Search Results
Results 451 - 500 of 857
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Piñar A - - 1998
In 30-50% of patients with portal thrombosis, no underlying etiology is found. The recent reports of new hereditary clotting defects are contributing to the understanding of this problem, but they only justify a small number of idiopathic cases. Instead, anticoagulant protein C resistance, caused by a mutation in the V ...
Iomhair M M - - 1998
The antithrombotic effect of unfractionated heparin, a low-molecular weight heparin, oral acetylsalicylic acid, intravenous lysine-aspirin and oral soluble aspirin was measured on platinum wire simultaneously in artery and vein, in groups of 12-20 rats with concurrent untreated controls. Subcutaneous low molecular weight heparin reduced mean thrombus weight by 26% in ...
Bayraktar Y - - 1998
Behçet's disease may be a possible cause of both occlusive and aneurysmal arterial involvement as well as recurrent venous thrombosis. A case of Behçet's disease complicated with vascular involvement leading to intestinal infarction is presented. A 41-yr-old man suffering from Behçet's disease for 15 yr presented with a 2-day history ...
Carretta R F - - 1998
The need for a radiopharmaceutical that will yield a definitive diagnosis of acute venous thrombosis in the lower extremities is evident from (1) the current difficulty in making a diagnosis on the basis of clinical signs and symptoms alone; (2) the sometimes inadequate or less sensitive diagnosis made on the ...
Grieg A - - 1998
OBJECTIVE: A case report is presented describing the use of tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) to dissolve a thrombosis in the brachial artery of a critically ill premature neonate. A short review of the literature is included. DESIGN: A premature infant with pulmonary hypertension is discovered to have a concomitant right ...
Bardo D M - - 1998
We report an unusual case of superficial venous thrombosis in a cyanotic 12-year-old child who had undergone recent appendectomy. Although compression, color Doppler, and duplex ultrasound techniques remain the keys to the diagnosis of venous thrombosis, SieScape sonography was beneficial in demonstrating the extent of the thrombi and their location ...
Warkentin T E - - 1998
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is an immune-mediated adverse effect of heparin that is important because of its relatively high frequency and its strong association with paradoxic venous and arterial thrombosis. As confirmatory laboratory assays are not always immediately available, physicians usually must make initial diagnostic and treatment decisions based on the ...
Ashkan K - - 1998
Restorative proctocolectomy has become the surgical treatment of choice in ulcerative colitis. Most commonly, this is performed as a staged procedure which includes formation of a defunctioning loop ileostomy. High output loop ileostomies are associated with both local and systemic complications. We describe two patients with loop ileostomies who developed ...
Loewe C - - 1998
A 35-year-old postpartum woman who was receiving bromocriptine (Parlodel) for only several days to suppress lactation experienced an episode of a seizure, complained of chest pains, and died in the emergency department. At autopsy, acute coronary thrombosis of the left main, left anterior descending, and circumflex arteries was found. Cases ...
Stern J M - - 1998
The authors report the occurrence of vascular occlusion due to hyperhomocysteinemia without significant underlying atherosclerotic disease. This unique observation supports the potential of hyperhomocysteinemia to induce thrombosis and the independence of the thrombosis from hyperhomocysteinemia's associated atherosclerosis. The case demonstrates the clinical relevance of the effects of hyperhomocysteinemia on the ...
Wang C - - 1998
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the incidence of in situ thrombosis of small pulmonary arteries and arterioles during the exacerbation stage of chronic cor pulmonale. METHODS: 49 autopsy cases died from the exacerbation of chronic cor pulmonale were chosen as the study group, while 103 other autopsy cases without chronic cor pulmonale ...
Vaidya B - - 1998
Riedel's invasive fibrous thyroiditis (IFT) is a rare disease of unknown etiology characterized by a dense fibrosis involving the thyroid gland and its surrounding tissues. Clinically, patients present with a stony hard goiter frequently associated with compressive symptoms. Involvement of the surrounding neck structures by IFT can lead to various ...
Mirzayan R - - 1998
Cocaine-induced thrombosis has been reported in the literature; however, its mechanism is not fully understood. Most cases are of small caliber vessels, such as the coronaries and cerebral vasculature. We report a case of a 36-year-old man with signs and symptoms of acute arterial insufficiency in his right lower extremity. ...
