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Query: UMLS:C0034065 (pulmonary embolism)
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We compared postoperative mortality and morbidity rates in the Veterans Health Administration (VA) to those in nonfederal hospitals, using multivariate analysis to adjust for the patient characteristics of age, diagnosis, comorbidity, and severity of illness. We used a total of 544,000 patient discharge records (330,000 nonfederal and 214,000 VA) from 1987 through 1988 and compared 118 surgical procedures or procedure groups composed of 314 individual surgical procedures. We found no significant differences in postoperative mortality rates between the VA and nonfederal hospital systems for 110 of 118 surgical procedures or procedure groups. Endarterectomy, cervical esophagostomy, and esophageal anastomosis or esophagocolostomy showed significantly lower postoperative mortality in the VA hospitals compared to nonfederal hospitals (P = 0.05). VA postoperative mortality rates that were higher than those in nonfederal hospitals and could not be entirely explained by adjusting for patient characteristics were found for suture of ulcer, cholecystostomy, colon surgery, small intestine surgery, and reopening of recent thoracotomy site (P = 0.05). Respiratory, gastrointestinal, and urinary postoperative morbidity were generally lower in the VA hospitals than in nonfederal hospitals (P = 0.05). Infections were generally higher in the VA hospitals than in nonfederal hospitals. Pulmonary embolism, deep venous thrombosis, shock due to surgery or anesthesia, mediastinitis, hemorrhage, cardiac, and central nervous system morbidity showed no significant differences. These data demonstrate that VA postoperative mortality and morbidity in 118 surgical procedures or procedure groups is comparable to those in nonfederal hospitals.
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PMID:Comparison of postoperative mortality and morbidity in VA and nonfederal hospitals. 817 Jan 40

The results of 100 consecutive autopsy studies performed since the introduction and use of cyclosporine (1984 to 1991) in patients who died less than 2.5 months after cardiac transplantation were analysed to try to prevent this type of lethal damage. The lesions were complex but the causes of death may be classified as follows: 44 infections (20 aspergillosis, with 13 septicaemias and 7 predominantly pulmonary complications, 15 severe lung infections, 9 other infections including 7 pyogenic mediastino-pericarditis), 12 acute myocardial rejects, 14 pulmonary arteriolitis reflecting the fact that pulmonary resistances affect the results of cardiac transplantation, 13 non-infectious pericarditis, 17 immediate postoperative deaths (incompetent graft, DIVC). In the discussion, the authors underline the importance of pericardial damage, the direct cause of death in 13 cases but also present in most cases of infection when sometimes clinically confused with the diagnosis of "acute reject". Acute pancreatitis (over 10% of cases) were often labelled "septicaemic shock". Pulmonary involvement is one of the commonest complications related to infection and changes due to passive pulmonary hypertension related to the causal preoperative disease, by silent pulmonary embolism during the 3 months of cardiac failure before surgery and DIVC. Infection was the cause of death in nearly half of the early fatalities, and aspergillosis was particularly common whereas systematic prevention with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine has eliminated pneumocystosis for example. The management of immuno-depression varies from centre to centre and this is also a factor in the incidence of anatomical complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Early fatal lesions after cardiac transplantation. Results of 100 autopsies]. 833 96

Common complications of cardiac transplantation include infection, rejection, accelerated coronary artery atherosclerosis, and lymphoproliferative disease. The authors reviewed radiographic and computed tomographic (CT) features of cardiac transplantation and its complications in a series of 232 patients (with 89 complications and 49 deaths). Normal postoperative findings in the first few weeks after surgery included enlarged cardiac silhouette, pneumomediastinum, pneumothorax, pneumopericardium, subcutaneous emphysema, and mediastinal widening. Infection was the most common complication, with pneumonia being the leading infectious condition (28 cases, with Aspergillus [n = 11] and cytomegalovirus [n = 10] being the most common pathogens) and the cause of death in seven cases. Although many cases of pulmonary infections occur in the first 3-4 months after surgery, in this series several cases developed up to 3 years afterward. Radiographic signs of acute rejection were nonspecific in the eight patients affected who died, and endomyocardial biopsy was used to confirm the suspected diagnosis. Accelerated atherosclerosis occurred in 13 patients between 10 months and 6.5 years after transplantation and led to death in eight. Lymphoproliferative disorders, which range from benign lymphoid hyperplasia to malignant lymphoma and which are the third leading cause of death beyond the immediate perioperative period in heart transplant recipients, developed in four patients who later died. Other complications related to endomyocardial biopsy and cardiothoracic surgery (i.e., pneumothorax, hemothorax, pneumomediastinum, mediastinitis, aortic dissection, aortic pseudoaneurysm, and pulmonary embolism) occurred in 31 cases and were diagnosed with radiography and CT.
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PMID:Imaging of cardiac transplantation complications. 1019 82

