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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors describe a rare case of pulmonary thromboembolism with unusual clinical findings and emphasized the large difficulty encountered in formuling a correct diagnosis in a reasonable time. A man, 60 years old, was admitted to a Medical Division of our hospital for the appearance of chest pain and epigastric pain during effort in the last year. He smoked 20 cigarettes a day and drank wine (1 or 2 litres a day). He was affected by hypercholesterolemia and in the past reported relapsed thrombophlebitis in the left leg. Four years before admission to our hospital he underwent large and small left saphenectomy. He had no cardiac events in the past. After a non significant exercise stress test the patient was treated with nitrates and asa and was discharged from the hospital. At home the symptoms increased and after 8 months the patient was admitted again to the Cardiologic Division of the hospital. At admission he reported dyspnea and chest pain at rest, not only during effort and the ECG showed negative T waves in anterior and inferior leads. Intravenous heparine, nitrates and calcium antagonists stabilized the clinical picture. The following examinations revealed: reduction of the T wave negativity at the ECG registered during chest pain; mild enlargement of the heart at the chest roentgenogram; normal value of the left ventricle and apical and midseptal by ipokinesia at the transthoracic echocardiogram; normal coronary artery at the coronary arteriography. "Vasospastic angina" was diagnosed and the patient was discharged after 20 days, asymptomatic. After 15 days he returned to the hospital again for chest pain, dyspnea, hypotension and syncope despite therapy. At physical examination he showed a painful left tibio-tarsal tumefaction, an increased and splitting second heart sound in the pulmonary area and a systolic murmur in the third and fourth left interspace. The ECG showed a severe anterior
ischemia
, while a new transthoracic echocardiogram revealed a considerable dilatation of the right atrium, right ventricle and the main pulmonary artery with severe tricuspid regurgitation and pulmonary hypertension (mean PAP about 50 mmHg). The following pulmonary perfusion scintigraphy confirmed the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism and the selective right and left pulmonary arteriography exhibited multiple thrombi and large intravascular filling defects. The right heart catheterization confirmed a chronic precapillary pulmonary hypertension (mean PAP = 55 mmHg). About 24 hours after these examinations the patient died because of a cardiac arrest with electromechanical dissociation.
Pulmonary thromboembolism
is a potentially fatal disease characterized by a largely variable clinical presentation. Frequently pulmonary embolism diagnosis is difficult especially when clinical findings are unusual. In the case observed the "typical" chest and epigastric pains associated with the electrocardiographic findings directed diagnosis towards myocardial ischemia. Also after the coronary arteriography that showed normal coronary artery, the erroneous diagnosis persisted. Pulmonary embolism was correctly diagnosed too late to begin an effective therapy. These unusual clinical findings and diagnostic mistakes are stressed and critically reviewed in the article.
...
PMID:[Pulmonary thromboembolism. A clinical case with unusual presentation]. 871 Jan 39
Pulmonary thromboembolism
(PEm) is a serious and life threatening disease and the most common cause of acute pulmonary vascular occlusion. Even following successful treatment of PEm, many patients experience long-term disability due to diminished heart and lung function. Considerable damage to the lungs presumably occurs due to reperfusion injury following anti-occlusive treatments for PEm and the resulting chronic inflammatory state in the lung vasculature. We have used a rat model of irreversible PEm to ask whether pulmonary vascular occlusion in the absence of reperfusion is itself sufficient to induce an inflammatory response in lungs. By adjusting the severity of the vascular occlusion, we were able to generate hypertensive and nonhypertensive PEm, and then examine lung tissue for expression of CXC and C-C chemokine genes and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid for the presence of chemokine proteins. Hypertensive and nonhypertensive PEm resulted in increased expression of both CXC and C-C chemokines genes in lung tissues. Hypertensive PEm was also associated with a 50-100-fold increase in protein content in lung BAL fluid, which included the CXC chemokines cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant and macrophage-inflammatory protein 2. The presence of chemokines in BALs was reflected by a potent neutrophil chemotactic activity in in vitro chemotaxis assays. Abs to cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant blocked the in vitro neutrophil chemotactic activity of BAL by 44%. Our results indicate that the
ischemia
and hypertension associated with PEm are sufficient to induce expression of proinflammatory mediators such as chemokines, and establish a proinflammatory environment in the ischemic lung even before reperfusion.
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PMID:Chemokines accumulate in the lungs of rats with severe pulmonary embolism induced by polystyrene microspheres. 1460 60