Katsumori T - - 1998
We performed transcatheter thrombolysis on a 64-year-old man with non-occluding superior mesenteric artery (SMA) thrombosis because his severe symptoms could not be controlled with medication. An enhanced computed tomography (CT) scan revealed intramural thrombosis in the SMA. We were concerned that the narrowing of the SMA lumen might progress to ...
Downing L J - - 1998
Vein wall inflammation associated with venous thrombosis is mediated by an imbalance in proinflammatory as compared with antiinflammatory molecules. We hypothesize that IL-10 is an important antiinflammatory cytokine that influences vein wall inflammation and thrombus propagation during venous thrombosis. To test this hypothesis a model of inferior vena caval thrombosis ...
Nagaraja D - - 1998
Morbidity and mortality in puerperal cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) can be reduced by arresting the progression of thrombosis using heparin. However, conventional dose of heparin requires monitoring of coagulation parameters and carries a risk of haemorrhage. The present study involved 56 patients of puerperal CVT with CT evidence of haemorrhagic ...
Holden A - - 1998
A 58-year-old woman presented with bilateral upper limb ischaemia. Digital subtraction angiography demonstrated upper limb arterial thrombosis, extensive on the left. This was initially treated with catheter-directed thrombolysis which cleared the thrombus on the right, although the left upper limb required supplementary surgical embolectomy. Subsequently, biopsy-proven pancreatic adenocarcinoma was detected. ...
Atkins K A - - 1998
Individuals with more than one defect in natural coagulant/anticoagulant systems have been postulated to be at an increased risk for thrombotic events. We report a case of combined protein S and C deficiency in a young woman, which resulted in fatal arterial mesenteric thrombosis. The role of coagulation defects in ...
Carmeliet P - - 1998
The development of efficient transgenic technologies in mice has allowed the study of the consequences of genetic alterations on cardiovascular (patho)physiology, although the development of such models have been hampered by size limitation of species resulting in time-consuming, labor-intensive and costly analyses. This overview summarizes the murine models currently available ...
Malnick S D - - 1998
Acute leukemia may be linked to disturbances of the coagulation system, which are usually due to hyperviscosity because of disseminated intravascular coagulation or a high white cell count. We report a unique case of femoral artery thrombosis as the beginning symptom of acute monocytic leukemia (M5) associated with a low ...
Sato K - - 1998
The antithrombotic effects of a novel factor Xa inhibitor, YM-60828 ([N-[4-[(1-acetimidoyl-4-piperidyl)oxy]phenyl]-N-[(7-amidino-2-nap hthyl)methyl]sulfamoyl]acetic acid dihydrochloride), in three thrombosis models in guinea pigs were studied in comparison with its effect on bleeding time. The antithrombotic effects of YM-60828 were most pronounced in the venous thrombosis and the arterio-venous shunt models but YM-60828 ...
Atsumi T - - 1998
OBJECTIVE: To explore a possible correlation between endothelin 1 (ET-1), the most potent endothelium-derived contracting factor that modulates vascular smooth muscle tone, and arterial disease in patients with the antiphospholipid syndrome (APS). METHODS: Plasma levels of ET-1 were measured in APS patients with (n = 16) and without (n = ...
Muckart D J - - 1998
Although venous thrombosis is a common sequela of central venous catheterisation, the vast majority of patients remain asymptomatic. Possible aetiological factors include catheter material, catheter-related sepsis, endothelial trauma, osmotic injury, and hypercoagulable states. Of these, only the first and last have been proven to increase the incidence. Thrombosis of the ...
Moore L A - - 1998
A six-day-old Missouri foxtrotter colt was examined because it had had diarrhoea since it was 24 hours old. A diagnosis of colitis, septicaemia, and disruption of the arterial blood flow to the pelvic limbs was made on the basis of clinical and laboratory findings. Despite intensive medical therapy, the foal ...
Matsumori A - - 1998
This study was designed to measure circulating hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) in a rat model of arterial thrombosis. The carotid endothelial surface of rats was denuded with a balloon catheter and partially occluded. The amount of thrombus formation was expressed as the difference between the wet weights of paired treated ...
