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)

The authors report their experience with 6 patients requiring liver transplantation who suffered with liver infestation by Echinococcus granulosus. One patient presented with acute Budd-Chiari syndrome because obstruction of hepatic veins was produced during the first operation; the other 5 patients received liver transplants for terminal chronic liver disease (2 secondary sclerosing cholangitis, 2 secondary biliary cirrhosis, and 1 postnecrotic cirrhosis of the liver). All the patients had been operated previously on for hydatidosis and were at the end of liver functional disorder. Some of the patients had undergone many operations, making the transplantation procedure even more difficult. One patient required a second transplant for primary graft failure; he died 40 days later from cerebrovascular accident. Another patient died 7 months after transplant from pulmonary embolism. The other 4 patients are alive and in optimal condition 37-65 months after transplantation. Hepatic hydatidosis--in principle, a benign disease--can cause hepatic complications that eventually require liver transplantation. The transplantation procedure is more difficult than usual in these cases. Although postoperative complications are frequent, most patients achieve prolonged survival and a good quality of life.
...
PMID:Liver transplantation for Echinococcus granulosus hydatid disease. 794 Jul 13

We introduce you a case report of a female patient who has got a chronic liver disease and who entered our hospital with clinical suspicion of pulmonary embolism. The radionuclide lung perfusion scan using 99m Technetium-labelled with macroaggregated albumin, showed an abnormal uptake out of the lungs in liver, spleen, and kidneys. Once all possible etiologies of extrapulmonary uptake were excluded and confirming that the hepatopulmonary syndrome clinical criteria were coincident with our case, we attribute that the abnormal extrapulmonary uptake was explainable due to this syndrome. This is an hepatopulmonary syndrome case in which nuclear medicine techniques were decisive for the diagnosis in front of other diagnostic tests (radiography, echography and CT) that gave valuable but non conclusive information.
...
PMID:[Hepatopulmonary syndrome and pulmonary perfusion scan]. 961 Dec 82

A 30-year-old HBsAg-positive woman was admitted to the hospital because of 6 days of progressive shortness of breath. She was in severe respiratory distress with circulatory collapse. She had an enlarged liver but no stigmata of chronic liver disease or signs of cirrhosis. She had rapidly developed respiratory arrest and was transferred to intensive care unit. Heart ultrasonography and Doppler scan showed right heart straining and high pulmonary artery pressure. Despite cardiovascular and respiratory support she died a few hours after admission. Autopsy revealed combined hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma infiltrating the entire liver, metastatic invasion of lung blood vessels and absence of right ventricular hypertrophy. The incidence of hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma, a variant of hepatocellular carcinoma, is roughly 2-3% and the presenting symptoms are abdominal pain, weight loss, jaundice, fever or decompensation of liver disease. Associated HBsAg positivity and cirrhosis are reported in 20-30% and 60% of patients, respectively. Metastases to lungs are relatively frequent but this is the first report of hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma presented with acute respiratory distress due to massive pulmonary embolism.
...
PMID:Combined hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma presented with massive pulmonary embolism. 1102 Aug 95

When the suprahepatic vena cava or the hepatic vein confluence with the inferior vena cava (IVC) is obscured by tumor or a clot in the IVC extends above the liver, cross-clamping the IVC during liver or retroperitoneal resection is hazardous. This report describes a 10-year experience with ten patients who had liver (seven) or retroperitoneal (three) resections with vena cava reconstruction using cardiopulmonary bypass and hypothermic circulatory arrest. There were no perioperative deaths. Morbidity consisted of prolonged bile leak (one), pulmonary embolism (one), and stroke (one). Control of the liver was secured in six of seven patients who had a liver resection. There were three significant advantages to this technique. First, the median sternotomy provided superior exposure to the suprahepatic IVC. Second, the bypass technique avoided the risks of hemodynamic instability and prevented air embolism and sudden uncontrolled hemorrhage incurred by resection or IVC cross-clamping. Third, hypothermia provided a method of protection for residual liver function especially in the face of chronic liver disease induced by infection or chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Continuing experience with liver resection and vena cava reconstruction using cardiopulmonary bypass and hypothermic circulatory arrest. 1195 47

