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

The effect of intermediate coronary care, with and without ECG monitoring, was compared with general medical ward care on the basis of mortality, resuscitation, and detection and treatment of arrhythmias from days 3 to 14 after admission in 2,095 cases of acute coronary heart disease. Mortality was significantly reduced (P less than .02), and number of successful resuscitations for ventricular fibrillation was increased (P less than .05) but only in the unit with monitoring. Number of arrhythmias detected was significantly increased, particularly incidence of ventricular ectopics and heart block (P less than .02). Number of arrhythmias corrected to sinus rhythm was increased, but not significantly. Death from pulmonary embolism fell (P less than .01). Review of causes of death and autopsies showed an increased proportion of deaths due to intractable heart failure and cardiogenic shock. Not only specially trained nurses, but also ECG monitoring, were necessary to obtain the benefits of this treatment.
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PMID:An assessment of intermediate coronary care. 71 43

During the acute phase of myocardial infarction, two groups of patients are observed. Patients in the first group have no significant complications, and approximately 95 per cent of these patients recover fully without any specific therapy. Patients in the second group may have various complications, some of which are benign, whereas others may lead to a fatal outcome. The complications may be divided into four major types: 1. Cardiac arrhythmias and conduction defects. The tachyarrhythmias and bradyarrhythmias are the most frequently encountered complications in patients with acute myocardial infarction. Tachyarrhythmias include ventricular premature beats, ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, supraventricular tachycardia, atrial flutter, and atrial fibrillation. Bradyarrhythmias include sinus and junctional bradycardia and various degrees of heart block. Those patients who are unable to reach a hospital and die suddenly presumably succumb to ventricular fibrillation. 2. Left ventricular failure and cardiogenic shock. In more than 33 per cent of patients with acute myocardial infarction, a third heart sound and pulmonary rales may be heard. If they are present for only 24 hours, the physical findings may indicate an alteration of left ventricular failure. However, if they persist for a few days and disappear after medical therapy, mild left ventricular failure may be present. About 12 per cent of patients have acute pulmonary edema, and 10 per cent of patients develop cardiogenic shock. These two complications carry a high mortality rate (40 per cent and nearly 100 per cent respectively). 3. Rupture of the heart. Cardiac rupture may occur in the free wall, ventricular septum, and papillary muscles. These complications, although less frequently encountered, cause a number of deaths in patients with acute myocardial infarction. 4. Thromboembolism. Under this category are included pulmonary embolism, systemic arterial embolism, and systemic venous thrombosis.
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PMID:The acute phase of myocardial infarction. 110 71

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

The literature on isolated right ventricular infarction is reviewed and local experience is reported. Chronic lung disease is an important risk factor. Chest pain and breathlessness are common. Syncope and sudden collapse can also occur. Rhythm disorders include sinus bradycardia, atrial fibrillation and ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation. Atrioventricular block is rare. Hypotension and a right-sided fourth heart sound are common. Cautious use of slow-release nitroglycerin is not hazardous in the absence of hypotension. High doses of steroids and anticoagulants can be helpful. The prognosis is usually good, although sudden collapse can occur due to ventricular fibrillation, rupture of the right ventricular free wall or massive pulmonary embolism.
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PMID:Isolated right ventricular infarction. 151 57

During 1987-1988, prehospital resuscitation was unsuccessful in 204 of 381 patients who suffered a witnessed cardiac arrest due to presumed coronary heart disease in Helsinki. The cause of death was verified by autopsy in 80 (39%) of the 204 patients. Their cause of death could not be estimated on the basis of previous patient history, and their autopsy diagnoses were then related to the initial cardiac rhythm recorded at the scene. At autopsy, coronary heart disease was considered to have been the cause of death in 78% of the patients with ventricular fibrillation, in 43% of the patients with electromechanical dissociation (EMD), and in 60% of the patients in asystole. Cardiac tamponade or massive pulmonary embolism was the cause of death in 15 of the 28 patients with EMD who underwent autopsy. These findings support previously noted relationships between some causes of cardiac arrest and the initial cardiac rhythm, and also in prehospital cardiac arrest patients with unsuccessful resuscitation.
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PMID:Cause of death in unsuccessful prehospital resuscitation. 202 86

Cardiopulmonary bypass (C-P bypass) was performed on two patients who had not responded to conventional cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). The first patient, a 56-y-o male, with bilateral pulmonary thromboembolism repeatedly underwent cardiac massage and electric defibrillation for recurrent ventricular fibrillation. A veno-arterial bypass route was prepared during cardiac massage, and bypass circulation was started 3 hours after the onset of the first ventricular fibrillation. Soon after the initiation of C-P bypass, the physical status and EEG of the patient improved. The patient regained consciousness within a few hours and later underwent open chest pulmonary embolectomy. The second patient, a 44-y-o male, developed refractory cardiogenic shock near the end of aortocoronary bypass graft operation. Under closed chest massage, a femoro-femoral cardiopulmonary bypass operation was started. Soon after the initiation of the bypass circulation and IABP, peripheral circulation improved markedly, and consciousness returned within several hours. Though the first patient finally died from far advanced pulmonary embolism, he was conscious as long as the C-P bypass was continued for two days. In the second patient, the cardiac function gradually improved after the 3rd day. C-P bypass was tapered and discontinued on the 5th day. Emergency veno-arterial bypass for CPR is effective means to maintain life until the cardiopulmonary and cerebral functions are restored. Recent advances in emergency C-P bypass are introduced and a new acronym extracorporeal lung and heart assist, ECLHA, is proposed. Emergency ECLHA with veno-arterial cannulations through percutaneous puncture will become a promising adjunct of cardiopulmonary-cerebral resuscitation in the near future.
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PMID:[Emergency cardiopulmonary bypass for cardiopulmonary-cerebral resuscitation]. 261 7