Derdeyn C P - - 1998
Aseptic cortical venous thrombosis is rare without concomitant dural sinus thrombosis. Ulcerative colitis is associated with both dural sinus thrombosis and isolated cortical venous thrombosis. We describe a 26-year-old woman with ulcerative colitis who had a spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage. An overlying thrombosed cortical vein was identified on spin-echo MR images ...
Reilly M P - - 1998
We describe a case of cerebral emboli related to pulmonary venous thrombosis after bilateral lung transplantation in a young man with cystic fibrosis. The diagnosis was made by transesophageal echocardiography, leading to aggressive anticoagulation within 24 hours of surgery. Hemodynamic deterioration in the following hours was of concern for the ...
Marsh Lyle E - - 1998
The importance of thrombin in arterial and venous thrombosis renders thrombin inhibition an important therapeutic target. Identification of novel inhibitors requires an appropriate animal model. We modified a previously reported rat arterial thrombosis model to allow simultaneous assessment of the arterial and venous antithrombotic efficacies of heparin, hirudin, hirulog, a ...
Peyton B D - - 1998
Pneumonia is the most common serious complication of varicella infection in adults. A variety of thrombotic complications including purpura fulminans and disseminated intravascular coagulation have been reported in children with varicella but not in adults. Two men with varicella pneumonia who had profound lower extremity ischemia caused by thrombosis of ...
Grimes D A - - 1998
BACKGROUND: Cerebrovascular complications of meningitis have been most extensively documented in the setting of acute bacterial or chronic tuberculous meningitis. Involvement of major cerebral vessels is rare and basilar artery thrombosis has not been reported in fungal meningitis secondary to candida infection. METHODS: We describe the clinical course and neuropathological ...
Kelton J G - - 1998
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia develops when patients given heparin as treatment for thrombosis have an immunologic reaction to the agent. Patients may have an underlying thrombotic disorder--for example, venous thrombosis or pulmonary embolism--that requires intervention. Alternative antithrombotic therapies that have been tried include defibrinogenating agents, LMWH and heparinoids, thrombin-specific inhibitors, antiplatelet agents, ...
Scoditti U - - 1998
To establish if an association exists between use of oral contraceptives (OC) and the occurrence of cerebral arterial thromboembolism, cerebral venous thrombosis and retinal vein/artery thrombosis, we identified all women aged 15-44 years resident in the province of Parma, Italy, who were hospitalized because of a documented cerebral or retinal ...
Murphy K D - - 1998
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia and thrombosis syndrome (HITTS) is an immune-mediated response to the administration of heparin that results in life-threatening thrombosis. The pathophysiology of HITTS remains controversial. The onset of clinical symptoms and laboratory changes is usually delayed 1-2 weeks after exposure to heparin. Thrombosis occurs in both the arterial and ...
Bellinger D A - - 1998
Older oral contraceptive (OC) formulations containing high doses of potent synthetic estrogens and progestins are associated with increased risk of thrombosis. To examine the effects of current low-dose OC and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) regimens on arterial thrombosis, premenopausal and surgically postmenopausal cynomolgus monkeys were divided into four treatment groups. ...
Bos G M - - 1998
In recent years hyperhomocysteinemia has been established as a new risk factor for neural tube defects, arterial cardiovascular disease, and venous thrombosis. Concerning vascular problems, it first became clear that hyperhomocysteinemia might be (though not proven) a risk factor for arterial disease as observed in case-control studies, as well as ...
Hayag-Barin J E - - 1998
Thrombocytosis in post-splenectomy patients with hereditary spherocytosis (HS) is usually not attended by an increased risk of thrombosis. Review of the literature revealed HS in association with pulmonary thrombosis, portal vein thrombosis, and cerebral infarction in two brothers, TTP in an asplenic patient and a patient with corpora cavernosum thrombosis ...
Malik G H - - 1998
A 23-year-old Saudi female presented with nephrotic syndrome. On renal biopsy she had primary focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis which was resistant to steroids. Two years later she presented with absent left arm pulses and on investigation a diagnosis of left ventricular thrombosis and thromboembolism of left brachial artery was made. ...
