Mesenteric ischemia disorders are precipitated by a circulation insufficiency event that deprives one or several abdominal organs of adequate respiration to meet metabolic demands. Although mesenteric ischemia occurs infrequently, the mortality rate is from 60% to 100%, depending on the source of obstruction. The successful outcome is dependent upon a high index of suspicion and prompt management. We briefly review the pathophysiology and presentation of the various ischemic entities and review the current state of the art in diagnosis and treatment. Despite advances in both diagnosis and treatment, prompt diagnosis and supportive care remain critical for successful outcome. New imaging techniques, endovascular therapy and emerging research may improve our approach to this deadly condition.
Death and cardiovascular events are higher after revascularization in octogenarians and septuagenarians, compared with controls, and are related to the severity of atherosclerosis and not age. Patency rates are excellent and similar. Limb salvage procedures should be considered for most octogenarians.
Aortic tissue elastase and alpha 1-antitrypsin were assayed in 67 patients with different types of infrarenal aortic disease; occlusive disease, elective abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs), multiple aneurysms, and ruptured aneurysms. Elastase modified by alpha 1-antitrypsin (elastase/alpha 1-antitrypsin) increased significantly as the type of aortic disease changed from occlusive to aneurysmal disease. Aortic elastase was significantly higher in patients with AAAs, multiple aneurysms, and ruptured AAAs compared with occlusive disease. The alpha 1-antitrypsin, was significantly lower in patients with multiple aneurysms and ruptured AAAs. These data suggest that the ratio between elastase and its major serum inhibitor, alpha 1-antitrypsin, is significantly altered in the aortic wall in different types of infrarenal aortic disease. In addition, the ratio between these two enzyme systems changes in favor of more proteolytic activity as the type of infrarenal disease changes from occlusive to aneurysmal.
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