Results of Surgical Treatment of Arterial Embolism

1979 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. P. Szczepanski
Vascular ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 222-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marković Miroslav ◽  
Davidović Lazar ◽  
Mikić Aleksandar ◽  
Djorić Predrag ◽  
Putnik Svetozar

The purpose of this study was to present 11 patients operated on owing to rare forms of peripheral arterial embolism at the Institute for Cardiovascular Diseases of the Serbian Clinical Center over a period of 20 years. Three patients were operated on owing to a foreign body embolism, two owing to a septic embolism, three owing to emboli that originated from malignant tissues, two owing to an embolization from cardiac myxoma, and one owing to an embolism from a myxomatous atrial septal defect. The preoperative evaluation included clinical examination, laboratory findings, and electrocardiography; in the majority of cases, ultrasonography and angiography were performed. Surgical treatment included foreign body extraction in three cases; thromboembolectomy in seven cases, and artery resection and saphenous graft interposition in one patient with septic embolism. In addition, three cardiosurgical procedures were done: aortic valve replacement in the patient with a septic embolism and tumor excision in patients with atrial myxoma. In addition to the usual clinical signs of acute limb ischemia, in the rare forms of arterial embolism, the presence of certain uncommon clinical symptoms was also observed. The early results of vascular surgical treatment were very good in all patients. Further follow-up revealed a poor prognosis in patients with malignant arterial embolism.


JAMA ◽  
1933 ◽  
Vol 101 (1) ◽  
pp. 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
ARTHUR A. ZIEROLD

Author(s):  
M.D. Graham

The recent development of the scanning electron microscope has added great impetus to the study of ultrastructural details of normal human ossicles. A thorough description of the ultrastructure of the human ossicles is required in order to determine changes associated with disease processes following medical or surgical treatment.Human stapes crura were obtained at the time of surgery for clinical otosclerosis and from human cadaver material. The specimens to be examined by the scanning electron microscope were fixed immediately in the operating room in a cold phosphate buffered 2% gluteraldehyde solution, washed with Ringers, post fixed in cold 1% osmic acid and dehydrated in graded alcohol. Specimens were transferred from alcohol to a series of increasing concentrations of ethyl alcohol and amyl acetate. The tissue was then critical point dried, secured to aluminum stubs and coated with gold, approximately 150A thick on a rotating stage in a vacuum evaporator. The specimens were then studied with the Kent-Cambridge S4-10 Scanning Electron Microscope at an accelerating voltage of 20KV.


2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A401-A401
Author(s):  
M BOERMEESTER ◽  
E BELT ◽  
B LAMME ◽  
M LUBBERS ◽  
J KESECIOGLU ◽  
...  

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