Subclavian Steal Syndrome
Mostrando 1-12 de 15 artigos, teses e dissertações.
-
1. Carotid Subclavian Bypass for the Treatment of Coronary Subclavian Steal Syndrome
Abstract Coronary subclavian steal syndrome is an uncommon cause of angina in patients with a previous coronary artery bypass graft procedure. The patient had chest pain with the exertion of the left upper limb, difference in blood pressure between the left and right arm, occlusion at the ostium of the left subclavian artery. He underwent carotid subclavian
Brazilian Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery. Publicado em: 2022
-
2. Objective evaluation of upper limbs ischemia: use of isokinetic dynamometer / "Avaliação objetiva da isquemia de membros superiores: uso do dinamômetro isocinético"
O objetivo deste trabalho é apresentar o teste de esforço com o dinamômetro isocinético na avaliação objetiva da isquemia funcional da doença arterial oclusiva de membros superiores (DAOMS). Reuniu-se 23 pacientes com DAOMS unilateral, no grupo 1. Sete pacientes, sem DAOMS foram selecionados como o grupo controle (grupo 2). Os membros testados sem DAO
Publicado em: 2005
-
3. Inversão circulatória vértebro-subclávia - "steal syndrome" - secundária a trauma torácico fechado
The authors report a case of thrombosis of the right subclavian artery in its pre-vertebral segment causing subclavian steal syndrome as a result of a blunt thoracic trauma in a 43-year-old woman. Aspects of the diagnosis and surgical treatment of this rare injury are reported and discussed.
Revista do Colégio Brasileiro de Cirurgiões. Publicado em: 2004-06
-
4. Congenital subclavian steal syndrome in an adult with a left aortic arch.
To our knowledge, all of the cases of congenital subclavian steal syndrome encountered to date in adults have involved a right aortic arch. We present an angiographically proven case of congenital subclavian steal syndrome involving a left aortic arch in an adult.
-
5. Magnetic resonance angiography in subclavian steal syndrome
A case is reported of a patient with the subclavian steal syndrome in whom the reversed blood flow of the vertebral artery was shown by phase encoded magnetic resonance angiography.
-
6. Acute subclavian steal syndrome following blunt thoracic trauma
A rare case of acute subclavian steal syndrome following blunt thoracic trauma is described. By aortography, obstruction of the origin of the left subclavian artery was found and the reversed flow through the vertebral artery was demonstrated. This injury was successfully treated by an aortosubclavian bypass Dacron prosthesis using a left posterolateral thor
-
7. Unusual subclavian steal phenomenon.
A patient who had undergone myocardial revascularization with a saphenous vein graft to the left anterior descending artery and a left internal thoracic (mammary) artery graft to the 1st diagonal branch presented with an unusual form of subclavian steal syndrome. Occlusion of both the left subclavian and the left anterior descending arteries caused retrograd
-
8. Coronary-subclavian steal syndrome
Pulsus Group Inc.
-
9. Management of the subclavian steal syndrome.
-
10. Congenital subclavian steal syndrome associated with right aortic arch.
-
11. Congenital isolation of the subclavian artery in adults.
The congenital anomaly of isolation of the subclavian artery, on the left side, is associated with a right aortic arch. The subclavian artery loses its connection with the aorta and is connected to the left pulmonary artery via the ligamentum arteriosum. Subclavian steal syndrome accompanies this anomaly in a minority of patients. We report 2 cases of adults
-
12. Stenting for occlusion of the subclavian arteries. Technical aspects and follow-up results.
We report the results of stenting in 17 patients who underwent treatment for total occlusions in the subclavian arteries between July 1991 and December 1995. Fourteen of the lesions were located in the left side; 15 patients had a subclavian steal syndrome. The indications for treatment were vertebrobasilar insufficiency (n = 7); arm claudication (n = 5); ve