Search results for "Femoral Artery"

showing 7 items of 57 documents

Iliac-femoral stent-graft infection after hybrid procedure redo: Case report

2021

Introduction Stent-graft infection in peripheral arteries is rare and potentially dangerous. The use of hybrid procedures, in complicated patients previously treated, involves an increase of infective risk especially in no collaborative patients. Presentation of case We report a case of rare stent-graft infection in a patient treated for a Rutherford IV Multiple Peripheral Arterial Disease (MPAD) involving the right iliac-femoral axis with stenosis on deep femoral artery due to a previously stenting procedure for Superficial Femoral artery (SFA) stenosis. The first simultaneous hybrid intervention consisted of an endovascular iliac stent-graft placement and a surgical common femoral patch a…

medicine.medical_specialtySuperficial femoral arterymedicine.medical_treatmentIschemiaCase ReportSettore MED/22 - Chirurgia Vascolare03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicine.arterymedicineDeep Femoral ArteryStent-graftcardiovascular diseasesEndovascularbusiness.industryStentmedicine.diseaseCommon iliac arterySurgeryCommon iliac arteryStenosissurgical procedures operativeAmputation030220 oncology & carcinogenesis030211 gastroenterology & hepatologySurgeryPresentation (obstetrics)InfectionComplicationbusinessInternational Journal of Surgery Case Reports
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Renal artery denervation for treating resistant hypertension: Definition of the disease, patient selection and description of the procedure

2012

Arterial hypertension is responsible for a significant burden of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, worldwide. Although several rational and integrated pharmacological strategies are available, the control of high blood pressure still remains largely unsatisfactory. Failure to achieve effective blood pressure control in treated hypertensive patients may have a substantial impact on individual global cardiovascular risk, since it significantly increases the risk of developing hypertension-related macrovascular and microvascular complications. Arterial hypertension is arbitrarily defined as 'resistant' or 'refractory' when the recommended blood pressure goals (clinic blood pressure below…

medicine.medical_specialtySympathetic nervous systemSettore MED/09 - Medicina InternahypertensionDrug ResistanceFemoral arteryRisk AssessmentNephropathyPharmacotherapyRenal ArteryRisk Factorsmedicine.arteryInternal medicinemedicineInternal MedicineHumansArterial PressureRenal arterySympathectomyrenal artery denervationglobal cardiovascular riskantihypertensive therapyAntihypertensive AgentsSettore MED/14 - NefrologiaDenervationrefractory hypertensiontreatmentbusiness.industryPatient SelectionType 2 Diabetes Mellitusresistant hypertensionmedicine.diseaseSettore MED/11 - Malattie Dell'Apparato Cardiovascolaremedicine.anatomical_structureBlood pressureTreatment Outcomeresistant hypertension refractory hypertension renal artery denervation antihypertensive therapy global cardiovascular risk.resistant-hypertension; treatment; hypertensionCardiologyCatheter AblationHypertension treatment; Resistant-hypertension treatment; Antihypertensive Agents; Humans; Hypertension; Patient Selection; Renal Artery; Risk Assessment; Risk Factors; Sympathectomy; Treatment Outcome; Arterial Pressure; Catheter Ablation; Drug Resistance; Internal Medicine; Cardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessCardiology and Cardiovascular Medicineresistant-hypertension
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Früh- und Spätergebnisse der perkutanen transluminalen Angioplastie (PTA) beim Diabetiker

1991

Results of 127 iliac and femoropopliteal transluminal angioplasties in 97 diabetic patients are presented. Patients who had undergone iliac (n = 70), femoral (n = 41), and popliteal (n = 16) angioplasties for stenoses up to 15 cm long were followed up for 6-60 months. In diabetic patients presenting with only claudication or adequate runoff, the 5-year iliac patency rate was 76% and the femoral patency rate was 60%; these results were comparable with those found in non-diabetic patients. For limb salvage, 3-year patency rates were 66% for iliac, 37% for femoral, and 37% for popliteal angioplasties, and 5-year patency rates were 29% for iliac, 7% for femoral, and 0% for popliteal angioplasti…

medicine.medical_specialtyVascular diseasebusiness.industryLimb salvageFemoral arterymedicine.diseasePeripheralSurgeryStenosismedicine.anatomical_structuremedicine.arteryDiabetes mellitusmedicineRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingmedicine.symptomClaudicationbusinessArteryRöFo - Fortschritte auf dem Gebiet der Röntgenstrahlen und der bildgebenden Verfahren
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No difference in 30-day outcome and quality of life in transradial versus transfemoral access – results from the German Austrian ABSORB registry (GAB…

