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

Documented rarity, diagnostic difficulty and poor results stimulated this study of 79 malignant and 37 benign small bowel tumors in order to emphasize these lesions, determine their symptomatology and improve diagnosis and results, particularly in the malignant group. Chief symptoms were recurrent abdominal pain and tenderness, signs of obstruction and gastrointestinal bleeding. Fourteen cases were asymptomatic. The mean symptom-diagnosis interval was 6.6 months. Roentgenographic contrast studies were helpful in diagnosing 33 of 43 patients, with false negatives in 10. Laboratory studies were usually not helpful. Metastases were present at the time of surgery in approximately 58%. In the malignant group curative procedures were performed in 36 and palliative in 43, with an operative mortality of 10%. Five and 10 year survival rates were respectively 21/51 (41.2%) and 8/38 (21.2%) for malignancies. Individual 5 and 10 year survival rates were respectively as follows: carcinoid 11/15, 4/8; undifferentiated carcinoma 3/5, 1/3; lymphoma 3/11, 1/9; leiomyosarcoma 2/7, 1/6 and adenocarcinoma 2/13, 1/12. In the benign group results were excellent, except for one death from pulmonary embolism. The study suggests that if results with malignant small bowel tumors are to be improved, prompt diagnostic study and early consideration of laparotomy in patients with suggestive symptoms is mandatory.
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PMID:The small bowel tumor problem: an assessment based on a 20 year experience with 116 cases. 45 45

Seventy-one patients with lymphoma underwent staging laparotomy. Fifty of the patients had Hodgkin's disease and the remainder, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. One patient died from pulmonary embolism on the tenth postoperative day, one required temporary assisted ventilation, one required reoperation for hemorrhage and six patients had infectious complications which responded to appropriate antibiotic therapy. Despite extensive noninvasive procedures, including bone marrow trephine biopsy and lymphangiography, in approximately 30% of the patients, the disease was restaged as a result of the operation. Since primary management of these diseases is critically dependent upon accurate staging, we conclude that, at the present time, this procedure is indispensible for proper management, as it contributes information not available from other currently used investigational techniques.
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PMID:The value of laparotomy in staging of lymphoma. 87 35

Nine adult patients with Ki-1-positive large-cell anaplastic lymphoma were treated with MACOP-B. Two suffered from relapsed disease and had previously received chemotherapy; a third patient had received a single dose of 100 mg/m2 cisplatin before initiation of MACOP-B. The stage of lymphoma was determined according to the Ann Arbor Conference criteria and was II in one, III in two and IV in six patients. All patients had constitutional symptoms. Five patients had achieved complete remission 4 weeks after termination of the protocol and there were two partial remissions. One patient died of massive pulmonary embolism during the 4th week of treatment; another patient, who had received MACOP-B as salvage therapy, died of progressive lymphoma 1 month after completion of the regimen. Maximal observed toxicities according to WHO were mucositis grade 3 (n = 3) and there were three cases with thromboembolic complications, including a fatal pulmonary embolism in a young patient. However, MACOP-B appears an effective, fairly well-tolerated and feasible therapy for patients with Ki-1-positive large-cell anaplastic lymphoma.
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PMID:MACOP-B treatment in patients with Ki-1-positive large-cell anaplastic lymphoma. 137 11

The radiological manifestations of asbestos-related visceral pleural changes are described. Generally, visceral pleural reactions follow the mesothelial cells response to various injurious substances, including asbestos, and even saline. The changes are nonspecific. They may occur subsequent to pleural reactions associated with many conditions, which include tuberculosis, viral pleurisy, malignancy and lymphoma, lupus, or rheumatoid-induced effusions, cardiac failure, and pulmonary embolism, among other etiologies. The failure to absorb the fibrinous exudate on the visceral pleural surface can lead to the development of diffuse fibrosis of the serosal surface, interlobar pleural thickening, localized pleural filaments (strands), subpleural wedge, and lenticular-shaped masses, and could be the forerunner of lobular atelectasis (pseudotumor) formation. Some of the features are recognized on posteroanterior chest radiographs and the counterparts corroborated with the use of routine and high-resolution computed tomography studies.
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PMID:Radiological features of asbestos-related visceral pleural changes. 200 21

Report is given on a 78-years-old woman with a primary lymphoblastic lymphoma of the thyroid gland. The lymphoma had invaded the trachea. An extrathyroid manifestation of the lymphoma was not found. There was no Hashimoto's thyroiditis. The patient died of bronchopneumonia and pulmonary embolism.
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PMID:[Primary lymphoblastic lymphoma of the thyroid]. 232 36

