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Query: UMLS:C0034065 (
pulmonary embolism
)
14,979
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chronic pulmonary embolism
is resistant to medicinal treatment. This is a report of the successful operation for chronic
pulmonary embolism
. A 29-year-old man suffered from dyspnea attack twice half a year in spite of intensive anticoagulant therapy. Cardiac catheterization showed pulmonary hypertension of 72/25 mmHg, mean 42 mmHg. Pulmonary angiogram demonstrated emboli in the right pulmonary artery and pulmonary perfusion scintigram revealed large perfusion defect in the right lung. The patient underwent pulmonary embolectomy after the total cardiopulmonary bypass. After surgery, blood gas showed an increased PaO2 from 65 to 77 mmHg. Pulmonary artery pressure decreased to 39/12 mmHg, mean 23 mmHg. Pulmonary arteriogram showed increased pulmonary vascular beds and pulmonary scintigram showed an increased perfusion in the right lung. The patient has been free from symptom and a half year after surgery.
...
PMID:[Pulmonary embolectomy for a patient of chronic pulmonary embolism]. 259 27
Chronic pulmonary embolism
is a rare disease which can occur at first with pulmonary hypertension. In these cases it may be difficult to distinguish between primary pulmonary hypertension. We examined nine patients with Chronic
Pulmonary Embolism
(CPE) (three females and six males, mean age 45 +/- 13 years, range 21-67 years) and ten patients with Primary Pulmonary Hypertension (PPH) (seven females and three males, mean age 35 +/- 13 years, range 10-56 years) who came to our attention during the years 1973-1986 (mean follow up 3 years). All patients had an electrocardiogram, chest x-ray, echocardiogram, cardiac catheterization with pulmonary angiography; seven patients with CPE and eight with PPH had perfusion lung scans. Progressive dyspnoea was the main feature in all the patients; four out of nine with CPE and none of the ones with PPH had a previous history of thrombophlebitis. In all the patients the electrocardiogram, chest x-ray and echocardiogram showed signs of pulmonary hypertension, so that a clear distinction between the two groups was not possible. Cardiac catheterization showed pulmonary pressure values higher in patients with PPH as compared to the ones with CPE (systolic pressure 96 mmHg vs 70 mmHg, diastolic pressure 49 mmHg vs 31 mmHg, mean pressure 65 mmHg vs 45 mmHg). Pulmonary angiography in more than half of the patients with CPE showed a "cut off" of two or more lobar branches of the pulmonary arteries. In the patients with PPH pulmonary angiography showed a dilatation of the main pulmonary artery and a diffuse bilateral hypoperfusion. Perfusion lung scan in all the cases of CPE showed zonal perfusion defects, while in all cases of PPH, with the exception of one, it was largely normal. Venograms in the districts of the inferior vena cava demonstrated thrombosis in two out of six patients with CPE. Negative venograms were found in the five patients with PPH who had this investigation performed. One patient with CPE had a surgical embolectomy, the other eight had anticoagulant oral treatment. During the follow-up period three patients with CPE and five with PPH died within five years and within fifteen months respectively, of the diagnosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Differences in patients with chronic pulmonary embolism and primary pulmonary hypertension]. 338 46
Chronic pulmonary embolism
with pulmonary hypertension in children is rarely diagnosed clinically; literature review yielded only 17 recorded cases. To demonstrate the radiographic features as well as to encourage the diagnostic consideration of chronic
pulmonary embolism
in children, this report focuses on three additional children with chronic
pulmonary embolism
. Of these 20 total cases, only two were not catheter-related; 17 patients had emboli as a complication of ventriculoatrial shunting, and one had emboli secondary to indwelling venous hyperalimentation. Analysis of the information available on the 20 cases revealed the following radiographic features: cardiomegaly (19 cases), large central pulmonary arteries with rapid distal tapering (15 cases), oligemia (five cases), "infiltrate" (three cases), and effusion (two cases). With increasing use of central catheterization as treatment for children with chronic illness, the incidence of chronic
pulmonary embolism
will likely increase; therefore, clinical diagnosis should reflect this increase. The radiologist in particular should be aware of the clinical and radiologic features of chronic
pulmonary embolism
in children.
...
PMID:Chronic pulmonary embolism in children. 396 Nov 85
Chronic pulmonary embolism
may occur in the antiphospholipid syndrome. Antiphospholipid antibodies including the lupus anticoagulant and anticardiolipin should therefore be searched for systematically in these patients. Blood clotting (lupus anticoagulant) and immunological (anticardiolipin) investigations are complementary; their positivity may be dissociated. If the thrombus is located in the proximal pulmonary artery, surgical thrombectomy is possible. Operative mortality ranges from 12.6% to 20%. The association of oral anticoagulants with low dose aspirin is indicated for the long term treatment of these patients. The role of steroid therapy is discussed. The authors report the case of a patient with antiphospholipid antibodies who successfully underwent surgical removal of a chronic
pulmonary embolism
.
...
PMID:[Pulmonary thrombectomy in a patient with antiphospholipid syndrome]. 874 22
Computed tomographic (CT) pulmonary angiography is becoming the standard of care at many institutions for the evaluation of patients with suspected
pulmonary embolism
. This pathologic condition, whether acute or chronic, causes both partial and complete intraluminal filling defects, which should have a sharp interface with intravascular contrast material. In acute
pulmonary embolism
that manifests as complete arterial occlusion, the affected artery may be enlarged. Partial filling defects due to acute
pulmonary embolism
are often centrally located, but when eccentrically located they form acute angles with the vessel wall.
Chronic pulmonary embolism
can manifest as complete occlusive disease in vessels that are smaller than adjacent patent vessels. Other CT pulmonary angiographic findings in chronic
pulmonary embolism
include evidence of recanalization, webs or flaps, and partial filling defects that form obtuse angles with the vessel wall. Factors that cause misdiagnosis of
pulmonary embolism
may be patient related, technical, anatomic, or pathologic. The radiologist needs to determine the quality of a CT pulmonary angiographic study and whether
pulmonary embolism
is present. If the quality of the study is poor, the radiologist should identify which pulmonary arteries have been rendered indeterminate and whether additional imaging is necessary.
...
PMID:CT angiography of pulmonary embolism: diagnostic criteria and causes of misdiagnosis. 1537 4