2021

Abstract Background Radial (RA) instead of femoral access (FA) for coronary interventions has become a European Society of Cardiology Class-IA guideline recommendation. But when the decision on the access site is left to the discretion of the operator, differences in adverse event rates mitigate. Methods We compared the 30-day outcome for RA and FA in all patients recruited for the observational German Austrian ABSORB Registry (GABI-R) in regard to all-cause mortality, stroke, myocardial infarction (MI), TIMI major bleedings (TMB) and quality of life (QoL). All patients were treated with a bioresorbable vascular scaffold. Access site was left to the discretion of the operator. Results In to…

medicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentMyocardial InfarctionHemorrhagePercutaneous Coronary InterventionQuality of lifemedicineHumansMyocardial infarctionRegistriesStrokebusiness.industryPercutaneous coronary interventionGeneral MedicineGuidelinemedicine.diseaseFemoral ArteryStrokeTreatment OutcomeAustriaEmergency medicineCohortConventional PCIRadial ArteryQuality of LifeCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessTIMI
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“Less invasive” surgery in the treatment of cutaneous chronic ulcers of the lower limb in elderly

2010

The role of treatment of vascular lesions of the legs is very important in the elderly. Pain, inability, bandages, periodicity of medications can seriously interfere with a good quality of life because of the lower compliance of geriatric patients to accept a surgical approach. To allow a new approach to vascular lesions the Authors propose a guideline in which the topic of “less invasive” surgery is underlined based on their pathophysiological causes. Patients affected with lesions of the legs are addressed to the Leg Ulcers Centre by general physicians and selected on the basis of age and comorbility to propose a therapeutical plan. General conditions, evaluation of lesions healing and of…

medicine.medical_specialtyvascular lesions legs chronics ulcers elderlybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentHemodynamicsLecture presentationGuidelineFemoral arterylcsh:GeriatricsRevascularizationSurgeryLesionlcsh:RC952-954.6Settore MED/18 - Chirurgia GeneraleQuality of lifemedicine.arteryMedicineLocal anesthesiaImplantGeriatrics and Gerontologymedicine.symptombusinessBMC Geriatrics
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The "critical zones" of entrapment of the nerves of the lower limb.

1991

The author has studied, in a group of 40 dissections on cadavers of individuals of different ages, the main “critical zones” of entrapment of some terminal branches of the lumbo-sacral plexus, which include canals (fibrous, osteo-fibrous, fibro-muscular), intervals (intermuscular, fibro-muscular, musculo-ligamentous), rings (fibrous or fibro-muscular) and foramina. They provide the topographical anatomical basis for possible compressive phenomena of the nerves of the lower limb.

musculoskeletal diseasesMaleanimal structuresLower limbPathology and Forensic MedicinePelvisIliumEntrapmentCadaverMedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingFasciaPsoas MusclesPlexusLegLigamentsbusiness.industryFootMusclesNerve Compression SyndromesPeroneal NerveAnatomyFemoral Veinmusculoskeletal systemFemoral ArteryThighFibulaSurgeryFemaleAnatomyTibial NervebusinessObturator NerveSurgical and radiologic anatomy : SRA
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Funktionsangiographie der kniegelenknahen Arterien: Konsequenzen für die Stentimplantation?

1990

Angiographic studies of the arteries adjoining the knee in 25 patients show extensive kinking and stenoses of the popliteal artery and less frequently of the distal femoral artery during flexion of the knee joint. This is due to the loss of elasticity with increasing age forcing the vessel into a tortuous course during shortening of the pathway of the popliteal artery with knee flexion. Independent of the principle of the different stents available they probably will not increase the contractility of the stented vessel in the longitudinal axis. It is to expect that after implantation of stents into the popliteal artery kinking will occur predominantly in the original segments of the vessel …

musculoskeletal diseasesmedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryKnee flexionFemoral arteryKnee JointPopliteal arterySurgeryContractilitymedicine.arteryInternal medicineArterial Occlusive DiseasesAngiographymedicineCardiologyStent implantationRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingbusinessRöFo - Fortschritte auf dem Gebiet der Röntgenstrahlen und der bildgebenden Verfahren
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