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

Pulmonary emboli from renal cell carcinoma may be more common than previously suspected. A case is reported of renal cell carcinoma presenting with a massive pulmonary embolus. Pulmonary embolectomy followed by radical nephrectomy with venocavotomy and tumor thrombectomy was successfully performed.
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PMID:Pulmonary embolus presenting as initial manifestation of renal cell carcinoma. 74 53

Invasion of renal tumor into retroperitoneal major vessels with thrombosis should be characterized as local spread of renal carcinoma and a serious complication. Extensive interventions were conducted in 30 subjects out of 196 nephrectomy cases. Nephrectomy was attended by colectomy (3 cases), pancreatic resection and adrenalectomy (3 cases), resection of the liver (2 cases), one-stage lobectomy (2 cases), adrenalectomy (9 cases), resection of the uterine appendages (1 case), resection of the colon, splenectomy, opening of an intraorganic abscess. 12 patients underwent thrombectomy from the major vein via the thoracophrenoabdominal approach. Cavathrombectomy was carried out in 7 (3.6%) patients, in 3 of which vena cava inferior was resected. Removal of the thrombus from the renal vein with resection of the opening and suturing of the vena cava inferior was performed in 5 patients. The thrombus originated from the right kidney in 9, while from the left one in 3 patients treated surgically. The thrombi occupied 4-10 cm along the renal vein from its opening. The removed kidney weighted from 400 to 3200 g. One death occurred due to pulmonary embolism during the operation, one on day 5 due to cardiopulmonary insufficiency. Histological examinations of the thrombi showed them to consist of fibrin, blood elements and tumor cells within the thrombus. The thrombi grow slowly, undergo organization and vascularization. Tumor cells multiply in the thrombus. Fibrin coating restricts cancer cell free dissemination via the venous system. Cavathrombectomy is considered the only way to prolong survival for the above patients.
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PMID:[Extensive operations in kidney cancer complicated by tumor thrombus invasion of the inferior vena cava]. 141 37

We experienced surgical treatment on two patients having renal cell carcinoma with a tumor thrombus extending into the right atrium. In these patients, we performed nephrectomy, dissection of lymph nodes and removal of a tumor thrombus using cardiopulmonary bypass. One died of multiple organ failure 42 days postoperatively; the other was discharged from the hospital and is currently doing well 12 months after the operation. Cardiopulmonary bypass combined with hypothermia and low blood flow significantly facilitated removal of the tumor thrombus extending into the right atrium without the risk of pulmonary embolism or brisk hemorrhage.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of renal cell carcinoma with a tumor thrombus extending into the right atrium. 235 88

The authors analyze diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic influence of caval neoplastic thrombosis in management of renal cell carcinoma. They describe, for the first time, the utilization of De Weese caval clip to prevent intraoperative pulmonary embolism secondary to surgical manipulations.
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PMID:[Intraoperative prevention of pulmonary embolism from neoplastic caval thrombosis secondary to renal tumors]. 335 51

Hypernephromas may give rise to extensive thrombus formation in the inferior vena cava. In a 70-year-old female patient, two-dimensional echocardiography revealed a well-defined mass (2 X 2 cm in dimension) in the right atrium with occlusion of the tricuspid valve and thrombo-embolic material spreading from the inferior vena cava to the right atrium. This finding was confirmed by computed tomography and cavography. Computed tomography of the abdomen detected a large left-sided renal tumour and thrombotic occlusion of the whole vena cava. The patient was not willing to undergo surgery and the masses of thrombo-tumorous material in the right atrium and ventricle spread rapidly. Meanwhile a spontaneous recanalization of the oval foramen occurred. The patient died from massive pulmonary embolism. Only the signs and symptoms of right heart failure with confirmed thrombus formation in the right atrium led to the diagnosis of hypernephroma.
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PMID:[Right atrial and ventricular thrombus formation in advanced left-side hypernephroma]. 374 36

Between 1972 and 1983, 25 patients were treated for renal carcinoma with tumor extension into the vena cava but without other clinical evidence of disseminated disease. Of these patients 12 had vena caval tumor thrombus extension up to the level of the hepatic veins (group 1), 10 had extension into the intrahepatic vena cava (group 2) and 3 had tumor extending into the right atrium (group 3). A perioperative management plan and an anatomical surgical approach have been developed to allow safe en bloc removal of these extensive tumor thrombi without removal of the vena cava. Successful management is dependent upon preoperative evaluation to determine precisely the extent of the disease, prophylaxis against pulmonary embolism and a well planned surgical method. For patients without evidence of metastatic or perinephric disease, the 5-year actuarial survival rate of 33 per cent is comparable to that of other patients without thrombus. Complete resection was possible in 20 patients (80 per cent), with a 5-year actuarial survival rate of 36 per cent. While patients with metastatic tumor cannot be cured, short-term palliation can be achieved for patients who have an imminent risk of vena caval occlusion or pulmonary embolism by an en bloc removal of tumor and thrombus, even for those with intra-atrial extension. Over-all, operative intervention was successful, with 22 of 25 patients leaving the hospital alive.
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PMID:Extension of renal cell carcinoma into the vena cava: clinical review and surgical approach. 394 86

