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  • Distal ulnar artery  (1)
  • Schlüsselwörter Paradoxe Embolie • Fraktur • Foramen ovale  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Der Unfallchirurg 100 (1997), S. 908-912 
    ISSN: 1433-044X
    Keywords: Key words paradoxical embolism • fracture • foramen ovale ; Schlüsselwörter Paradoxe Embolie • Fraktur • Foramen ovale
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Zusammenfassung In etwa 25 % der Fälle ist im Erwachsenenalter das Foramen ovale anatomisch offen, funktionell, bedingt durch den höheren Druck im linken Vorhof, aber geschlossen. Wenn z. B. durch eine Lungenembolie ein höherer Druck durch Rechtsherzbelastung im rechten Vorhof entsteht, kann sich ein funktionell normalerweise geschlossenes Foramen ovale wieder öffnen, und durch den eintretenden Rechts-links-Shunt der Weg für eine paradoxen Embolie gebahnt werden. Im vorliegenden Fall traten bei einer Patientin 20 Tage nach operativer Versorgung einer subtrochantären Oberschenkelfraktur mittels Kondylenplatte Wortfindungsstörungen auf. Die deshalb durchgeführte Magnetresonanztomographie (MRT) des Schädels zeigte einen frischen ischämischen Infarkt. Nachdem die übliche Durchuntersuchung mit Duplexsonographie der Karotiden keinerlei Erklärung für den ischämischen Infarkt ergeben hatte, wurde eine paradoxe Embolie über ein offenes Foramen ovale vermutet. Anschließend konnte sowohl duplexsonographisch eine frische Thrombose der V. femoralis superficialis als auch szintigraphisch eine Lungenembolie nachgewiesen werden. Die transösophageale Echokontrastkardiographie stellte ein spontan hämodynamisch wirksames offenes Foramen ovale dar. Der Fall zeigt, daß inapparente Beinvenenthrombosen durch zerebrale Defizite, wie z. B. Wortfindungsstörungen manifest werden können, und veranschaulicht den Pathomechanismus einer paradoxen Embolie.
    Notes: Summary The foramen ovale is anatomically open in 25 % of individuals, but functionally closed by the higher pressure in the left antrum. Right-to-left shunt and subsequent paradoxical embolism may occur when pressure in the left antrum rises, for example, as a result of pulmonary embolism. In the present case we demonstrate a patient who presented 20 days after osteosynthetic treatment of a femoral fracture with word-finding deficits. Cerebral MRT revealed a fresh ischemic insult. Duplex ultrasound of the legs showed a fresh thrombosis of the superficial femoral vein and scintigraphy of the lungs detected pulmonary embolism. Transesophageal contrast echocardiography trapped a hemodynamically spontaneous, open foramen ovale. Duplex ultrasound of the carotid arteries detected no pathological findings. Deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism can be clinically unconspicuous and become manifest by cerebral deficits resulting from paradox embolism and cerebral ischemia.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy 4 (1996), S. 167-170 
    ISSN: 1433-7347
    Keywords: Hypothenar hammer syndrome ; Distal ulnar artery
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine , Sports Science
    Notes: Abstract Repetitive blunt trauma or single severe trauma to the hypothenar region may lead to traumatic thrombosis of the distal ulnar artery (hypothenar hammer syndrome, HHS). In the sports-related literature we found and analysed isolated cases attributed to injuries sustained during sporting activities such as baseball, badminton, handball, football, frisbee, softball, karate, weight-lifting and hockey. Further, we report the case of an amateur golf player with ischaemic symptoms of his left hand, where angiography revealed filling defects in the digital arteries associated with a corkscrew-like configuration of the distal ulnar artery. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan demonstrated, at the level of the hamulus ossis hamati, accessory fibres of m. palmaris brevis forming a sling around the ulnar artery. Treatment by resection of the ulnar artery. Treatment by resection of the thrombosed a. ulnaris segment and replacement with an autologous vein graft resulted in complete relief of symptoms. Histological sections revealed partially organized thrombi adherent to the intimal surface with fragmentation of the internal elastic membrane, indicating a traumatic genesis. As the mechanism of injury, we suspected intensive golf playing with the grip style and subsequent motions leading to pressure injury of the hypothenar area and the underlying ulnar artery. Contraction of the anomalous muscle belly may have additionally compressed the artery, slowing down the arterial flow and promoting thrombosis. In most reported cases including our own, it took a relatively long time until the cause of the disease as traumatic was found and accepted. The initial repetitive blunt or single severe trauma initiaing the HHS can easily be overlloked or ignored. After intimal damage of a. ulnaris, the beginning of symptoms may be prolonged and mislead one into thinking the cause is a collagen or vasospastic disease.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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