Results 151 to 160 of about 25,006 (191)
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Celiac artery aneurysmectomy with pancreatectomy
Journal of Vascular Surgery, 1986A case of symptomatic celiac artery aneurysm with pancreatic involvement treated by excision, 85% pancreatectomy, and direct reanastomosis of the common hepatic artery with restoration of arterial continuity is reported. This is the first reported case, of which we are aware, in which celiac artery aneurysm resection also required partial ...
R K, Wolf, P A, Carmichael, J H, Clark
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Spontaneous Dissection of the Celiac Artery
Annals of Vascular Surgery, 1997We describe a case of intestinal angina caused by spontaneous dissection of the celiac artery and thrombosis of the superior mesenteric artery. Spontaneous dissection of a visceral artery is an uncommon occurrence that is usually diagnosed after fatal hemorrhage or ischemia. The underlying mechanism is unclear but the frequent association with multiple
P, Chaillou +6 more
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Journal of Gastroenterology, 2004
We report a new strategy--celiac artery stenting--to relieve stenosis of the celiac arterial root. This was performed in two patients with pancreaticoduodenal artery (PDA) aneurysm associated with a stenotic celiac arterial root. The first patient was a 66-year-old man complaining of abrupt onset of upper abdominal pain.
Yu-Wen Tien +2 more
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We report a new strategy--celiac artery stenting--to relieve stenosis of the celiac arterial root. This was performed in two patients with pancreaticoduodenal artery (PDA) aneurysm associated with a stenotic celiac arterial root. The first patient was a 66-year-old man complaining of abrupt onset of upper abdominal pain.
Yu-Wen Tien +2 more
exaly +3 more sources
Hepatic- and Celiac-Artery Aneurysms
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1966ANEURYSMS of the hepatic and celiac arteries are both unusual and lethal. The total number of reports in the United States and European literature is 143 and 38, respectively. 1-20 Of the 37 cases treated surgically, excision of the aneurysm was successful in only a dozen.
W R, Sweetman, M J, Weinstein
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Celiac Artery Aneurysmectomy With Hepatic Artery Ligation
Archives of Surgery, 1972A patient had a large, asymptomatic celiac artery aneurysm. Elective aneurysmectomy was performed with ligation of the common hepatic, splenic, and left gastric branches. Hepatic revascularization is often necessary after excision of the celiac axis, but was not required in this patient because the gastroduodenal artery provided adequate collateral ...
N R, Hertzer, P H, Mullally
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Recurrent celiac artery compression syndrome
International Journal of Angiology, 1999The celiac artery compression syndrome (CACS) is an infrequently described clinical condition with poorly defined diagnostic criteria and an obscure pathophysiology. It is usually associated with an extrinsic compression upon the celiac axis near its takeoff from the aorta by fibrous diaphragmatic bands or sympathetic neural fibers.
, Frangos, , Steinthorsson, , Sumpio
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The Celiac Artery Syndrome—Again?
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1977Excerpt In this issue (pp. 278-284), the paper by Watson and Sadikali on the results of surgery for celiac artery compression reopens the debate on the existence of the so-called celiac artery synd...
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CELIAC ARTERY COMPRESSION SYNDROMES
Surgical Clinics of North America, 1997Compression of the visceral arteries can produce true mesenteric ischemia, but the syndrome is rare. The syndrome is caused by unfavorable anatomic relationships at the aortic hiatus among the CA, the SMA, and overlying structures, particularly the diaphragmatic crura.
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Celiac artery compression syndrome
The American Journal of Medicine, 1984Celiac artery compression syndrome has been referred to in the literature as an entity in limbo, yet there have been many cases that have been well documented. This report describes two cases of abdominal pain with epigastric bruits in which the diagnosis of celiac artery stenosis was made. The abdominal bruit with its diastolic component had been the "
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Annals of Internal Medicine, 1977
Excerpt To the editor: Controversy over celiac artery stenosis as a clinical entity was revitalized by the point-counterpoint communications of Watson and Sadikali (1) and Sleisenger (2) in a recen...
ARTHUR J. SIEGEL, JOHN MANNICK
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Excerpt To the editor: Controversy over celiac artery stenosis as a clinical entity was revitalized by the point-counterpoint communications of Watson and Sadikali (1) and Sleisenger (2) in a recen...
ARTHUR J. SIEGEL, JOHN MANNICK
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