Injecting drug use, mainly of heroin, currently represents a major public health issue in the North East of Scotland. The recent tendency of the committed injecting drug user to inject into the groin has created novel problems for the Infection Unit. Data are presented on 20 consecutive patients admitted between 1994 and 1999 with iliofemoral venous thromboses, often complicated by severe soft tissue infections and bacteraemia as a result of heroin injection into the femoral vein. Nine had coexistent groin abscesses, four had severe streptococcal soft tissue infection of the right thigh, groin and lower abdomen, and two had coincidental soft tissue infections of the upper limb. Nine were bacteraemic on admission. All of the patients were chronic injecting drug users with a median injection duration of 6.5 years. The 18 patients tested for hepatitis C virus were all seropositive. None of the 14 patients tested was positive for HIV. Seventeen patients were treated with subcutaneous low molecular weight heparin (tinzaparin), three having received intravenous unfractionated heparin initially. The tinzaparin was self administered and given for a median duration of seven weeks. One patient declined to have any treatment. Three months after presentation eight patients were asymptomatic, seven had a persistently swollen leg, and five were lost to follow up. None developed clinically apparent pulmonary embolism after institution of anticoagulant therapy. The management of iliofemoral venous thrombosis in injection drug users is problematic because of poor venous access, non-compliance with prescribed treatment, ongoing injecting behaviour, and coexistent sepsis. It is unlikely that a randomised trial of standard treatment with heparin and warfarin versus low molecular weight heparin alone would be practical in this patient group. These retrospective data indicate that the use of tinzaparin in injecting drug users is feasible and appears to result in satisfactory clinical responses. The possibility of concomitant infection in injecting drug users with venous thrombosis should always be addressed, as it appears to be a common phenomenon. Early drainage of abscesses and antimicrobial chemotherapy, often administered intramuscularly or orally because of lack of peripheral venous access, is central to the appropriate care of these patients.
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PMID:High prevalence of iliofemoral venous thrombosis with severe groin infection among injecting drug users in North East Scotland: successful use of low molecular weight heparin with antibiotics. 1096 21

Infection, pulmonary embolism caused by mostly deep venous thrombosis (DVT), hypoxaemia and drugs, used in the treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), related arrhythmia, aspiration are mostly responsible for acute exacerbations of COPD. The incidences of DVT and pulmonary embolus were investigated in 56 hospitalised cases with acute exacerbation of COPD. DVT was diagnosed in six (10.7%) cases with coloured doppler ultrasonography (CDU) and in two cases whose examinations were not sufficient enough to diagnose or refuse DVT. Diagnosis of pulmonary embolus was investigated with ventilation/perfusion scintigraphy in eight cases of clinically medium--high-probable pulmonary embolus. Pulmonary embolus was determined in five cases (8.9%). Age, weight, height, disease course, pulmonary function tests, arterial blood gases and haematocrit values of the cases did not predict the diagnosis of DVT and pulmonary embolus in our cases.
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PMID:The frequency of deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolus in acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. 1219 36

Acute cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in immunocompetent patients is common worldwide, with seroprevalence rates of 40%-100%, depending on the country, socioeconomic conditions, and the patient's age. Infection is most often asymptomatic, but acute cytomegalovirus infection is occasionally revealed by prolonged fever, cervical lymphadenitis, and arthralgia, and it is more rarely revealed by pneumonia, myocarditis, pericarditis, colitis, and hemolytic anemia. Here, we report 2 cases of acute CMV infection in nonimmunocompromised adults that were complicated by venous thrombosis with pulmonary embolism. We also review previously reported cases of vascular thrombosis and discuss the propensity of CMV to induce vascular damage with associated thrombosis.
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PMID:Vascular thrombosis and acute cytomegalovirus infection in immunocompetent patients: report of 2 cases and literature review. 1276 55

