Literature DB >> 7444764

Arterial embolization: problems of source, multiplicity, recurrence, and delayed treatment.

J P Elliott, J H Hageman, E Szilagyi, V Ramakrishnan, J J Bravo, R F Smith.   

Abstract

The clinical course of 225 patients who had experienced 309 arterial embolic episodes was reviewed with special reference to the problems of the identification of the source of embolization, multiplicity of involvement, significance of recurrence, and the effects of some therapeutic means, including anticoagulation, on the early and late results. The most common source of embolization was cardiac (in 85% of the cases). Persistent search, at times by complex diagnostic methods, uncovered the origin in all but 11% of the cases. Within a range of 8 hours to 7 days the effect of delayed treatment had a linear relationship to the severity of ischemic changes and the deterioration of favorable results. Angiography was helpful and often essential in the diagnosis of visceral embolism and in differentiating local thrombosis from embolism in the periphery. Recurrent embolization was common (in 28% of the cases), was often multiple, and had a grave prognosis. Permanent anticoagulant therapy, preferably with but even without the removal of the source of embolization, reduced the rate of recurrence and, in general, reduced early and late morbidity and mortality rates.

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Year:  1980        PMID: 7444764

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Surgery        ISSN: 0039-6060            Impact factor:   3.982


  13 in total

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2.  Delayed presentation and treatment of popliteal artery embolism.

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5.  Arterial surgery of the upper extremity.

Authors:  D Bergqvist; B F Ericsson; P Konrad; S E Bergentz
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6.  Update experience of surgery for acute limb ischaemia in a district general hospital - are we getting any better?

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7.  Aortic saddle embolus. A twenty-year experience.

Authors:  R W Busuttil; G Keehn; J Milliken; V M Paredero; J D Baker; H I Machleder; W S Moore; W F Barker
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1983-06       Impact factor: 12.969

8.  Long-term results of percutaneous aspiration embolectomy.

Authors:  H J Wagner; E E Starck; P Reuter
Journal:  Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol       Date:  1994 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.740

9.  Combined arterial and venous whole-body MR angiography with cardiac MR imaging in patients with thromboembolic disease--initial experience.

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10.  Should embolectomy be performed in late acute lower extremity arterial occlusions?

Authors:  Hikmet Iyem; M Nesimi Eren
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