudicants or 1:1000 of those undergoing arteriography. It is most often described in the popliteal artery and is characterised by a mucinous cyst located in the adventitia of the artery, the contents of which resemble those of a ganglion. The origins of adventitial cysts are unknown, but connections to adjacent synovial spaces have been identified, suggesting that the cyst is a variant of a ganglion. In this report, we discuss a rare case of severe mucoid degeneration of the intima and media in a 67-year-old Saudi male patient. The patient presented with a saccular aneurysm of his right "mid-arm" brachial artery and critical ischemia of his right hand from distal embolisation.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = intima (Clic here for more details about this article) |
2/34. Acute arterial occlusion associated with total knee arthroplasty.Acute arterial occlusion is a rare but limb-threatening complication in total knee arthroplasty. Most of the previously reported cases of this complication required surgical intervention. This report illustrates an unusual case of this complication that was managed conservatively with an acceptable outcome. The case is also indicative of the etiology and the optimal prevention of this complication. In a patient with advanced arteriosclerosis, as indicated by vascular calcification around the knee or in the abdomen, knee arthroplasty should be performed without a tourniquet, and intra-operative manipulation should be done cautiously because of the potential for intimal disruption.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = intima (Clic here for more details about this article) |
3/34. ergotamine-induced intermittent claudication.We report about a female patient with intermittent claudication caused by ergotamine. She used ergotamine as a treatment for migraine headaches for more than 4 years. The claudication began 7 month before admission. Colour Doppler sonography and angiography showed severe stenosis of the left external iliac and superficial femoral artery. The patient was treated with phenprocoumon for one year after withdrawal of ergotamine. After that the superficial femoral stenosis disappeared completely, but the external iliac stenosis was still present and was consequently successfully treated by atherectomy. The histology showed a fibrosis of the intima and a hypertrophy of the media.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = intima (Clic here for more details about this article) |
4/34. Refractory proctosigmoiditis caused by myointimal hyperplasia of mesenteric veins: report of a case.PURPOSE: Proctosigmoiditis occurring in young adults is usually idiopathic and usually responds to medical management. If the process progresses to pancolitis and is refractory to medical management, proctocolectomy may be required. Myointimal hyperplasia of mesenteric veins, though rare, may also cause proctosigmoiditis, but this entity, in contrast to the idiopathic variety, does not respond to medical management; surgical excision limited to the involved colonic segment is curative. Because the treatment of the two entities differs significantly, it is important to distinguish them diagnostically. The purpose of this case report is to increase awareness of myointimal hyperplasia of mesenteric veins and to emphasize the clinical features that distinguish it from idiopathic proctosigmoiditis. methods: We report the case of a twenty-two-year-old male with an inflammatory process involving the distal colon and rectum, initially thought to be idiopathic proctosigmoiditis. The inflammation did not respond to an extensive course of medical management, and the patient developed complications associated with both the disease process and his medical therapy. Surgical resection of the rectosigmoid was performed. RESULTS: Histologic examination of the resected colon revealed the underlying process to be colonic ischemia caused by myointimal hyperplasia of mesenteric veins not associated with idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease or systemic vasculitis. CONCLUSION: Proctosigmoiditis caused by myointimal hyperplasia of mesenteric veins and idiopathic proctosigmoiditis may present in a similar fashion. Although patients with myointimal hyperplasia of mesenteric veins do not respond to medical management, segmental resection is usually curative, and long-term drug therapy or even proctocolectomy can be avoided. physicians should consider the possibility of myointimal hyperplasia of mesenteric veins when patients with apparent idiopathic proctosigmoiditis do not respond to medical therapy.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 10keywords = intima (Clic here for more details about this article) |
5/34. Femorofemoral bypass, even in pregnancy--a case report.A 29-year-old pregnant woman sustained blunt, left lower abdominal trauma, with hip and pelvic fractures, and progressive dissection of an intimal flap in the left iliac artery, which manifested two days later as profound ischemia of the left leg. The patient underwent distal thromboembolectomy, fasciotomies and revascularization of the leg by femorofemoral polytetrafluoroethylene bypass. The patient recovered completely and gave normal birth three months later to a healthy child. Four years after the operation she gave uneventful birth to another child. Various considerations pertinent to this complex traumatic-vascular-gestational state are discussed.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = intima (Clic here for more details about this article) |
