Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0034065 (pulmonary embolism)
14,979 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the case of three patients an acute respiratory failure with alveolar hypoventilation is related to bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis apparently isolated from any other neurologic abnormalities. The current initial diagnosis of pulmonary embolism leading to admission in an intensive respiratory care unit, because of the severity of the acute respiratory failure, has to be rectified then. Bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis is suspected on account of the absence of any patent etiology, on increasing dyspnea in supine position and paradoxic movements of the upper abdomen (whether spontaneously or in attempted weaning of ventilation support). Bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis is asserted by electromyogram with measurement of nerve conduction velocities of the two phrenic nerves. In the first case, it appears early in the course of an amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; in the second case, it occurs before the presence of a herpes-zoster becomes patent. In the third case, paralysis seems to be idiopathic. Evolution is promising in the last two cases, owing to the reversibility of the lesions. The difficulty of diagnosis, the varying nature of etiology and prognosis encountered in these three cases are also apparent in the 15 cases published in medical literature. The small number of cases published up to now, contrasting with the cases we have witnessed over the last 3 years, leads us to think that this disease must exist more often and may remain unknown to us.
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PMID:[Acute respiratory failure disclosing bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis]. 717 Nov 80

Due to the limited clinical experience there is no standard treatment of primary CNS-lymphomas (PCNSL). Based on the actual data it seems that high-dose methotrexate (HTMRX) and high-dose cytarabine (ARA-C) qualify as treatments of choice for this disease. The role of radiation therapy is still unclear, due to the high long-term toxicity, especially in elderly patients. We treated 14 HIV negative patients with 4-5 cycles of methotrexate (MTX) at 3500 mg/m2 and MTX 15 mg intrathecal weekly or MTX 8000 mg/m2 weekly without intrathecal treatment. Younger patients (<60 y) received 3 weeks after last MTX dose a whole-brain irradiation (45 Gy + 9 Gy boost), older patientsts were not irradiated and continued CT. The following treatment consisted in ARA-C 3000 mg/m2 d1 + 2 every 3 weeks for two cycles. All patients received steroids for two months or until the end of radiotherapy. The overall response rate was 100%, 12/14 CR (86%). Two patients died still on treatment but not due to lymphoma (1 pulmonary embolism, 1 herpes encephalitis). Toxicity was very mild with no grade 3-4 non-haematological toxic events and almost 100% grade 3-4 leucopenia without episodes of neutropenic fever. After a median follow up of 39 months the PFS and OS are 65% (9/14) and 78% (11/14) respectively, and compare well with other trial results.
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PMID:Combination chemotherapy with high-dose methotrexate and cytarabine with or without brain irradiation for primary central nervous system lymphomas. 1224 Nov 19

Local and international guidelines recommend that anticoagulation should be initiated before diagnostic work up has been completed, in patients with high clinical probability of pulmonary embolism (PE). However, many patients receiving anticoagulants for suspected PE do not have this disease. We present three cases of life-threatening bleeding complications after treatment with low-molecular-weight heparins for suspected PE. A 35-year-old woman had acute chest pain and died of a ruptured thoracic aneurysm. A man with herpes encephalitis developed acute dyspnoea, and died of intracerebral haemorrhage. And a woman with mild chest trauma had a complicated recovery after life-threatening intrapleural haemorrhage. Neither of these patients had PE. These cases emphasise that delaying diagnostics may pose a risk in patients with acute chest symptoms. An early CT scan may avoid unnecessary anticoagulation in patients without PE, and may help to direct attention to the actual cause.
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PMID:Life-threatening haemorrhage in patients without pulmonary embolism who received anticoagulants. 2662 5

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a type of herpes infection that has a characteristic feature of maintaining lifelong latency within the host cell. CMV manifestations can cover a broad spectrum from fever to as severe as pancytopenia, hepatitis, retinitis, meningoencephalitis, Guillain-Barre syndrome, pneumonia, and thrombosis. Multiple case reports of thrombosis associated with CMV have been reported. Deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism is more common in immunocompetent patients while splenic infarct is more common in immunocompromised patients. However, here we report a female patient on low-dose methotrexate for rheumatoid arthritis who presented with both pulmonary embolism and splenic infarct.
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PMID:Splenic Infarct and Pulmonary Embolism as a Rare Manifestation of Cytomegalovirus Infection. 2915 25