The aim of this study was to review the main causes of death as determined by autopsy of deceased solid organ transplant recipients. We reviewed 156 autopsies including 76 heart, 32 liver, 29 kidney, and 19 lung transplant recipients. The mean survival period varied depending on the transplanted organ: namely heart, 497 days; liver, 189 days; kidney, 1124 days; and lung, 252 days. Infections were the most common cause of death in all groups, varying from 21% in heart to 63% in lung recipients. Acute rejection, chronic rejection, and malignancies only appeared as the cause of death in heart recipients (14.5%, 9.2%, and 4%, respectively). Primary graft failure was present in heart (15.7%), kidney (3.4%), and lung (5.3%) recipients. The highest rate of surgical complications as a cause of death was observed in heart transplant recipients. In all groups there was a significant percentage (about 30%) of other pathologies that were responsible for death, such as pulmonary embolism, central nervous system pathology, acute pancreatitis, digestive hemorrhage, and acute myocardial infarction. Our results emphasize that infections are the main cause of death within the first year posttransplant, independent of the organ transplanted.
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PMID:Autopsy-determined causes of death in solid organ transplant recipients. 1511 Jun 64

Assessing the quality of care delivered in office-based outpatient surgery centers is difficult because formerly there was no central data collection system. The American Association for Accreditation of Ambulatory Surgery Facilities (AAAASF), in its ongoing effort to assess and improve patient care, has developed an Internet-based quality improvement and peer review program to analyze outcomes for surgery centers it accredits. Reporting is mandatory for all surgeons operating in AAAASF-accredited facilities. Each surgeon must report all unanticipated sequelae and at least six random cases reviewed by an accepted peer review group biannually. A total of 411,670 procedures were analyzed during a 2-year period (from 2001 to 2002). There were 2597 sequelae reported during this period. The most common sequela was hematoma formation following breast augmentation. Infection occurred in 388 cases. Deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, and intraoperative cardiac arrhythmias were found to occur in a frequency consistent with previous reports. Significant complications (hematoma, hypertensive episode, wound infection, sepsis, and hypotension) were infrequent. A total of 1378 significant sequelae were reported for 411,670 procedures. This calculates to one unanticipated sequela in 299 procedures (an incidence of 0.33 percent). Seven deaths were reported. A death occurred in one in 58,810 procedures (0.0017 percent). The overall risk of death was comparable whether the procedure was performed in an AAAASF-accredited office surgery facility or a hospital surgery facility. This study documents an excellent safety record for surgical procedures performed in accredited office surgery facilities by board-certified surgeons.
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PMID:Analysis of outpatient surgery center safety using an internet-based quality improvement and peer review program. 1511 43

Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is still a major health problem world-wide. HIV infection has changed into a chronic infection with the chance of developing long-term complications. Vascular complications are frequently reported in the current literature. HIV and treatment by highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) are associated with many cardiovascular risk factors. An increased risk of arterial cardiovascular complications was found in a number of studies. However, data about the risk of venous thrombotic disease (VTE), including potentially fatal conditions as pulmonary embolism, were limited. In a systematic review of the literature, ten relevant epidemiological studies were identified that investigated the risk of venous thrombotic disease in HIV-infected patients. The incidence was increased two- to tenfold in comparison with a healthy population of the same age. However, these studies were mainly retrospective cohort studies that were prone to selection bias, confounding factors were not always mentioned and in all but three control populations were missing. An increased risk of venous thrombotic disease in HIV-infected patients could be explained by the presence of a hypercoagulable state, characterised by an increase in procoagulant factors, such as endothelial TF expression and thrombogenic properties of microparticles, and a decrease in anticoagulant factors, including AT III, HC II and the protein C pathway. Furthermore, the risk of VTE was associated with an increased risk of infections and autoimmune haemolytic anaemia, and was weakly associated with HAART. All together, quite some evidence pointed towards a relationship between HIV infection and venous thrombotic disease, but the association still needs to be established in properly designed epidemiological studies.
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PMID:Is chronic HIV infection associated with venous thrombotic disease? A systematic review. 1586 40

Implantation of electrophysiological cardiac devices such as pacemakers and implantable cardioverter defibrillators has become a widely available and routine procedure in cardiovascular medicine. One of the most feared complications of device implementation is infection. Infection rates for these devices are reported to vary between 0.7% and 7.0%. Cardiac thromboembolic event is a recognized complication of permanent cardiac rhythm devices with an incidence of 0.6%-3.5%, unrelated to lead size or number. These complications are associated with high morbidity and mortality rates. In this case report, right atrial mass, right atrial abscess, perforation of tricuspid septal leaflet, and pulmonary embolism secondary to ICD lead endocarditis is presented.
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PMID:Implantable cardioverter defibrillator lead endocarditis causing diffuse right atrial abscess and pulmonary artery embolism. 2063 17


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