Search results for "CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE."
showing 10 items of 2331 documents
Cardiovascular Risk Factors - Association with Lower Extremity Versus Coronary Artery Disease
2021
Abstract Atherosclerosis is the main cause of lower extremity artery disease (LEAD) and coronary artery disease (CAD). These two arterial territories share the major cardiovascular risk factors: smoking, hypertension, dyslipidaemia and diabetes. Current guidelines draw attention to other possible risk factors: homocysteine level, inflammation markers (e.g. high-sensitive C reactive-protein (CRP), interleukin 6) and chronic kidney disease (CKD.) The objective of this study was to evaluate the cardiovascular risk factors strength association with LEAD and CAD on a study population of 203 patients. Our study concluded that smoking seems to be the most powerful risk factor for LEAD, especially …
Factor V Leiden and prothrombin gene G20210A mutations in Italian patients with Behçet's disease and deep vein thrombosis
2004
Objective To evaluate the frequency and type of vascular lesions and to study the association of factor V gene G1691A (Leiden) and prothrombin gene G20210A polymorphisms with venous thrombosis in Italian patients with Behcet's disease (BD). Methods Included were 118 consecutive Italian BD patients followed over a 3-year period (1997–1999) who satisfied the International Study Group criteria for BD. The control group consisted of 132 healthy Italian blood donors. All BD patients and controls were genotyped by polymerase chain reaction and allele-specific restriction enzyme techniques for factor V Leiden and prothrombin gene G20210A polymorphisms. Results Vascular lesions were observed in 37 …
Time-frequency analysis for early classification of persistent and long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation
2016
This study aimed to assess an early classification of persistent and long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation patients by means of the time-frequency analysis of the surface ECG, which would allow electrophysiologists to choose the most suitable therapeutic approach to treat this arrhythmia. 140 consecutive unselected patients suffering from atrial fibrillation conformed the study population (84 persistent and 56 long-standing persistent). After ventricular activity cancellation, time-frequency analysis of the atrial activity was performed. Then, the study of phase variations along time for those frequency bands where the average power of atrial activity is concentrated, together with t…
Endovascular Treatment of Giant Visceral Aneurysms: An Overview
2021
Giant visceral aneurysms (or pseudoaneurysms) are aneurysmal lesions of the splanchnic vessels that are larger than 5 cm in diameter. As with other visceral aneurysms, treatment may be either surgical or endovascular. Both treatments face challenges given the anatomical complexity of such lesions. However, in the era of novel tools and techniques that have been developed in this field, an increasing number of giant visceral aneurysms can now be treated using endovascular approaches. The purpose of this article is to offer an overview of the most current techniques and trends in the endovascular treatment of giant visceral artery aneurysms.
Orthotope arterialisierte Lebertransplantation bei Ratten mit Stenttechnik der supra- und infrahepatischen v. cava
2003
The aim of this study was to establish a liver transplant model with a reduced warm ischemic period between cold preservation and completed anastomosis. Male brown Norway rats were used. A cuff was fixed in the portal vein, stents were inserted in the A. hepatica, the suprahepatic and infrahepatic v. cava and in the bile duct. After cross clamping of the recipient liver, another stent, occluded by a small pin, was introduced in the recipient suprahepatic v. cava. After ligation of this recipient suprahepatic caval stent the recipient liver was removed and the cold prepared donor liver was pushed forward along the pin and both suprahepatic stents of recipient and donor were connected. Then c…
Reperfusion Treatment in an Acute Myocardial Infarction in Patients Older Than 75 Years. Do We Need a Randomized Controlled Trial?
2005
Fibrinolytic therapy in ST-segment elevation acute myocardial infarction (AMI) constitutes one of the most important advances in cardiology in the last 25 years and has influenced the management and evolution of patients as much as the first coronary care units did. The most important limitations of fibrinolytics are the presence of absolute or relative contraindications to their administration in ≤25% of patients, their limited capacity to restore adequate coronary flow and the risk of inducing cerebral hemorrhage. They are at their most efficient in the first 2 hours’ evolution of AMI but lose their efficacy thereafter. 1 Consequently, treatment must be initiated as early as possible and …
Is it time to be concerned about the effects of e-cigarettes on cardiovascular health?
2018
nrCBF and EEG Monitoring During Probatory Balloon Occlusion of the Internal Carotid Artery
1985
Surgical treatment of tumors in the neck and throat rounding the carotid artery or of giant aneurysms originating from this vessel often makes ligation or resection of the internal carotid artery necessary. This procedure carries a 15%–30% morbidity from cerebral ischemia according to the literature (2, 7).
Relationship between Diabetes and Ischemic Stroke: Analysis of Diabetes- Related Risk Factors for Stroke and of Specific Patterns of Stroke Associate…
2015
Diabetes and ischemic stroke are common diseases that frequently occurring together. Among patients with diabetes mellitus several factors contribute in varying degrees to the overall cerebrovascular risk including hyperglycemia, vascular risk factors such as hypertension and dyslipidemia and also genetic, demographic, and lifestyle factors and several studies have shown that people with diabetes have approximately twice the risk of ischemic stroke compared with those without diabetes. The association between ischemic stroke and diabetes is bidirectional and it is not limited to acute ischemic stroke since diabetes may contribute to a more insidious brain damage represented by lacunar infar…
Combining Body Mass Index With Measures of Central Obesity in the Assessment of Mortality in Subjects With Coronary Disease
2013
Objectives This study sought to assess the mortality risk of patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) based on a combination of body mass index (BMI) and measures of central obesity. Background In CAD patients, mortality has been reported to vary inversely with BMI (“obesity paradox”). In contrast, central obesity is directly associated with mortality. Because of this bi-directional relationship, we hypothesized that CAD patients with normal BMI but with central obesity would have worse survival compared with subjects with other combinations of BMI and central adiposity. Methods We included 15,547 participants with CAD who took part in 5 studies from 3 continents. Multivariate stratified…