Vascular medicine
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Reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD) syndrome has been recognized clinically for many years. It is most often initiated by trauma to a nerve, neural plexus, or soft tissue. Diagnostic criteria are the presence of regional pain and other sensory changes following a noxious event. ⋯ Besides, it has been suggested that excitation of sensory nerve fibres at axonal level causes release of neuropeptides at the peripheral endings of these fibres. These neuropeptides may induce vasodilation, increase vascular permeability, and excite surrounding sensory nerve fibres -- a phenomenon referred to as neurogenic inflammation. At the level of the central nervous system, it has been suggested that the increased input from peripheral nociceptors alters the central processing mechanisms.
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The purpose of this study was to determine the rate of progression of the degree of carotid stenosis and to determine the risk of continued observation in a group of asymptomatic patients with moderate stenosis of at least one internal carotid artery. Between 1989 and 1994, 2130 patients were found to have 60-79% stenosis of at least one internal carotid artery following a duplex ultrasound examination in the authors' vascular laboratory. Of these, 465 patients (255 men, 210 women) were asymptomatic and had more than one ultrasound examination, and they form the basis of this retrospective review. ⋯ Patients who progressed were more likely to have symptoms, but the rate of unheralded stroke was relatively low over a 3-year time period. Surveillance carotid ultrasound examinations should be performed in patients with moderate carotid stenosis. Because of the lack of clear benefit, carotid endarterectomy for asymptomatic 60-79% internal carotid artery stenosis cannot be justified.