In the light of the current controversy surrounding the use of hemorheologic and vasodilator drugs in the treatment of peripheral arteriosclerosis, a comparative study was designed in order to evaluate the efficacy of pentoxifylline, buflomedil, and nifedipine in 45 patients with peripheral arterial disease (Fontaine stage II). The patients in this prospective randomized study were divided into three groups: 15 patients received pentoxifylline treatment (1,200 mg/day), 15 were treated with buflomedil (600 mg/day), and 15 with nifedipine (60 mg/day). Response to treatment was assessed at the start of the study and after forty-five and ninety days, by clinical examination, Doppler test, strain test, and digital occlusion plethysmography using a strain gauge ring. Pentoxifylline was significantly more effective (P < 0.05) than buflomedil and nifedipine at ninety days in improving walking performance, resting toe pressure, resting and postexercise ankle/brachial pressure ratio, and basal/postischemic toe-pulse ratio. Significant differences within groups were also noted for initial claudication, toe peak-flow time, pulse reappearance time (PRT/2), and maximum postischemic flow time, together with significant intergroup variables. In conclusion, pentoxifylline proved more effective than the other drugs tested in: 1. improving distal pressure and resting microcirculatory blood flow; 2. increasing postexercise distal flow, ratios, and pressures and enabling faster recuperation of basal pulse rates; 3. increasing initial claudication distance in the strain test within the test group and achieving a greater absolute subjective claudication distance than that obtained using the other treatments.
We have reviewed four cases of incomplete vascular rings caused by the presence of a common carotid trunk from which arose both carotid arteries associated with an aberrant right subclavian artery. The patients were aged between 3 and 9 months. All patients presented with recurrent respiratory tract infections. Three patients showed signs of malnutrition and failure to thrive caused by episodes of bronchial aspiration from extrinsic compression of the oesophagus. One patient presented with dyspnoea induced by feeding and another had stridor. A common carotid trunk associated with an aberrant subclavian artery was confirmed in all cases. No other associated anomaly was observed in any patient. Ligature and section of the anomalous right subclavian artery was performed in all patients. The low incidence of this type of vascular ring, its physiopathological mechanism and surgical management are discussed.
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