Low molecular weight heparins (LMWHs) are a rapidly growing class of anticoagulant drug. Their efficacy has been demonstrated in several clinical settings where they are rapidly becoming the anticoagulant of choice. Controlled clinical studies in patients with deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, and unstable angina have documented that the frequency of major hemorrhage is 0.5-4%. The purpose of the study was to determine the frequency of minor and major hemorrhage occurring in patients receiving anticoagulant doses of an LMWH (enoxaparin) during routine clinical practice. A prospective, observational study of consecutive patients receiving enoxaparin 1 mg/kg twice daily for at least 24 hours in five internal medicine wards of a university teaching hospital was performed. Five hundred forty-nine patients were studied. The mean age was 67.5+/-15.5 years and the mean duration of enoxaparin therapy was 3.8+/-1.5 days. Hemorrhage was documented in a total of 94 patients (17.3%). Major hemorrhage occurred in 14 patients (2.6%), injection-site hemorrhage occurred in 55 patients (10%), and minor hemorrhage (noninjection site) was documented in 25 patients (4.7%). There were two deaths attributed to hemorrhage. Patients with major hemorrhage were older than patients with minor or no hemorrhage (75.5+/-10.4 versus 66.8+/-15.2 years; p=0.03) and occurred in patients receiving enoxaparin for a longer period (5.14+/-3.8 days) than those with minor (4+/-2.5 days) or no hemorrhage (2.9+/-2.1 days). Major hemorrhage was significantly associated with impaired renal function, chronic liver disease, and concomitant treatment with warfarin or a proton pump inhibitor. Enoxaparin used in anticoagulant doses in unselected medical patients is not associated with more major hemorrhagic complications than observed in controlled clinical trials. Major hemorrhage may be more likely in older patients, in patients with chronic liver disease and impaired renal function, in patients receiving prolonged enoxaparin therapy, and in patients receiving warfarin or proton pump inhibitors.
...
PMID:Hemorrhagic complications in patients treated with anticoagulant doses of a low molecular weight heparin (enoxaparin) in routine hospital practice. 1670 22

Patients with chronic liver disease may present with different degrees of respiratory dysfunction whose differential diagnosis is important before elective surgery. We report the case of a misleading diagnosis of peri-operative respiratory failure in a cirrhotic patient who underwent mastectomy. Intra-operative respiratory failure was ascribed by the anaesthetic team to pulmonary embolism and after the operation this diagnosis was still suspected. Despite postoperative heparin treatment, pulmonary gas exchange remained severely impaired. On the hypothesis of a right to left shunt, we performed transoesophageal echocardiography with a bubble test and confirmed hepatopulmonary syndrome. We administered anticoagulant therapy to the patient following surgery, increasing the risk of haemorrhage. We also continued orotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation longer than was needed. Respiratory symptoms in a patient with liver disease should not be underestimated and up to 20% of these patients may have hepatopulmonary syndrome.
...
PMID:Peri-operative respiratory failure in a cirrhotic patient: a misleading diagnosis. 1769 29

Patients with chronic liver disease exhibit various cardiovascular and pulmonary complications. Hepatopulmonary syndrome results in dyspnea due to intrapulmonary arteriovenous shunting and ventilation-perfusion mismatch. Portopulmonary hypertension occurs in patients with portal hypertension. Intrathoracic portosystemic collateral vascular pathways develop in patients with portal hypertension to allow decompression of the portal vein into the systemic circulation. Hepatic hydrothorax may develop in patients with cirrhosis and ascites. Massive necrosis of the liver from any cause may be associated with acute hypoxic respiratory failure, necessitating ventilatory support. Bacterial infection is common in cirrhotic patients because of a compromised host defense system. Hepatocellular carcinoma may produce hematogenous lung metastases, intrathoracic lymph node metastases, direct intracardiac extension, and pulmonary embolism. Interferon therapy for treatment of chronic active hepatitis C may disturb cellular immune activation in some patients and contribute to the onset and progression of sarcoidosis. Awareness of the various thoracic manifestations in chronic liver disease can be helpful for making a differential diagnosis and planning proper management.
...
PMID:Thoracic complications of liver cirrhosis: radiologic findings. 1944 18