A case, unique in the literature, is reported in which a primary carcinoma of the liver presented a right-sided heart failure and pulmonary hypertension. The diagnosis of hepatocarcinoma was established by needle biopsy of the liver. Later, postmortem examination demonstrated that the pulmonary arterial tree was severely compromised by multiple tumor microemboli, despite the persistent lack of characteristic roentgenographic abnormality in our patient. In reviewing the literature, we found rare cases of occult renal cell carcinoma, choriocarcinoma and one of occult hepatocarcinoma, which presented as pulmonary embolism. These were diagnosed by pulmonary embolectomy, human chorionic gonadotrophin levels or autopsy, respectively. In another small group of reported cases of known carcinoma (gastric, breast, colonic) the patients had a clinical picture of "idiopathic" pulmonary hypertension or of pulmonary hypertension with pulmonary metastases. Pulmonary hypertension in these cases resulted from carcinomatous lymphangitis and/or tumor microembolization, as in our case. We report this case to emphasize the necessity of including occult carcinoma in the differential diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular failure.
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PMID:Pulmonary hypertension as a presentation of hepatocarcinoma. Report of a case and brief review of the literature. 624 34

Extension of tumor into the vena cava occurs in 5 to 10 per cent of the cases of renal cell carcinomas. Of these cases 14 to 39 per cent may extend to or into the right atrium. Acceptable techniques for dealing with this situation include cross-clamping the atrium, using positive pressure ventilation and extracting the thrombus with a Fogarty or Foley catheter, and extracorporeal circulation or a cardiopulmonary bypass with open excision of the tumor extension. Since 1974 we have seen 2 men and 2 women, mean age 56 years, with clear cell renal carcinomas and supradiaphragmatic vena caval tumor extension (1 with additional pulmonary embolism). None had other evidence of metastatic disease determined on staging evaluation by celiac and renal angiography, liver scan, bone scan and chest tomography. Each patient was explored with the planned use of extracorporeal circulation or cardiopulmonary bypass, Greenfield vena caval filter insertion and standard radical nephrectomy. Resection was not done in 1 patient with biopsy proved tumor eroding through the right atrial wall. He died of disease in 8 months. Of the remaining 3 patients who had the tumors completely resected 1 is alive with recurrent disease in the retroperitoneum at 44 months, 1 died of metastatic disease to the bones and liver at 39 months, and 1 died 1 day postoperatively of technical complications with no evidence of residual disease at autopsy. In the absence of metastatic disease it seems reasonable to pursue a radical surgical approach in patients with renal cell carcinoma and supradiaphragmatic tumor thrombus. The use of extracorporeal circulation and post-extraction insertion of the Greenfield vena caval filter offers the surgeon the advantage of direct visualization and better vascular control in removing the thrombus, as well as protection from the possibility of post-extraction pulmonary embolism. With the combined use of these techniques, the previously hopeless situation for these patients has been improved.
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PMID:Extracorporeal circulation for renal cell carcinoma with supradiaphragmatic vena caval thrombi. 670 18

Forty-seven patients with renal cell carcinoma with tumor thrombus extension to the renal vein or inferior vena cava (IVC) were treated surgically over a 10-year period. There were 41 males and 6 females with a mean age of 45.7 years. Thirty-three patients had right-sided and 14 had left-sided tumors. Patients with renal vein or infrahepatic IVC thrombus were treated with radical nephrectomy with tumor thrombus excision after achieving conventional vascular control over the IVC and the opposite renal vein. Four patients with retrohepatic IVC thrombus were treated with venacavotomy and thrombectomy after achieving vascular control above the thrombus but below the hepatic veins while two other patients with retrohepatic and one with suprahepatic thrombus required a bifemoroatrial partial venous bypass prior to tumor thrombectomy. There was one postoperative death due to pulmonary embolism. The actuarial 5-year survival for all patients with venous extension was 50% and the median survival was 4.35 years. Perinephric spread and lymph node metastases were significant prognostic factors affecting survival. This suggests that it is the locoregional spread of renal cell carcinoma rather than the level of the thrombus which governs the prognosis of patients with tumor thrombus extension to the renal vein or IVC.
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PMID:Renal cell carcinoma extending to the renal vein and inferior vena cava: results of surgical treatment and prognostic factors. 777 59

We report on a woman in whom pulmonary embolism and positive lupus anticoagulant occurred 9 months before the diagnosis of renal cell carcinoma. To our knowledge this association has been described previously with other malignant neoplasms but not with a renal tumor, and it may represent an autoimmune paraneoplastic event.
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PMID:Pulmonary embolism and lupus anticoagulant in a woman with renal cell carcinoma. 805 60


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