145 patients with acute or subacute deep vein thrombosis confirmed by phlebography were treated with streptokinase. During the same period 42 patients considered unfit for thrombolytic therapy were treated with herapin and oral anticoagulants. The results, assessed by repeat phlebography, in 93 of the patients treated with streptokinase were compared with those in the 42 patients treated with heparin. The age, sex, and severity of occlusion were roughly similar in both groups. Streptokinase treatment was successful in 420,, partially successful in 25%, and unsuccessful in 32% of the 93 patients compared with none, 10%, and 880/ respectively in the 42 patients treated with heparin.Streptokinase was more effective when the thrombus was in proximal rather than calf veins. Thrombi of more than six days old were readily lysed. Plasma fibrinogen levels were below 0 8 g/l (80 mg/100 ml) in nearly all patients successfully treated. The incidence of pulmonary embolism was no greater with streptokinase than with heparin treatment. Only prolonged follow-up would show whether thrombolytic treatment would be effective in preventing late complications of deep vein thrombosis such as chronic venous insufficiency.
Energy metabolism of calf muscle was assessed non-invasively by phosphorus (31P) NMR spectroscopy in eleven patients with symptomatic arterial occlusion and in seven matched controls. Phosphocreatine (PCr) content and pH values decreased during non-ischaemic foot exercise to lower values in severely afflicted patients but in all patients, as a group, they were not significantly decreased compared to controls. In contrast, recovery from ischaemic exercise (arterial occlusion by a tourniquet) demonstrated significant differences between patients and controls. Intracellular pH and PCr recovered more slowly in patients than in controls; PCr recovery proceeded exponentially with a recovery half-time of 203 +/- 74 s in patients compared to 36.7 +/- 5.5 s in controls (P less than 0.02). Phosphocreatine (PCr) recovery after ischaemic exercise correlated significantly with the degree of arterial stenoses as assessed by Doppler ultrasound (r = 0.739, P = 0.019) and by angiography (r = 0.885, P = 0.005), suggesting that the degree of large vessel stenoses limits the postischaemic increase in mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. Reactive blood flow after ischaemia failed to correlate with PCr recovery or with the degree of arterial stenoses. Phosphorus (31P) NMR spectroscopy provides, therefore, quantitative parameters of muscle energy metabolism in patients with peripheral arterial occlusions.
We present the case of a woman where the diagnosis of cold agglutinin disease could be made after we had noticed slight cutaneous manifestations during a routine examination. Leading symptoms were livedo reticularis of the thighs and a history of acrocyanosis and Raynaud’s phenomenon upon cold exposure. The current knowledge about the etiology, clinical presentation and treatment of the disease is briefly discussed.
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