AORTIC ARTERITIS
Aortitis is an inflammatory process of the aortic wall that may be caused by several disease processes, When it involves the origin of various aortic branches (e.g., the innominate artery, the left common carotid artery, and the left subclavian artery), it is termed the “aortic arch syndrome” and is characteristically produced by Takayasu’s syndrome but also by syphilis, arteriosclerosis, or dissecting aneurysm. Takayasu’s arteritis or pulseless disease appears to be most common in Japanese females and is an aortic panarteritis that leads to eventual luminal obliteration from the thickened walls and superimposed thrombus. Localized aneurysm formation may occur. The process may involve the coronary ostia or any of the branches of the aortic arch. Tertiary syphilis causes an aortic arteritis that may lead to an ascending aortic aneurysm, aortic valvulitis with insufficiency, and/or coronary ostial stenosis. It is a late manifestation of syphilis, usually occurring 10 to 30 years after the primary infection. Routine serological tests may be negative, but the Treponema pallidum immobilization or the fluorescent Treponemal antibody absorption test are almost always positive. The media of the aorta is destroyed from necrosis of smooth muscle and elastic tissue. The intima assumes a wrinkled appearance referred to as “tree barking.” Involvement is much more prominent in the aortic root than in the distal aorta, in contrast to atherosclerotic aortic aneurysms. This whole process is often asymptomatic and detected by egg shell calcification of the ascending aorta on chest x-ray.
- AORTIC ARTERITIS
- NONRESPIRATORY FUNCTIONS OF THE LUNG
- Factors Involved in the Choice of Type of Dialysis
- Screening and Prevention
- Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis
- PENETRATING TRAUMA
- Mechanism of Proteinuria
- Uremic Osteodystrophy
- PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF AIRWAY OBSTRUCTION
- Amiodarone
- CLINICAL ASSESSMENT OF THE REGULATION OF VENTILATION
- Multiple Myeloma
- CARDIAC TRAUMA
- Acid-Base Abnormalities
- Public health and environment
- INVASIVE DIAGNOSTIC TECHNIQUES
- CLINICAL AMD LABORATORY FEATURES
- Laparoscopy
- CLINICAL PRESENTATION AND DIAGNOSIS
- Neurologic Manifestations
- Proliferative Glomerulonephritis
- Treatment and Prognosis
- ADAPTATION TO NEPHRON LOSS
- GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CARDIAC SURGERY
- Diabetes Mellitus (DM)
- Nephritic Glomerulopathies
- DEFINITION
- CARDIAC PACEMAKERS
- CLASSIFICATION OF THE MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES
- Verapamil
- VASCULAR DISEASE OF THE LIVER
- Visceral Angiography
- RISK FACTORS
- THE COMMON CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS OF GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE
- Alberto N. v. Hawkins