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

Two patients with multiple myeloma are described in whom an unusual complication developed: pleural effusion containing myeloma cells. There are 7 previously reported cases of myeloma in the English literature with this type of effusion. Pleural effusion in myeloma may be due to plasma cell infiltration of the pleura, congestive heart failure, pulmonary embolism, nephrotic syndrome, and second neoplasms. In view of these multiple etiologies, diagnostic thoracentesis should be performed in order to treat the effusion appropriately.
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PMID:Pleural effusion in multiple myeloma. 38 71

A prospective study of 6,527 hospitalized patients was performed to evaluate the effectiveness of multivariate analysis of risk factors to correctly designate risk for pulmonary embolism. History of previous pulmonary embolism was the single most important factor. In patients without prior history, five factors emerged: inactivity, congestive heart failure, Doppler ultrasound evidence of deep-vein occlusion, female sex, and black race. Used together, these factors permitted a discrimination of risk such that 68.7% of pulmonary embolization was found to occur in 32.2% of the population designated as showing increased risk. Multivariate analysis of clinical factors improved assessment of risk, compared to the use of lower extremity findings alone, and proved to be useful in identifying individuals at increased risk for pulmonary embolism.
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PMID:Risk assessment of pulmonary embolism by multivariate analysis. 42 25

In 53 patients with possible pulmonary embolism, pulmonary abnormalities of 133Xe ventilation and 99Tcm albumin microsphere perfusion scintigraphy were compared with absence or presence of pulmonary emboli documented by concurrent pulmonary angiography. It was found that patients with combined scintigraphy considered as unlikely for pulmonary embolism (ventilation defect larger than perfusion defect) or indicative of pulmonary embolism (ventilation defect smaller than perfusion defect) provide high diagnostic specificity. Patients with equal ventilation-perfusion abnormalities (possible pulmonary embolism) require further evaluation by pulmonary angiography to ascertain diagnosis. Importantly, diagnostic accuracy, using ventilation-perfusion scintigraphy and the quantified method of evaluation delineated, is preserved in patients with severe congestive heart failure.
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PMID:Lung ventilation-perfusion scintigraphy in pulmonary embolism. Diagnostic specificity compared to pulmonary angiography. 73 45

Objective documentation of pulmonary embolism is an essential prerequisite for appropriate treatment (Figure 7). A chest film, as well as measurement of arterial blood gases, should be obtained immediately, and if the lung fields are essentially normal, a lung scan should then be performed. If the scan shows a definite perfusion defect characteristic of embolism, this provides sufficient evidence to establish a diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. The presence of hypoxemia with a low arterial pO2, further confirms the suspicion of a ventilation-perfusion abnormality, and anticoagulant therapy with heparin should be initiated immediately. Should the chest film show abnormalities in the same anatomic areas in which perfusion defects are present on the scan, further investigation by pulmonary arteriography is required to substantiate the diagnosis. The use of pulmonary angiography for documentation of pulmonary embolism is also indicated at the outset when certain specific disorders that confuse scan interpretation are also present-chronic obstructive lung disease, emphysema, asthma, congestive cardiac failure. Assessment of the arterial blood oxygenation simultaneously with the estimated occlusion and the hemodynamic data can be used as a prognostic index as therapy progresses.
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PMID:The diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. 100 Sep 26

It was established by means of radioimmunoassay that the blood concentration of Digoxin in patients with congestive heart failure depends not only on the dose of the drug given, but also on the stage of cardiac insufficiency. With equal daily doses, higher Digoxin concentrations were observed in patients with more severe cardiac insufficiency. The analysis of the obtained data has demonstrated that in 75% of the patients with signs of digitalis intoxication the concentration of Digoxin in blood exceeded 2.5 ng/ml. In animal experiments it was established that a distinct reduction of the toxic threshold took place in rabbits with acute myocardial infarction, acute pulmonary embolism, congestive cardiac failure, this threshold being determined by the amount of intravenously injected Strophantin that causes persistent ventricular tachycardia.
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PMID:[Digitalis poisoning, risk factors and digitalis intolerance]. 101 87

Surgical treatment of cardiovascular complications in patients with Marfan's syndrome is usually recommended with apprehension since the systemic nature of the disease predisposes to early and late complications. To define the incidence of these complications, 30 patients were evaluated after surgical treatment of aortic insufficiency and ascending aortic aneurysm at the Texas Heart Institute. To provide a minimal follow-up period of 5 years, only patients operated upon during of before 1968 were included in this series. There were 9 female and 21 male patients aged 4 to 80 years (mean 44 years). Aortic insufficiency was treated by valvuloplasty in 3 patients and by aortic valve replacement in 27. Graft replacement of the ascending aorta was required in 23 patients, and the aneurysm was excised and the aorta repaired by direct anastomosis in 7. Two patients were lost to follow-up study; 12 of the remaining 28 (42.8 percent) lived 5 years or more. The hospital mortality rate was 20 percent (6 of 30); the causes of death included dissection or rupture of the aorta in three patients, congestive heart failure in two and pulmonary embolism in one. The 24 survivors lived from 5 weeks to 9 years. Follow-up data were available on 22 of these patients. Ten of these (45.4 percent) died of late complications. Seven died suddenly, four of these had redissection, one patient had occlusion of the right coronary artery, and two had ventricular fibrillation of no apparent cause. The remaining three died of noncardiac causes. Although the risk of ascending aortic and aortic valve surgery in patients with Marfan's syndrome is high, 42.8 percent of the patients in our series survived 5 years or more. We believe that surgery should be recommended for patients with Marfan's disease who have dissection of the aorta or severe aortic regurgitation, or both.
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PMID:Surgical experience in patients with Marfan's syndrome, ascending aortic aneurysm and aortic regurgitation. 116 38

