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Query: UMLS:C0034065 (pulmonary embolism)
14,979 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Of the many causes of acute chest pain, it is important to delineate the life threatening causes, such as myocardial infarction, dissecting aneurysm and pulmonary embolism. It is important to consider the cause as 'myocardial infarction until proved otherwise'. Common causes in general practice are musculoskeletal disorders and functional problems. A diagnostic strategy is outlined.
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PMID:Acute chest pain. 162 76

A 58-year-old female was admitted with an abrupt onset of chest and back pain. The CT scan of the chest showed aortic dissection of the ascending aorta and proximal aortic arch, but the false lumen of the aortic dissection had already been occluded by a blood clot. After admission, she complained of chest pain with hemoptysis and presented facial edema and the distention of the neck veins. The pulmonary angiogram showed complete occlusion of the right pulmonary artery at the proximal segment. These findings were interpreted as pulmonary embolism. She was treated with intravenous heparin and urokinase, but these treatments did not demonstrate any improvement. She underwent a surgical exploration on the fourth hospital day. During surgery, the right pulmonary artery was discovered to be compressed and occluded by the large dissecting aneurysm of the ascending aorta. In addition, hematoma was seen between the right pulmonary artery. The ascending aorta and pulmonary trunk, which was injured in the operative procedure, were replaced with an artificial graft successfully. Postoperative pulmonary angiogram showed no stenosis of right pulmonary artery. The occlusion of the pulmonary artery by an acute dissecting aneurysm is an extremely rare complication and it is often wrongly diagnosed as pulmonary embolism. In such cases, the correct diagnosis and prompt surgical treatment is essential and antithrombolytic and anticoagulant therapy should be avoided.
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PMID:[Occlusion of the right pulmonary artery due to acute dissecting aortic aneurysm]. 194 May 29

The authors report the case of a dissecting aneurysm of the ascending aorta compressing the right pulmonary artery in a 62 year old man, 6 years after aortic valve replacement. The clinical presentation was that of pulmonary embolism. The diagnosis was confirmed by angiopneumography and CT scanning. The ascending aorta was successfully replaced with a Dacron prosthesis. One other case was found in a review of the literature. After discussing the predisposing factors of aortic dissection during cardiac surgery, the authors underline the diagnostic value of CT scanning in cases of suspected aneurysms of the thoracic aorta.
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PMID:[Compression of the right pulmonary artery by a dissecting aneurysm of the ascending aorta. Apropos of a case occurring long after aortic valve replacement]. 309 36

A series of 46 autopsied adult cases of sudden and unexpected natural death were investigated. In this study, sudden and unexpected death was defined as any death occurring with 24 hours of onset of symptoms in a person with or without probable cause of death suggested by medical history. The cases included 31 males and 15 females aged 26 to 85 years (mean 66.6 years). Age distribution peaked in seventies. The lesions causing sudden and unexpected death according to the most frequent organ systems were, diseases of the heart (acute myocardial infarction with or without old infarct, 20; old myocardial infarction without acute infarction, 2; dilated cardiomyopathy, 2; sarcoidosis, 1; amyloidosis, 2; and valvular disease, 2), the aorta (ruptured aneurysm, 6; dissecting aneurysm, 2), the respiratory tract (pulmonary embolism, 7; pulmonary hypertension, 1), the alimentary tract (intestinal obstruction, 1), and other diseases (cause unknown, 1). The cardiovascular lesions were found in 78.2% of cases autopsied. The sudden and unexpected death caused by acute myocardial infarction was found in 47.8%, and acute myocardial infarction seemed to play a major role in cardiac sudden death in these series. The respiratory lesions were found in 17.4%. Four of seven cases with pulmonary embolism died in two weeks after surgical operation. The most common underlying disease was post-operative condition.
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PMID:[A clinical and pathological study of 46 cases of sudden and unexpected death]. 859 27

Anticoagulant therapy is effective and prevents death in more than 95% of patients with pulmonary embolism following deep vein thrombosis. We report a patient who developed deep vein thrombosis following rupture of a dissecting aneurysm of the internal auditory artery. The parent artery was occluded before anticoagulant therapy as a prophylactic measure to prevent intracranial haemorrhage. We discuss some of the clinical features, therapeutic difficulties, and pitfalls in the management of internal auditory artery aneurysm complicated by deep vein thrombosis.
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PMID:Isolated internal auditory artery aneurysm. 1828 Jul 38

On rare occasions, acute aortic dissection may cause pulmonary artery obstruction when there is aortic rupture with hemorrhage into the common adventitia of the aorta and pulmonary artery. We report an extremely unusual case of an ascending aortic dissecting aneurysm associated with an isolated medial intramural hematoma in the right pulmonary artery in an 86-year-old woman with clinical manifestations mimicking pulmonary embolism. We believe that this rare pulmonary arterial complication of aortic dissection without involvement of the common adventitia has not been previously described.
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PMID:Ascending aortic dissecting aneurysm with isolated right pulmonary arterial medial intramural hematoma. 1849 41