A 67 year old woman with a permanent pacemaker was admitted with pulmonary oedema and mitral valve incompetence two months after a myocardial infarction. Echocardiograms showed good left ventricular function and a large coil of apparent thrombus in the right atrium prolapsing into the right ventricle. Intermittent loss of pacemaker sensing and capture was noticed on admission and probably caused the supraventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation that occurred before an exploratory bypass operation. At operation rupture of the papillary muscle was found and the mitral valve was replaced. A large piece of thrombus was retrieved from the right pulmonary artery. The right heart contained no clot and the pacemaker wire was not displaced. It is envisaged that the strand of venous thrombus was caught in the permanent pacing wire at the tricuspid valve level resulting in an unusual case of pacemaker malfunction. The eventual poor outcome was almost certainly influenced by the arrhythmias and pulmonary embolism caused by the clot and might have been avoided by early operation.
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PMID:Entanglement of embolised thrombus with an endocardial lead causing pacemaker malfunction and subsequent pulmonary embolism. 356 90

For the past 25 years an emergency pulmonary embolectomy service has been offered to the hospitals serving a conurbation of 1.5 million. Fifty-five of these procedures have been performed during a short period of normothermic circulatory standstill produced by clamping the superior and inferior venae cavae. Of 36 patients who underwent pulmonary embolectomy without an episode of asystole or ventricular fibrillation, 35 survived the operation (97.2%). However, there were seven deaths during the postoperative period, three related to pulmonary embolism and four to other causes (mortality 20%). Conversely, in a group of 19 patients who had an episode of cardiac arrest, 14 died during or after the operation of pulmonary embolism and two of unrelated causes (mortality 73.7%). In properly selected patients this technique achieves a satisfactory measure of success. It can be used in hospitals that do not have cardiac surgical facilities and, because of its simplicity, it can be performed during the early period after pulmonary embolism when the risk of death is greatest.
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PMID:Pulmonary embolectomy: a 25 year experience. 374 72

By means of equilibrium gated radionuclide angiography (EGRA) 67 patients were studied with first inferior acute myocardial infarction (AMI) within 4 days of the onset of symptoms and 12 normal volunteers. Ejection fraction (EF) of the left ventricle (LV) and right ventricle (RV) was computed. The regional wall motion (RWM) was evaluated by parametric images of amplitude and phase (Fourier analysis). The following major in-hospital complications were diagnosed in 41 patients (61%): postinfarction angina, congestive heart failure (CHF), high-degree atrioventricular (AV) block, ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation, shock, extension of infarction, pericarditis, pulmonary embolism and acute pulmonary edema. A significant correlation between RVEF and the extent of RVRWM abnormalities and the incidence of major complications was found. In particular, the incidence of shock and CHF was significantly correlated with that of the RV disfunction, while the LVEF was generally in the normal range despite a high incidence of LVRWM abnormalities. In the patients developing high-degree AV block this correlation did not reach statistical significance; in this group, 10 of 12 patients developed other major complications. Also in 10 of 13 cases with CHF, other complications arose during the period of hospitalization. In conclusion the disfunction of the RV can identify the subgroup of patients with inferior AMI who are at high risk for developing major complications, especially shock and CHF. AV block and CHF have a severe prognostic meaning, because they occur usually in association with other major complications.
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PMID:[Right and left ventricular function and incidence of major complications in acute inferior myocardial infarct. Study by equilibrium-gated radioisotope angiography]. 383 79

Out of 178 consecutive patients with acute inferior wall myocardial infarction submitted to technetium-99 m pyrophosphate scintigraphy, 49 (27.5%) were found to have concomitant right ventricular infarction. Gated blood pool scans showed right ventricular abnormalities in 21 out of 26 patients who were submitted to this investigation (right ventricular asynergy: 16 cases; right ventricular dilatation: eight cases; decreased right ventricular ejection fraction: 16 cases). Complications were common in the acute stage. Shock was noted in 19 cases (eight related to bradycardia, three related to relative hypovolaemia and eight instances of true cardiogenic shock). Atrial fibrillation (seven patients), ventricular fibrillation (eight patients) and severe atrioventricular conduction disorders (13 patients) were also frequent. In spite of this, the in-hospital mortality was low: three deaths occurred (6.1%), one from heart failure, two others from posterior septal rupture. All patients were followed up for one year or more. Six additional deaths were noted (three from left cardiac failure, two from recurrent anterior wall infarction and one from massive pulmonary embolism). Clinical assessment, haemodynamic measurements and gated blood pool scans showed significant improvement of right ventricular function with return to normal in those cases with small right ventricular infarcts as judged from technetium-99 m pyrophosphate scintigraphy. In spite of the complications seen in the initial period, patients with a right ventricular infarction have a good overall prognosis and the long-term outcome, primarily determined by the left-sided lesions, is often favourable.
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PMID:Right ventricular myocardial infarction diagnosed by 99 m technetium pyrophosphate scintigraphy: clinical course and follow-up. 629 41


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