A 20-year-old man developed a massive nephrotic syndrome, rapidly complicated by pulmonary embolism and septicemia. Two renal biopsies taken 3 months apart showed minimal change glomerulonephritis. Treatment with prednisolone 1.5 mg/kg/day failed to induce a sustained remission, then monotherapy with cyclosporin A (CsA, 5 mg/kg/day) was started. Complete remission was obtained after 15 weeks. CsA was gradually tapered to 3 mg/kg/day. Twenty-two months after starting CsA, a routine examination disclosed a right sub-clavicular lymph node, of which histological examination showed a class 4 large cell Hodgkin's lymphoma. CsA was abruptly withdrawn and a polychemotherapy resulted in lymphoma remission after four courses. Ten months later, Hodgkin's disease is currently in remission and there is no relapse of proteinuria.
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PMID:Cyclosporin A-sensitive nephrotic syndrome preceding Hodgkin's disease by 32 months. 238 97

Nowadays, extradural vertebral neoplasms which compress the spinal cord are being diagnosed earlier and therefore laminectomy for decompression relieves many patients of their neurological deficits before permanent cord damage has set in. In addition, radiotherapy and oncological treatment have prolonged life expectancy as well as the quality of life in these patients. As the indications for surgery have grown, the problem of spinal instability resulting from direct involvement of the supporting structures of the spine or due to the surgical procedure per se, must be considered. Many of these patients would rapidly return to leading their normal activities if not confined to bed rest or uncomfortable orthopedic devices. The Authors present 9 patients with extradural vertebral lesions: 4 plasmacytomas, 3 metastatic carcinomas, 1 malignant lymphoma and 1 aggressive osteoblastoma treated by simultaneous decompression and stabilization of the spine. All patients showed remarkable improvement of neurological symptoms except in one case where massive pulmonary embolism caused death a few hours after surgery. This surgical treatment offers the advantages of performing wider and better decompressive maneuvers and, at the same time, assuring fast mobilization of the patient after surgery who is often in poor general conditions, thus reducing post-operative complications due to delayed physical therapy and bed confinement.
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PMID:One-stage decompression and stabilization in the treatment of spinal tumors. 242 Sep 50

The series studied comprised 6197 patients who had died of or who had cancer at death and represents all patients with cancer from 21,530 necropsies performed at this department from 1960-84. Pulmonary embolism was significantly more common among cancer patients than in those with non-neoplastic diseases. Among those palliatively treated, patients with ovarian cancer, cancer of the extrahepatic bile duct system, and cancer of the stomach had the highest prevalence of pulmonary embolism (34.6%, 31.7%, and 15.2%, respectively). Necropsy patients with cancer of the oesophagus and larynx, together with leukaemia, myelomatosis, and malignant lymphoma had the lowest prevalence (0-5.6%). Palliatively treated cancers in organs of the peritoneal cavity had a significantly higher incidence than all other cancers combined. Cancer of the peritoneal cavity may impede venous drainage from the lower limbs and thus be an important factor in the onset of deep calf vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. It is concluded that cancer represents an increased risk factor for onset of pulmonary embolism, in particular in patients with ovarian cancer and cancer of the extrahepatic bile duct system.
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PMID:Prevalence of pulmonary embolism at necropsy in patients with cancer. 247 26

A 56-year-old patient received a cadaveric renal allograft because of primary cystic kidney disease. The donor was a 28-year-old man who died from head trauma. No other major illnesses were present at the time of transplantation. Immunosuppression was performed with cyclosporine A and steroids. After 3 months, the patient presented with fever and abdominal pain which was located in the region of the allograft. Ultrasonography demonstrated a tumor mass at the renal transplant hilus that was suspected to be an infected hematoma. Kidney biopsy from the cortex revealed only severe morphologic signs of cyclosporine A toxicity which was due to high cyclosporine A levels during the first 2 months after transplantation. The patient died from pulmonary embolism 6 months posttransplant. Histologic evaluation of the tumor specimens obtained at autopsy showed an extensive infiltration of the renal hilus and the medulla by a peripheral T cell lymphoma of the large-cell type. The T cell origin was confirmed by immunohistochemistry using the T cell-associated monoclonal antibodies UCHL-1 and MT1.
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PMID:Primary peripheral T cell lymphoma in a kidney transplant under immunosuppression with cyclosporine A. 252 3

A large focus of liver activity was seen after the injection of Tc-99m macroaggregated albumin (MAA) in a pregnant patient thought to have pulmonary embolism (PE). The correct diagnosis of superior vena caval (SVC) obstruction led to an immediate cesarean section, CT of the chest and abdomen, open lung biopsy of a mediastinal mass, and radiation therapy for the lymphoma with pericardial invasion, all within 24 hours of presentation. The next day, an in vitro labeled Tc-99m red blood cell (RBC) angiogram was performed, which documented collateral flow from the SVC obstruction to the abdomen and filling of the right ventricle via the liver, presumably through reopened channels of the umbilical vein.
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PMID:Unexpected demonstration of superior vena caval obstruction in third trimester lung imaging. 304 39


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