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

Pertinent historical, clinical, and laboratory findings were recorded for 37 consecutive patients who presented to the emergency room complaining of shortness of breath and chest pain but without evidence of coronary insufficiency, pneumonia, or musculoskeletal injury. 13 had pulmonary embolism suggested by lung scan with or without pulmonary angiogram, or, in 2 cases, by right heart catheterization. As a group, these patients in whom embolism was judged probable approached fairly closely the profiles of previous studies of patients with documented pulmonary emboli. Nonetheless, they differed very little, and in no clinically useful way short of lung scans and invasive studies, from the remaining 24 patients in whom embolism was judged unlikely. In the population served by this emergency room, which has a high morbidity from chest diseases and putative predisposing conditions to pulmonary embolism, screening patients for high and low probability groups for this diagnosis cannot be done on clinical grounds alone. Six-projection ventilation-perfusion lung scanning may be the only acceptable screening examination, and should be available directly from the emergency room in hospitals with an active emergency service.
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PMID:Accuracy of screening for pulmonary embolism in the emergency room. 45 63

The study of two cases of young patients with renal transplants who, successively and a few months after the procedure, presented a thrombophlebitis of the lower extremities (with or without pulmonary embolism), then an acute coronary insufficiency, without any encouraging or triggering factor, raises the hypothesis that this is not a mere coincidence. In fact, in the literature, numerous cardiovascular risk factors) inherent in complicated chronic renal failure, dialysis, steroid therapy and immuno-suppressive treatment (Azathioprime, under these circumstances) were demonstrated. In addition, abnormalities of the platelets aggregation, hemostasis and fibrinolysis, were at the origin of thrombo-embolic accidents. Besides any specific cardiovascular risk factor or any obvious biological anomaly, there is still a predisposition of patients with renal transplants, to arterial as well as venous thrombo-embolic accidents.
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PMID:[Arterial and venous thromboembolic complications in patients with renal transplants. Apropos of 2 cases]. 266 42

Two cases of massive pulmonary embolism, with elevation of the ST segment in the right precordial leads, are reported. In the presence of this electrocardiographic sign, simulating acute coronary insufficiency involving right ventricle, the diagnosis of acute cor pulmonale should be suspected.
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PMID:[Electrocardiographic aspects simulating acute myocardial infarct in massive pulmonary embolism. Description of 2 cases]. 381 70

Elevation of the ST segment in the right precordial leads may be associated with electrocardiographic signs of acute cor pulmonale. This sign, which we have observed in 77 cases of moderate to severe pulmonary embolism (greater than 1.3 per cent of cases), is a very early but transient sign of usually moderate to severe pulmonary embolism. In the presence of this sign, the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism with acute cor pulmonale should be proposed at the same time as more common aetiologies such as coronary insufficiency and pericardial disease.
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PMID:[An overlooked electrocardiographic sign of acute embolic cor pulmonale: elevation of the ST segment in right precordial leads]. 401 15

The surgical treatment of acute heart failure is limited to cases of pressure or volume overload. Acute valvular regurgitation due to active endocarditis or to prosthetic dysfunction is a classic example of failure which can be cured by restoring valvular competence. Acute pressure load is mostly caused by prosthetic dysfunction or pulmonary embolism; therapy is aimed at removal of the causative agent. Coronary heart disease can cause heart failure by volume overload: acute mitral incompetence or ventricular septal defect lend themselves to surgical correction. In the surgical treatment of acute heart failure maximal attention is devoted to optimal timing of surgery, anesthetic management and postoperative care. Careful attention to the function of the right and left ventricle and combination of catecholamines, afterload reducing agents and volume loading together with respirator support have considerably improved the surgical results. Acute pump failure due to coronary insufficiency and infarction is less amenable to surgical treatment, with rare exceptions of emergencies during coronary angiography and percutaneous dilatation. The intra-aortic balloon pump is the only method of mechanical circulatory assistance which has reached widespread clinical acceptance. The best results are achieved in conjunction with surgery: either as cardiac support in inherently reversible postoperative heart failure or as the means of circulatory stabilization prior to surgery. Ventricular assist devices are still in the experimental stage: their use has been sharply curtailed by the virtual disappearance of the postoperative low output syndrome. In selected cases of end-stage cardiomyopathy cardiac transplantation is nowadays performed with acceptable survival (70% at one year after surgery). Both orthotopic and heterotopic transplantation (transplanted heart in parallel with the natural one) give comparable results, but the procedure is still very restricted due to the lack of donors, multiple contraindications and lack of suitable heart preservation techniques.
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PMID:Surgical and mechanical support of the failing heart. 622 Aug 97