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Circulation | 1965

The Prognosis in Aortic Dissection (Dissecting Aortic Hematoma or Aneurysm)

Randolph M. Mccloy; John A. Spittell; Dwight C. McGoon

Between 1945 and 1961 50 patients with aortic dissection were seen at the Mayo Clinic. Survival information for prognostic purposes was available in 40 patients and revealed that more than half of the patients were dead within a week. Of 15 patients who survived the acute phase (2 weeks) more than half were dead within a year. The cause of death was determined by necropsy in 24 patients and 22 died of external rupture of the dissecting aneurysm. In 11 patients a site of re-entry in the dissection was found and in all of these patients external aortic rupture had occurred also. The surgical approach to the treatment of aortic dissection is discussed in the light of these findings. The relationship of the location of the primary tear, blood pressure, and the age of the patient to prognosis is reviewed.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1983

Hypertension and arterial aneurysm

John A. Spittell

The rather common coexistence of arterial aneurysm and systemic hypertension may be attributed to their respective frequency as clinical findings. The development of hypertension secondary to renal ischemia that can occur as a complication of certain types of aneurysmal disease is well recognized. Less well appreciated is the evidence to implicate hypertension as a factor in the pathogenesis of arterial aneurysms, perhaps in their progressive enlargement, and even in rupture. Furthermore, after resection of an aneurysm, systemic hypertension adversely influences survival, and it is an important contributing factor in the development of false aneurysms. A relation between hypertension and aortic dissection has received more recognition. Just how systemic hypertension contributes to the occurrence of aortic dissection is not clear, but the effective control of hypertension has the potential for decreasing the incidence of aortic dissection. The curious clinical association of hypertension with the location of the primary tear in the proximal part of the descending aorta (type III or type B) has several plausible explanations.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1993

Recommendations for training in vascular medicine

John A. Spittell; Mark A. Creager; Gerald Dorros; Jeffrey M. Isner; Navin C. Nanda; John L. Ochsner; Lewis Wexler; Jess R. Young

Abstract Each trainee in vascular medicine must be eligible for the board certification examination of the American Board of Internal Medicine or its equivalent. Training faculty, preferably at least two members, should meet the qualifications and training requirements described in this report. They must be dedicated, effective teachers and should spend most of their time in research, education and patient care related to peripheral vascular diseases. A curriculum of training should be established. Faculty experts in related specialties and in the related basic sciences should be available for teaching. The institution should have a fully equipped noninvasive vascular laboratory and areas where catheter revascularization techniques and vascular surgery are performed. The period of training should not be less than 1 year, preferably continuous.


Dm Disease-a-month | 1994

Peripheral arterial disease

John A. Spittell

Peripheral arterial diseases are common problems because atherosclerosis, the most common cause of both occlusive peripheral arterial disease and aneurysmal disease, is a feature of an aging population. The less common types of occlusive peripheral arterial disease--the vasospastic disorders and the arteritides--although frequently not addressed to any extent in medical school curricula or in residency programs in family and internal medicine, offer the alert and informed clinician diagnostic and therapeutic opportunities that are too important to neglect. As a group, abnormalities of the peripheral arteries are easy to detect if careful observation and examination of the extremities is included in the physical examination and attention to functional disorders is included in the medical history. In this presentation, the clinical features, physical findings, complications, useful noninvasive diagnostic tests, imaging techniques, and therapeutic options for atherosclerotic occlusive peripheral arterial disease (both chronic and acute), uncommon types of occlusive arterial disease of both the lower and upper extremities, the vasospastic disorders, and the peripheral arterial presentations of the arteritides are reviewed. The application of natural history and comorbidity of a particular arterial disease, when available, is emphasized in the formulation of management for the individual patient.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1993

Recommendations for peripheral transluminal angioplasty: Training and facilities

John A. Spittell; Mark A. Creager; Gerald Dorros; Jeffrey M. Isner; Navin C. Nanda; John L. Ochsner; Lewis Wexler; Jess R. Young


Current Problems in Cardiology | 1980

Clinical aspects of aneurysmal disease

John A. Spittell


Current Problems in Cardiology | 1990

Diagnosis and management of occlusive peripheral arterial disease

John A. Spittell


Current Problems in Cardiology | 1984

The vasopastic disorders

John A. Spittell


Postgraduate Medicine | 1964

Radiology: Roentgenographic Manifestations of Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm

Paul C. Hodges; Edward A. Ryan; John A. Spittell; Owings W. Kincaid


Circulation | 1963

Thrombophlebitis and Pulmonary Embolism

John A. Spittell

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Gerald Dorros

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Navin C. Nanda

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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