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Query: UMLS:C0034065 (
pulmonary embolism
)
14,979
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of a clinically occult ovarian carcinoma leading to subacute
cor pulmonale
in a 62-year-old woman is described. The patient was admitted to hospital with increasing respiratory distress. Physical examination and echocardiography showed signs of pulmonary hypertension. She died from circulatory failure. Autopsy revealed a bilateral ovarian carcinoma with diffuse carcinosis of the peritoneum. No gross evidence of
pulmonary embolism
was present, but microscopic investigation revealed tumour-related microangiopathic lesions causing the lethal pulmonary hypertension.
...
PMID:Subacute cor pulmonale due to microscopic pulmonary tumour cell embolization. 796 40
Acute massive pulmonary embolism (AMPE) is an event that places the recipient at an unusually high risk of sudden death. Among 183 patients with thromboembolic disease, AMPE has been diagnosed clinically in 58 cases (32%). Diagnostic criteria: cardiac arrest (24 cases--41%), shock (12--21%) acute
cor pulmonale
(ACP 15--26%) and ACP with shock (7 cases--12%). There were 33 women and 25 men aged 22-88 years in this group. In 25 patients heparin (H), in 7 streptokinase (S), in 1 tPA, in 7 S after H have been used, 26 patients (45%) survived, 32 (55%) died: there were 20 sudden deaths. Advanced underlying cardiopulmonary diseases or/and recurrent
pulmonary embolism
seem to be the most important predictors of fatal outcome of AMPE.
...
PMID:[Outcome of patients with clinically acute massive pulmonary embolism]. 806 37
We report the case of a woman treated with urokinase for acute
pulmonary embolism
with a right-sided heart thrombus. She developed life-threatening acute
cor pulmonale
which dramatically improved within 4 h with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA). We emphasize the clinical interest of rtPA for the treatment of life-threatening
pulmonary embolism
.
...
PMID:Life-threatening pulmonary embolism with right-sided heart thrombus. Rapid recovery with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator. 816 78
A categorical diagnosis of "high probability" or "intermediate probability" encompasses a spectrum of diagnostic probabilities of
pulmonary embolism
(PE) that is not communicated to the referring physician. The diagnostic value of ventilation/perfusion lung scans, in the present investigation, was strengthened by use of a table to determine the likelihood of PE in individual patients on the basis of the observed number of mismatched segmental equivalent perfusion defects. In addition, we tested the hypothesis that stratification of patients according to the presence or absence of prior
cardiopulmonary disease
may enhance the ventilation/perfusion scan assessment of the probability of PE among both of these clinical categories of patients. Data were derived from the collaborative study of the Prospective Investigation of
Pulmonary Embolism
Diagnosis (PIOPED). Ventilation/perfusion lung scans were evaluated in 378 patients with acute PE and 672 patients in whom suspected PE was excluded. Among patients with no prior
cardiopulmonary disease
, > or = 1.0 mismatched segmental equivalents was indicative of PE in 102 of 118 (86 percent) vs 113 of 155 (73 percent) among patients with prior
cardiopulmonary disease
(p < 0.02). Among patients with prior
cardiopulmonary disease
, > or = 2 mismatched segmental equivalents were required to indicate > or = 80 percent probability of PE. Stratification on the basis of the presence or absence of prior
cardiopulmonary disease
, therefore, enhanced the ability of ventilation/perfusion scan readers to assign an accurate positive predictive value and specificity to individual patients based on the observed number of mismatched segmental equivalent defects. Among patients with no prior
cardiopulmonary disease
, fewer mismatched segmental equivalent defects were required to indicate a high probability of PE than were required by PIOPED criteria. The findings from some of these patients, by PIOPED criteria, would have indicated intermediate probability. Some indeterminate probability readings, therefore, will be eliminated among patients stratified with no prior
cardiopulmonary disease
.
...
PMID:Stratification of patients according to prior cardiopulmonary disease and probability assessment based on the number of mismatched segmental equivalent perfusion defects. Approaches to strengthen the diagnostic value of ventilation/perfusion lung scans in acute pulmonary embolism. 822 7
The purpose of this investigation was to test the hypothesis that ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) lung scans in patients with suspected acute
pulmonary embolism
(PE) can be evaluated on the basis of the total number of mismatched vascular defects, irrespective of whether such defects are moderate or large size segmental defects. Lung scan data from the national collaborative study of the Prospective Investigation of
Pulmonary Embolism
Diagnosis (PIOPED) were assessed in 383 patients with acute PE and 681 patients in whom suspected PE was excluded. The predictive value of the cumulative number of mismatched moderate size segmental defects (irrespective of the number of mismatched large segmental defects) was nearly the same as that of mismatched large segmental defects (irrespective of the number of mismatched moderate size segmental defects). This suggests that the diagnostic value of mismatched moderate size segmental defects is the same as mismatched large segmental defects. Lung scans evaluated on the basis of the number of mismatched vascular defects (moderate and/or large segmental defects) were compared with V/Q scans evaluated on the basis of the number of mismatched segmental equivalents. The maximum likelihood estimates of the areas under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves for the number of mismatched vascular defects and for mismatched segmental equivalents were similar (0.8512 vs 0.8530) (NS). Stratification according to the presence or absence of prior
cardiopulmonary disease
permitted a more accurate assessment of both clinical groups. Evaluation of V/Q scans by vascular defects and by segmental equivalents showed similar areas under the ROC curves. In conclusion, the number of mismatched vascular defects is as powerful for the assessment of V/Q scans as the number of mismatched segmental equivalents. The number of mismatched vascular defects, however, is easier to interpret, and permits a more objective evaluation.
