In medicine, ischemia (Greekισχαιμία, isch- is restriction, hema or haema is blood) is a restriction in blood supply, generally due to factors in the blood vessels, with resultant damage or dysfunction of tissue.
Mechanism
Rather than in hypoxia, a more general term denoting a shortage of oxygen, ischemia is an absolute or relative shortage of the blood supply to an organ. Relative shortage means the mismatch of blood supply (oxygen delivery) and blood request for adequate oxygenation of tissue.
As the carrier of oxygen (oxygen is mainly bound to hemoglobin) insufficient blood supply leads to hypoxic tissue (anoxic in case of no oxygen supply at all) with the consequence of necrosis which determines the celldeath.
This projection is important in the investigation of mesenteric ischaemia because stenoses or short occlusions of these vessels may be obscured by contrast in the underlying aorta on the AP view.
Ischaemia of the intestine results from the interruption or reduction of its blood supply.
arteial vs venous), the extent of the occlusion or ischaemia, (eg.