6/34. rupture of pseudointima in an implanted vascular prosthesis: immunohistological study of plasminogen activators and matrix metalloproteinases.We investigated late-onset anastomotic stenosis in an implanted prosthetic graft. rupture of the pseudointima and hemorrhaging from the vasa vasorum were observed at the border of the collagenous tissue and fibrin layer. An immunohistological study showed that the fibrin layer was positive for tPA, but weakly positive for PAI-1. Some neutrophils and monocyte/macrophages in the fibrin layer were immunostained for tPA, uPA, uPAR, and MMP-1, -2 and -3. Some spindle-shaped cells surrounding the graft were immunostained for uPA, uPAR, MMP-1, -2, -3, -7 and -9, and TIMP-1 and -2. The endothelial cells of some microvessels were positive for MMP-1 and -2, and tPA. Some multi-nucleated giant cells were immunostained for MMP-7 and-9, tPA, PAI-1, uPA, and uPAR. Overexpressed MMPs and PAs possibly caused instability of the pseudointima.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 6keywords = intima (Clic here for more details about this article) |
7/34. Acute occlusion of the left iliac artery after long-distance-running.We report a case of spontaneous iliac occlusion in a 44-year-old male patient after long-distance running. Atherogenic risk factors like hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia and smoking were missing. Spontaneous iliac occlusion is extremely rare and only a few cases have been documented. angiography showed occlusion of the left iliac artery with collateral flow via the obturator artery to the common femoral artery. thrombectomy was performed but reocclusion occurred. An iliacofemoral bypass, arterial lysis and bypass thrombectomy was necessary within a few months. At the last follow-up visit two years afterwards the patient was symptom-free. This case indicates that exercise-dependent blood flow disturbances in long-distance-runners could produce changes of the intima.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = intima (Clic here for more details about this article) |
8/34. Intimal angiosarcoma of the aorta with tumour embolisation causing mesenteric ischaemia. Report of a case diagnosed using CD31 immunohistochemistry in an intestinal resection specimen.Primary intimal angiosarcomas of the aorta (i.e. mostly intraluminal sarcomas with evidence of endothelial differentiation) are extraordinarily rare. We report a case in which the diagnosis was accurately made using immunohistochemistry in an intestinal resection specimen and confirmed during autopsy. The patient was a 64-year-old woman with mesenteric ischaemia and a "thrombus" in the abdominal aorta. Two segments of the ileum and the right colon were surgically removed. Histological examination showed multiple tumour emboli in small arteries of the submucosa, serosa and mesentery. The highly atypical cells comprising these emboli were positive immunohistochemically with antibodies to ulex Europaeus, von willebrand factor and CD31 and negative for CD34. During post-mortem examination, the intraaortic mass was located around the orifices of the coeliac and the superior mesenteric arteries, and gross tumour thrombi were found in the left renal and splenic arteries. This case emphasises the need for a wide panel of immunohistochemical antibodies when tumour emboli of unknown origin are under study.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = intima (Clic here for more details about this article) |
9/34. Embolized ischemic lesions of toes in an afibrinogenemic patient: possible relevance to in vivo circulating thrombin.Fibrinogen plays a complex role in hemostasis, thrombosis, and vascular disease. Hyperfibrinogenemia is an independent vascular risk factor and dysfibrinogenemia can provoke thrombosis. afibrinogenemia is usually responsible for hemorrhagic diathesis, and unexpected ischemic lesions are intriguing. We report the case of an afibrinogenemic patient, who at the age of 30 developed ischemic lesions of the feet related to severe stenosis of the iliac and hypogastric arteries. The biopsy of the iliac artery lesion showed an intense myointimal hyperplasia. We performed standard hemostatic analysis and analyzed the activation markers of platelets and coagulation factors and the kinetics of thrombin generation in the patient and in normal control plasmas treated or not with reptilase. Occlusive arterial lesions were attributed to a disruptive hematoma penetrating the vascular lumen. Thrombin concentration after calcium addition increase markedly in the afibrinogenemic patient and in defibrinated normal plasma, as compared to untreated normal plasma. Thrombin-antithrombin complexes (T-AT) were markedly enhanced while F1 2 prothrombin fragments stayed in the normal range. These results suggested activation of coagulation and in vivo circulating thrombin. Thrombin activates the platelets that secrete growth factors for smooth muscle cells and generate the intimal hyperplasia. Recurrent hemorrhage within the vessel wall might induce injury and local thrombin generation. Thrombin not trapped by the clot is available for platelet activation and smooth muscle cell migration and proliferation. The absence of a protective fibrin cap on the intima might account for intima vulnerability and embolization. afibrinogenemia appears in this paradoxical situation as a vascular risk factor.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 4keywords = intima (Clic here for more details about this article) |
10/34. Aortic intimal dehiscence: a complication of percutaneous balloon fenestration for aortic dissection.A patient with acute type B dissection and a tube configuration of the intimal flap presented with signs of advanced mesenteric and renal ischemia as well as decreased pulses in the lower extremities. The patient was referred for emergency percutaneous fenestration of the abdominal aorta as a salvage procedure and a possible bridge to later surgery. After fenestration, femoral pulses became transiently stronger and then disappeared. The patient died after exploratory laparotomy. Postmortem examination demonstrated dehiscence of the infrarenal abdominal aortic intima with occlusion of the aortic bifurcation.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 6keywords = intima (Clic here for more details about this article) |
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