...
PMID:Mismatched vascular defects. An easy alternative to mismatched segmental equivalent defects for the interpretation of ventilation/perfusion lung scans in pulmonary embolism. 822 8
The purpose of this investigation was to test the hypothesis that prior clinical assessment among patients stratified according to the presence or absence of prior
cardiopulmonary disease
enhances the accuracy of the predictive value of
pulmonary embolism
(PE) in the various categories. Diagnostic evaluation was made on the cumulative spectrum of mismatched defects, rather than a probability based on a preassigned number of mismatched segmental equivalent defects or mismatched vascular defects. Families of curves were derived that allowed an accurate assessment of the predictive value for each category of patients. The families of curves were comparable, irrespective of whether ventilation/perfusion scans were assessed on the basis of mismatched segmental equivalent defects or mismatched vascular defects, although the latter eliminated the necessity of estimating whether segmental defects were large or moderate in size. Clinical assessment was shown to prominently affect the predictive value of PE. Prior clinical assessment among patients stratified according to prior
cardiopulmonary disease
enhanced the accuracy of the predictive value of PE in the various groups of patients.
...
PMID:The addition of clinical assessment to stratification according to prior cardiopulmonary disease further optimizes the interpretation of ventilation/perfusion lung scans in pulmonary embolism. 822 9
The objectives of this report were to analyse clinical presentation, echocardiographic features and diagnostic and therapeutic problems posed by an unusual form of thrombo-embolic disease: mobile right heart thrombosis. Systematic echocardiography in 170 cases of severe
pulmonary embolism
identified mobile right thrombi in 12 cases. The auscultatory findings were abnormal in 6 cases, 3 showing signs of tricuspid obstruction. Two-dimensional echocardiography showed an extremely mobile right atrial mass, sometimes prolapsing across the tricuspid valve, which was variously spheric, ovoid or worm-like; dilatation of the right heart chambers and echocardiographic signs of
cor pulmonale
were observed in all cases. The differential diagnosis with other embolic masses of the right atrium and, above all, with well-developed Chiari networks, may be difficult and requires transoesophageal echocardiography. Pulmonary angiography is contra-indicated because of the risk of embolism. Embolectomy under cardiopulmonary bypass was carried out in 8 patients, immediately after echocardiography in 6 cases. The thrombus was recovered from the right atrium in 6 cases and from the pulmonary artery in 2 cases: there was one operative death. Medical treatment was administered to 3 inoperable patients. The clinical and echocardiographic outcome was good in 2 of these but the third patient died; autopsy revealed thrombi in the right atrium and pulmonary artery. One patient died before any treatment could be given and autopsy showed the thrombus in the pulmonary artery. These results confirm the extreme instability of this type of thrombus and the risk of death due to its embolism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Mobile thrombus of the right heart and pulmonary embolism: diagnostic and therapeutic problems. Apropos of 12 cases]. 829 39
Although less frequent than that of the lower limbs, venous thrombosis of the upper limbs may cause
pulmonary embolism
. This embolism is usually moderate and facilitated by the delay or absence of anticoagulant treatment. We report the case of a young man who had multiple and recurrent embolism consecutive to thrombosis of the axillary and subclavian veins and who rapidly developed pulmonary arterial hypertension on previously healthy lungs. There was no venous disease of the lower limb. After a more than 2 years' period, the pulmonary arterial hypertension is still moderate, but the patient remains under long-term antivitamin K therapy, this being the only available treatment capable of preventing a deterioration that would result in post-embolic
cor pulmonale
and ultimately require lung transplantation.
...
PMID:[Unusual complication of venous thrombosis of the upper limb: pulmonary hypertension]. 829 44
Haemoptysis and pleuritic chest pain are common presentations of
cardiopulmonary disease
. While a number of common disorders may explain these symptoms, occasionally unusual causes may emerge which should be considered in the differential diagnosis especially if
pulmonary embolism
is unlikely; so that inappropriate anticoagulation or thrombolytic therapy is avoided. We present a case of unilateral pulmonary artery agenesis, who presented with pleuritic chest pain and haemoptysis, and was initially treated as a case of pulmonary thromboembolism.
...
PMID:Unilateral pulmonary artery agenesis: a rare cause of haemoptysis and pleuritic chest pain. 834 74
The authors report the case of a patient with a serious recurrence of
pulmonary embolism
with echocardiographic evidence of a floating serpentine thrombus of the right atrium. The outcome was rapidly satisfactory with disappearance of signs of acute
cor pulmonale
and lysis of the right atrial thrombus after infusion of two thrombolytic agents: Rt PA and streptokinase. There is no evidence in the literature to indicate that one form of treatment, i.e. surgical thrombectomy or thrombolysis, is markedly superior to the other. Thrombolysis appears to be a useful alternative to surgery. The use of Rt PA and of the combination of two thrombolytics has not been published previously and merits confirmation.
...
PMID:[Severe pulmonary embolism and thrombus of the right atrium. Success of the thrombolytic treatment combining Rt PA and streptokinase]. 849 26
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