Stenosis (from the Greek στένωσις — narrowing, compression) is a pathological, persistent narrowing of the lumen of any hollow anatomical formation (blood vessel, heart valve, digestive tract, respiratory tract, or spinal canal).
This narrowing prevents the normal passage of physiologic media (blood, air, food, cerebrospinal fluid) through it, which leads to impaired function of the corresponding organ or system. Clinical manifestations, severity, and prognosis of stenosis depend entirely on its localization, degree of narrowing and speed of development.
The narrowing can be caused either by pathologic changes in the wall of the structure itself or by its compression from the outside.
The primary causes of the development of stenosis:
Pathophysiologically, stenosis leads to two main consequences: increased stress on the chambers upstream of the narrowing site (e.g., myocardial hypertrophy in aortic stenosis) and inadequate blood supply or function of the sections downstream of the narrowing (ischemia, hypoxia).
Stenosis is the basis of many widespread and clinically significant diseases.
The most common and important locations are:
Stenosis is diagnosed using medical imaging techniques. For the vessels and valves of the heart, ultrasound with Doppler ultrasound (cardiac US, echoCG) is widely used. CT and MRI scans are used to evaluate the spinal canal, brain, and internal organs. “The gold standard” for the diagnosis of arterial stenosis is angiography.
Treatment is aimed at eliminating the narrowing. Depending on the cause and degree of stenosis, it can be conservative (drug therapy), minimally invasive (balloon angioplasty and arterial stenting) or surgical (heart valve replacement, bypass surgery, decompressive spinal surgery).
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