1. Roentgenographic aspects of intestinal ischemia
- Author
-
Roger H. Tutton, Seymour Fiske Ochsner, and Stover L. Smith
- Subjects
Adult ,Diarrhea ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Abdominal pain ,Malabsorption ,Time Factors ,Arteriosclerosis ,Embolism ,Ischemia ,Infarction ,Pain ,Enema ,Gastroenterology ,Intestinal mucosa ,Malabsorption Syndromes ,Internal medicine ,Abdomen ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Angiography ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Aortic Aneurysm ,Intestines ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Acute Disease ,Chronic Disease ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Barium Sulfate ,business ,Gastrointestinal Motility - Abstract
Until recent years, the general concept of vascular disease involving the intestine was of overwhelming infarction leading to rapid death unless corrected surgically. While this type of involvement may occur, there has been increasing recognition of a whole spectrum of intestinal ischemic states. Some are mild and chronic. Longstanding symptoms such as abdominal pain, weight loss, disturbed intestinal peristalsis, malabsorption, or fatty diarrhea may be the result of ischemic intestinal abnormality.The possibility of a vascular abnormality as a cause for such complaints should be more promptly recognized by clinicians and by radiologists. Plain roentgenograms and contrast studies of the bowel may be interpreted with greater understanding and discrimination if the patterns produced by ischemia are more widely recognized.Arteriography then gives the diagnostic roentgenologist a very accurate method of identifying the presence of vascular disease, of localizing with precision, and studying the pattern of abn...
- Published
- 1972