Sodium warfarin was administered to a 59-year-old woman with congestive cardiac failure and deep vein thrombosis. After 3 days of therapy the nipple and areola of the left breast became inflamed; the entire breast then became necrotic. Gangrene spread and a simple mastectomy was performed. The patient died from pulmonary embolism 1 day after operation. Histologic examination of the breast revealed thrombi in some of the arteries and veins. The etiology of this condition is obscure, and there is no known way of preventing or effectively treating the condition. Simple mastectomy or more conservative local excision recommended.
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PMID:Cutaneous gangrene: a rare complication of coumarin therapy. 124 9

Seven patients with mobile right heart thrombi, 4 floating and 3 pediculated, were recensed between 1985 and 1990. Two patients were admitted for congestive cardiac failure (Group I) and 5 patients for pulmonary embolism (Group II). Both patients in Group I were treated with heparin without complications. In one case, the size of the thrombus decreased in 10 days whereas, in the second case, it disappeared within 8 days. In Group II, the first patient underwent successful thrombectomy. The other four patients were given thrombolytic therapy (UK = 2, rt-PA = 2) associated with appropriate doses of heparin. In the two patients given UK (3M units the first day followed by 1.2 M units per day for 4 days) the thrombus disappeared in the first 48 hours of treatment. One patient had a recurrent pulmonary embolism after 2 hours' treatment; both patients had a fall in haemoglobin of 3 cg/ml at the second day. The second patient died at the 5th day. In the two patients treated by rt-PA (100 mg/7 hours) the thrombus disappeared within 4 hours of starting therapy. One patient had a probable recurrent pulmonary embolism. Both patients had a fall in haemoglobin of 3 cg/ml at the 2nd day of treatment. Right heart thrombi are rare (168 cases in the literature of which 111 were mobile). The prognosis seems to be related to echocardiographic appearances: mortality of mural thrombi is about 4% compared with 50% in mobile thrombi. Very mobile "worm-like" masses are therapeutic emergencies because of the risk of embolism (about 68%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Thrombi of the right heart. Value of thrombolytic therapy in mobile thrombi]. 141 6

Pulmonary embolism (PE) is thought to occur infrequently after cardiac operations, possibly because systemic heparinization during cardiopulmonary bypass prevents deep vein thrombosis. This retrospective study was undertaken to determine the actual incidence of PE after cardiac operations and to identify risk factors. Between January 1, 1985, and December 31, 1989, 5,694 adult patients (greater than 18 years old) had open heart operations at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. Thirty-two patients (20 men and 12 women) had PE within 60 days of operation, an overall PE incidence of 0.56%. The diagnosis of PE was established by ventilation/perfusion scan, pulmonary angiogram, or autopsy. Mortality among patients with PE was 34%. Using a case-control method, preoperative and postoperative risk factors for PE were identified by multivariate and multiple logistic regression analyses. Preoperative risk factors included bed rest (p less than 0.003), prolonged hospitalization before operation (p less than 0.004), and cardiac catheterization performed through the groin within 15 days before operation (p less than 0.01). Post-operative risk factors were congestive heart failure (p less than 0.008), prolonged bed rest (p less than 0.05), and deep vein thrombosis (p less than 0.03). This study demonstrates that PE is an unusual complication after cardiac operations, has a high mortality rate, and is often related to perioperative immobility and recent groin catheterization. These results also suggest that minimizing preoperative hospital stay may be important in PE prophylaxis.
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PMID:Pulmonary embolism in the cardiac surgical patient. 159 61

A total of 99 cases of viridans streptococcal endocarditis encountered during the period of 1973 and 1990 at the Veterans General Hospital-Taipei were reviewed to evaluate its prognostic factors. Applying strict clinical and laboratory criteria, 24 cases were categorized as definite, 44 probable, 23 possible and 8 likely. The symptoms were frequently subtle and atypical but initial laboratory tests gave useful indications: 69.1% with leukocytosis, 78% with anemia, 58.5% with elevation of LDH level, 88.9% with elevation of ESR value and 100% with elevation of CRP level. Furthermore, 32.4% of the cases demonstrated proteinuria and 67.4% microscopic hematuria. Seventy-three of the subjects had a history of underlying heart disease, predominantly rheumatic heart disease. Histological examination and echocardiography revealed that 51 patients suffered from vegetative endocarditis, 7 (13.7%) of whom were found to have anatomically confirmed vegetations without initial echocardiographic evidence, Vascular events were seen in 61 cases (61.6%): peripheral stigmata (32 cases), cerebral vascular accidents (17 cases), pulmonary embolism (10 cases) and others (2 cases). The overall mortality rate was 18.2%. Congestive heart failure with embolization was the most common cause of death in this group. The presence of vegetation was not well correlated with embolic events. There was no statistically significant association between the mortality and the following characteristics: age, sex, underlying heart disease, evidence of echocardiographically detected vegetations, major surgical intervention and recurrent cases except for embolic events (p less than 0.01). In conclusion, viridans streptococcal endocarditis complicated embolic events usually presented with a fulminant course and a grave outcome.
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PMID:Overview of viridans streptococcal endocarditis: clinical analysis of 99 cases. 165 35


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