Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019079 (hemoptysis)
6,129 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pulmonary thromboembolism is a life-threatening condition resulting mostly from lower extremity deep-vein or pelvic-vein thrombosis. A 46-year-old woman was admitted to hospital with pain on the right side of the chest and hemoptysis. On laboratory analysis, D-dimer level was elevated. Computed tomographic pulmonary angiography revealed intravascular filling defects due to thrombi in right lower lobe pulmonary segmental arteries. Screening for thrombophilic states was normal except for heterozygous mutations of both prothrombin and methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR 677) genes. Homocysteine level was high, and vitamin B12 level and serum ferritin level were reduced. Serum antiparietal antibody was positive, and therefore, pernicious anemia was diagnosed along with iron-deficiency anemia. After the diagnoses were established, enoxaparin followed by warfarin was started in addition to oral vitamin B12, pyridoxine, thiamine, folic acid, and ferroglycine sulfate supplementation. At the end of 8 weeks of the replacement therapy, vitamin B12, folate, and homocysteine levels and red cell volume were found to be normal, with complete resolution of the thrombus confirmed by repeat computed tomographic pulmonary angiography. We conclude that hyperhomocysteinemia due to vitamin B12 deficiency associated with pernicious anemia might have decreased the threshold for thrombosis. In addition, the presence of heterozygous prothrombin and methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase mutations might serve as synergistic cofactors triggering pulmonary thromboembolism.
...
PMID:Hyperhomocysteinemia due to pernicious anemia leading to pulmonary thromboembolism in a heterozygous mutation carrier. 1858 84

Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) caused by intraluminal thrombus organization and fibrous stenosis or complete obliteration of pulmonary arteries, is a not rare but life-threatening complication of acute pulmonary embolism. The prognosis of medically treated patients with CTEPH is poor and worsens as pulmonary hypertension exacerbates. We describe the case of a 43-years old with a history of progressive shortness of breath, hemoptysis, chest discomfort and syncope. Echocardiographic and imaging studies showed changes consistent with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension. Further work-up showed only moderate increase of homocysteine level with negative features for lupus and others primary thrombophilic disease. The patient was managed adequately with thrombolytic and inotropic therapy; oral anticoagulation was started with improvement of his clinical status and was screened for pulmonary thrombo endarterectomy, but he refused. The case presented despite its evolution 'temporarily' positive perhaps related to the reduction of hemodynamic overload through bronchial arteries, reiterates the importance of early surgical intervention, before it establishes the hypertensive vasculopathy. Abnormal pulmonary function at rest and after exercise stress test associated to non invasive echocardiographic measurements are an excellent tool to identify the bad prognosis patients in CTEPH. We discuss the pathophysiology and conclude that in selected cases, pulmonary thromboendarterectomy is the best therapy, but only if executed early.
...
PMID:Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension: take care to a "favourable" apparently evolution. A case report. 2206 57

An 18-year-old male presented to our hospital with complaints of episodic abdominal pain, dry cough and right pleuritic chest pain. He was diagnosed as a case of right tuberculous pleural effusion on the basis of the pleural fluid Genexpert report of Mycobacterium tuberculosis detected sensitive to rifampicin and was started on antituberculous therapy. Forty-five days later, he presented with acute onset breathlessness, swelling of the right leg, streaky haemoptysis and a fresh left-sided pleural effusion. Evaluation revealed venous thromboembolism (right lower lobar segment pulmonary embolism with right leg deep vein thrombosis). Workup for malignancy was negative. However, he had vitamin B12 deficiency with increased homocysteine levels and heterozygous mutation of the MTHFR gene at A1298C. He was treated with optimal anticoagulation, vitamin B12 supplementation and antitubercular treatment. This is a rare combination of events perhaps related to the MTHFR gene mutation.
...
PMID:Venous thromboembolism due to hyperhomocysteinaemia and tuberculosis. 2893 98