Active contiguous abnormalities can frequently involve the pericardium. Prominent among these are cardiac conditions which encroach on the pericardium, particularly transmural myocardial infarction (newly always with Q-waves). Complications of infarctions, notably myocardial pseudoaneurysm, have one wall which is pericardium. Furthermore, dissecting aneurysm of the aorta and the intramural aortic hemorrhage may rupture into the pericardium with tamponade, or, if limited, mimic acute pericarditis. Diseases of the lungs and pleura, including the diaphragmatic pleura, also result in pulmonary embolism which can produce several syndromes. Many mediastinal diseases, notably inflammation and malignancy, especially involving the lymph nodes, induce mediastinal inflammation and fibrosis. Many esophageal disorders can penetrate or produce a fistula usually with pneumopericardium. Rarely, primarily pericardial disorders like purulent pericarditis, malignancies, and rough pericardial calcifications affect the contiguous tissues. We discuss the many syndromes and disorders under each of these topics.
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PMID:Pericardial involvement in diseases of the heart and other contiguous structures: part I: pericardial involvement in infarct pericarditis and pericardial involvement following myocardial infarction. 2247 31

Active contiguous abnormalities can frequently involve the pericardium. Prominent among these are cardiac conditions which encroach on the pericardium, particularly transmural myocardial infarction (newly always with Q-waves). Complications of infarctions, notably myocardial pseudoaneurysm, have one wall which is pericardium. Furthermore, dissecting aneurysm of the aorta and the intramural aortic hemorrhage may rupture into the pericardium with tamponade, or, if limited, mimic acute pericarditis. Diseases of the lungs and pleura, including the diaphragmatic pleura, also result in pulmonary embolism which can produce several syndromes. Mediastinal diseases, notably inflammation and malignancy, especially involving the lymph nodes, induce mediastinal inflammation and fibrosis. Many esophageal disorders can penetrate or produce a fistula usually with pneumopericardium. Rarely, primarily pericardial disorders like purulent pericarditis, malignancies, and rough pericardial calcifications affect the contiguous tissues. We discuss the many syndromes and disorders under each of these topics.
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PMID:Pericardial involvement in diseases of the heart and other contiguous structures: part II: pericardial involvement in noncardiac contiguous disorders. 2247 61

Conventional angiography of the coronary arteries is a standard in heart and coronary arteries diagnosis, sufficient to choose a treatment method. The introduction of 64-row multidetector computed tomography improved the imaging of coronary arteries by increasing its spatial and temporal resolution. It has been shown that the potential clinical value of CT angiography, including dual source computed tomography (DSCT), is based particularly on the exclusion of coronary artery disease and is now a recognized clinical indication in patients with equivocal stress test results. Detection of hemodynamically insignificant atherosclerotic plaques during CT angiography may be important from the clinical point of view. Rupture of those plaques is the reason of about 60% of acute coronary events. Myocardial infarction with ST-segment elevation is not an indication for CT angiography of the coronary arteries. Acute chest pain is the cause of approximately 6-8% of hospitalizations in the EU and the United States. According to the U.S. data about 50% of patients are admitted to a hospital for observation, and of those only 15% are finally diagnosed with acute coronary syndrome. On the other hand 2-5% of patients are incorrectly diagnosed and discharged home despite the occurrence of ACS. In spite of relatively frequent and easy to recognize symptoms, the subject literature states that diagnosis of more than 1/3 of patients with acute chest pain poses a considerable difficulty in the A&E departments. Problems with proper risk assessment and diagnosis of the disease result in unnecessary hospital admissions, implementation of expensive and often invasive diagnostic methods and generating costs borne by the health care system. There is a need to optimize the minimally invasive diagnostic methods, that allow reliable exclusion of coronary artery disease and acute coronary syndrome. In approximately 10 to 20% of all patients with chest pain neither ST segment elevation nor positive results of enzymatic tests are found, those are patients with low or intermediate risk of acute coronary syndrome. Currently, the most widely used diagnostic method in these patients is a stress test and other diagnostic tests. Coronary angiography and stress tests enable the detection of atherosclerotic lesions, which significantly narrow the artery lumen and reduce the myocardial perfusion. There is therefore the demand for a reliable and minimally invasive imaging method for assessing coronary arteries, which will enable excluding critical coronary artery stenosis or isolating, from a group of medium and low risk patients assessed with routine tests, those who should undergo immediate angiography and invasive treatment. CT angiography allows to assess the severity of coronary atherosclerosis. The possibility of vascular wall and plaque morphology evaluation may have a significant impact on the detection of atherosclerotic lesions of vulnerable character. CT angiography has already been used for the noninvasive assessment of plaque morphology in comparison with the standard, i.e. intracoronary ultrasound-ICUS. Intracoronary ultrasound is the most accurate method for the evaluation of stenosis and plaque morphology, but high costs and invasiveness limit its application. It is necessary to assess the extent to which the multidetector dual source computed tomography may be an alternative for the intracoronary ultrasound (ICUS). Recent years brought about extensive tests of a CT angiography diagnostic algorithm originally called "triple rule-out" (Scheme 1). This method refers to the population of patients without a definitive diagnosis after routine diagnostic tests. It is applied mainly to acute conditions with which a patient reports to the A&E department: myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, aortic dissecting aneurysm as well as changes in the chest and ascending aorta and pulmonary arteries. The authors of this paper deem it necessary to conduct further clinical trials on the usefulness and cost-effectiveness of CT angiography in different patient groups.
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PMID:[The clinical value of computer tomography (CT) of diagnostics of acute thorax pain--a literature review]. 2400 65