Patients with liver cirrhosis are characterized by decreased synthesis of both pro- and anticoagulant factors, and recently there has been evidence of normal generation of thrombin resulting in a near normal haemostatic balance. Although it is generally recognized that bleeding is the most common clinical manifestation as a result of decreased platelet function and number, diminished clotting factors and excessive fibrinolysis, hypercoagulability may play an under recognized but important role in many aspects of chronic liver disease. In fact, they can encounter thrombotic complications such as portal vein thrombosis, occlusion of small intrahepatic vein branches and deep vein thrombosis (DVT). In particular, patients with cirrhosis appear to have a higher incidence of unprovoked DVT and pulmonary embolism (PE) compared with the general population. In dedicated studies, the incidence of DVT/PE ranges from 0.5% to 1.9%, similar to patients without comorbidities, but lower than patients with other chronic diseases (i.e, renal or heart disease). Surprisingly, standard coagulation laboratory parameters are not associated with a risk of developing DVT/PE; however, with multivariate analysis, serum albumin level was independently associated with the occurrence of thrombosis. Moreover, patients with chronic liver disease share the same risk factors as the general population for DVT/PE, and specifically, liver resection can unbalance the haemostatic equilibrium towards a hypercoagulable state. Current guidelines on antithrombotic prophylaxis do not specifically comment on the cirrhotic population as a result of the perceived risk of bleeding complications but the cirrhotic patient should not be considered as an auto-anticoagulated patient. Therefore, thromboprophylaxis should be recommended in patients with liver cirrhosis at least when exposed to high-risk conditions for thrombotic complications. Low molecular weight heparins (LWMHs) seem to be relatively safe in this group of patients; however, when important risk factors for bleeding are present, graduated compression stockings or intermittent pneumatic compression should be considered.
...
PMID:Should we give thromboprophylaxis to patients with liver cirrhosis and coagulopathy? 1981 8

Vascular invasion of supra-hepatic veins (SHV) is a major complication of primary liver tumours. The tumorous thrombus, when extended to the vena cava and right atrium, may produce occlusion of the tricuspid valve or pulmonary embolism with sudden cardiac death. The presence of macroscopic vascular infiltration represents an advanced stage of the tumour contraindicating liver transplantation, thus liver resection with thrombectomy is the only therapeutic option in this setting despite the concerns of postoperative liver failure and the dismal results at distance. A 45-year-old male with chronic active hepatitis/cirrhosis was referred to our department for a tumour in the left hemi-liver with infiltration of the left-middle hepatic veins and a tumour thrombus extension to the right atrium. We reported a successful cavo-atrial thrombectomy, along with left hemi-hepatectomy, under hypothermic cardio-circulatory arrest (HCA). To our knowledge, this technique has been used only once for primary liver cancer on chronic liver disease, this being the second case reported in literature. We conclude that this technique should be considered for atrial thrombi removal in patients affected by liver tumours in the presence of a healthy liver or of a well compensated liver cirrhosis in order to prolong the patient's life span.
...
PMID:Cavo-atrial thrombectomy combined with left hemi-hepatectomy for vascular invasion from hepatocellular carcinoma on diseased liver under hypothermic cardio-circulatory arrest. 1995 14

A number of diseases may cause right atrial mass. Primary cardiac tumors range from 0.002 to 0.25%. Intracardiac manifestation and pulmonary embolism of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a very rare finding and uncommon even at autopsy. Here we describe the case of a 32-year-old Asian man who was referred for shortness of breath lasting for a month, along with unproductive cough. He was a manual laborer with a history of diabetes, alcoholism, and smoking. Clinically he was diagnosed as having pulmonary embolism. Echocardiogram showed a mass in the right atrium. Magnetic resonance imaging showed that he had a large mass in the right atrium extending down into the inferior vena cava. Further evaluation showed that he had chronic liver disease with portal hypertension and was hepatitis B surface antigen-positive, indicating hepatitis B infection. He underwent excision of the mass, and the pathological report showed metastasis of HCC with multiple vascular emboli in the lungs. As this is the second reported case of this kind in the literature, we highlight the need of screening at least 6-monthly all patients with chronic liver disease, hepatitis B and C virus infection for the early detection of HCC.
...
PMID:A rare cause for acute cor pulmonale. 2171 49


1 2 Next >>