Lee D H - - 1998
To determine whether factor V Leiden is associated with thrombotic events in patients with heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT), we evaluated 165 patients with serologically confirmed HIT for the presence of factor V Leiden and determined the incidence of venous or arterial thrombosis during the period of HIT. Factor V Leiden was ...
Berry C N - - 1998
We studied the use of the Ecarin Clotting Time (ECT) as a predictive assay of the antithrombotic effects of argatroban in a new tissue factor-dependent model of venous thrombosis and a model of arterial thrombosis in the rat. Heparin was used as a reference anticoagulant. Infusions of argatroban dose-dependently increased ...
Arruda V R - - 1997
The prothrombin gene variant resulting form a G-->A transition at position 20210 has been described as a common genetic risk factor for venous thrombosis. However, the risk for developing arterial disease is unknown. In this investigation, we studied 116 patients with venous thrombosis and 71 with arterial disease, all of ...
Belougne-Malfatti E - - 1997
It is well known that high stress and particularly an enhancement of plasma catecholamines and myocardial infarction have a close relation. In addition, adrenaline is presented as a prothrombogenic agent in vivo. The role of the other agents such as serotonin or acetylcholine, in the development of arterial thrombosis is ...
Bennett J S - - 1997
Thrombosis can occur on the venous or the arterial side of the circulation. Each has different causes, requires a different diagnostic workup, and responds to different therapies. Venous thrombosis may be situational, but may also reflect inherited or acquired anticoagulation defects. Arterial thrombosis usually results from abnormalities in the blood ...
Foshager M C - - 1997
OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to determine whether elevated pancreatic transplant arterial resistive index (RI) and absence of venous flow correlate with pancreatic transplant venous thrombosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Thirteen episodes of surgically documented pancreatic venous thrombosis occurred in 175 pancreases that had been transplanted over a 3-year period. Duplex sonography ...
Toursarkissian B - - 1997
PURPOSE: Thrombosed peripheral vessels that are pharmacologically or mechanically recanalized have diminished long-term patency rates compared with vessels that are repaired before occlusion. We hypothesized that thrombosis induces proinflammatory changes in the arterial media that may contribute to postthrombotic vascular remodeling. METHODS: We studied expression of intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM), ...
Semashko D C - - 1997
This article reviews the initial assessment and emergent management of several common as well as uncommon vascular emergencies. Aortic dissection, aneurysms, and arterial occlusive disease are familiar but challenging clinical entities. Less frequently encountered conditions are also discussed including an aortic enteric fistula, mesenteric venous thrombosis, phlegmasia alba dolens, and ...
Saxena A - - 1997
Arterial thrombosis is the most frequent major complication of percutaneous arterial catheterization in children. We prospectively studied the effect of randomized dosage of heparin, 50 IU/kg-group I and 100 IU/kg-group II, on the incidence of arterial thrombosis in 366 children and analysed the various factors which may influence the occurrence ...
Rosendaal F R - - 1997
Thrombosis occurs most often as myocardial infarction, cerebral infarction or venous thromboembolism, ie, deep-vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. The incidence of all types of thrombosis is strongly dependent on age. Among young individuals, up to age 40, venous thrombosis is the most common form of thrombosis. The risk factors for ...
Ambrosio G - - 1997
Arterial thrombus formation is the result of complex events which require the interaction of damaged vessel walls with blood cellular elements and coagulation factors, and in which several mediators may play a role. In this context, the role of 'classical' chemical mediators such as thrombin, thromboxane or serotonin in initiating ...
Scholes S F - - 1997
A 3-year-old Angora goat that developed acute fibrinous pleuropneumonia associated with Pasteurella haemolytica infection had thrombotic occlusion of a large pulmonary vein. Thrombosis of pulmonary capillaries occurs in pneumonic pasteurellosis, but large vessels are not commonly affected. This unusual lesion may reflect the procoagulant effect of pasteurella endotoxin on vascular ...
Everitt N J - - 1997
BACKGROUND: Thrombophlebitis frequently complicates intravenous infusion, but its precise pathogenesis remains unclear. METHODS: Serial B mode ultrasonographic imaging was used to detect intraluminal thrombosis when intravenous nutrition was delivered via fine-bore catheters inserted into peripheral veins. RESULTS: Thrombus was detected in 14 of 22 catheterized veins. There were nine episodes ...
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