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Cholesterol crystal embolism (atheroembolism)

Cholesterol crystal embolism, known as atheroembolic disease, is caused by showers of cholesterol crystals from an atherosclerotic plaque that occludes small arteries. Embolization can occur spontaneously or as an iatrogenic complication from an invasive vascular procedure (angiography or vascular s...

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Autores principales: VENTURELLI, CHIARA, JEANNIN, GUIDO, SOTTINI, LAURA, DALLERA, NADIA, SCOLARI, FRANCESCO
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PAGEPress Publications 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3184670/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21977265
http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/hi.2006.155
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author VENTURELLI, CHIARA
JEANNIN, GUIDO
SOTTINI, LAURA
DALLERA, NADIA
SCOLARI, FRANCESCO
author_facet VENTURELLI, CHIARA
JEANNIN, GUIDO
SOTTINI, LAURA
DALLERA, NADIA
SCOLARI, FRANCESCO
author_sort VENTURELLI, CHIARA
collection PubMed
description Cholesterol crystal embolism, known as atheroembolic disease, is caused by showers of cholesterol crystals from an atherosclerotic plaque that occludes small arteries. Embolization can occur spontaneously or as an iatrogenic complication from an invasive vascular procedure (angiography or vascular surgery) and after anticoagulant therapy. The atheroembolism can give rise to different degrees of renal impairment. Some patients show a moderate loss of renal function, others severe renal failure requiring dialysis. Renal outcome can be variable: some patients deteriorate or remain on dialysis, some improve and some remain with chronic renal impairment. Clinically, three types of atheroembolic renal disease have been described: acute, subacute or chronic. More frequently a progressive loss of renal function occurs over weeks. Atheroembolization can involve the skin, gastrointestinal system and central nervous system. The diagnosis is difficult and controversial for the protean extrarenal manifestations. In the past, the diagnosis was often made post-mortem. In the last 10 yrs, awareness of atheroembolic renal disease has improved. The correct diagnosis requires the clinician to be alert. The typical patient is a white male aged >60 yrs with a history of hypertension, smoking and arterial disease. The presence of a classic triad (precipitating event, renal failure and peripheral cholesterol crystal embolization) suggests the diagnosis. This can be confirmed by a biopsy of the target organs. A specific treatment is lacking; however, it is an important diagnosis to make because an aggressive therapeutic approach can be associated with a more favorable clinical outcome.
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spelling pubmed-31846702011-10-05 Cholesterol crystal embolism (atheroembolism) VENTURELLI, CHIARA JEANNIN, GUIDO SOTTINI, LAURA DALLERA, NADIA SCOLARI, FRANCESCO Heart Int Article Cholesterol crystal embolism, known as atheroembolic disease, is caused by showers of cholesterol crystals from an atherosclerotic plaque that occludes small arteries. Embolization can occur spontaneously or as an iatrogenic complication from an invasive vascular procedure (angiography or vascular surgery) and after anticoagulant therapy. The atheroembolism can give rise to different degrees of renal impairment. Some patients show a moderate loss of renal function, others severe renal failure requiring dialysis. Renal outcome can be variable: some patients deteriorate or remain on dialysis, some improve and some remain with chronic renal impairment. Clinically, three types of atheroembolic renal disease have been described: acute, subacute or chronic. More frequently a progressive loss of renal function occurs over weeks. Atheroembolization can involve the skin, gastrointestinal system and central nervous system. The diagnosis is difficult and controversial for the protean extrarenal manifestations. In the past, the diagnosis was often made post-mortem. In the last 10 yrs, awareness of atheroembolic renal disease has improved. The correct diagnosis requires the clinician to be alert. The typical patient is a white male aged >60 yrs with a history of hypertension, smoking and arterial disease. The presence of a classic triad (precipitating event, renal failure and peripheral cholesterol crystal embolization) suggests the diagnosis. This can be confirmed by a biopsy of the target organs. A specific treatment is lacking; however, it is an important diagnosis to make because an aggressive therapeutic approach can be associated with a more favorable clinical outcome. PAGEPress Publications 2006-12-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3184670/ /pubmed/21977265 http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/hi.2006.155 Text en © Wichtig Editore, 2007
spellingShingle Article
VENTURELLI, CHIARA
JEANNIN, GUIDO
SOTTINI, LAURA
DALLERA, NADIA
SCOLARI, FRANCESCO
Cholesterol crystal embolism (atheroembolism)
title Cholesterol crystal embolism (atheroembolism)
title_full Cholesterol crystal embolism (atheroembolism)
title_fullStr Cholesterol crystal embolism (atheroembolism)
title_full_unstemmed Cholesterol crystal embolism (atheroembolism)
title_short Cholesterol crystal embolism (atheroembolism)
title_sort cholesterol crystal embolism (atheroembolism)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3184670/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21977265
http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/hi.2006.155
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