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)

Ten patients with matching ventilation-perfusion lung scan defects and corresponding pulmonary infiltrates were evaluated with segmental pulmonary angiography. All ten patients presented with sudden onset of pleuritic chest pain and fever. Pulmonary emboli were documented in three of the ten patients (30%). The remaining seven patients had pneumonia or atelectasis. The findings emphasize the non-diagnostic nature of lung scans which show only matching ventilation and perfusion defects in regions of pulmonary infiltrates. Segmental pulmonary angiography is recommended for differentiating pulmonary embolism from atelectasis or pneumonia in these patients.
...
PMID:Pulmonary embolism with unilateral lung scan defects and matching infiltrates. 46 74

Lung cancer is known as a risk factor of pulmonary embolism. We experienced a case of pulmonary embolism combined with pleural effusion and pleuritic chest pain as the initial manifestation of large cell lung cancer, which is a relatively rare cell type of lung cancer in Korea. We report it with a review of the literature.
...
PMID:Pulmonary embolism as the initial manifestation of large cell lung cancer--a case report with review. 133 79

Today a large group of patients with pulmonary embolism is still undetected because this disease is not suspected. We evaluated the role of routine clinical procedures such as history, chest x-ray, electrocardiogram and blood gas analysis in the diagnosis of this disease. We studied 177 patients sent to our observation with suspicion of pulmonary embolism, which was later confirmed in 97 and excluded in 80. Prolonged immobilization, surgical procedures and deep vein thrombosis are the most frequent predisposing factors (P less than 0.05 or less) in patients with pulmonary embolism with respect to patients with unconfirmed suspicion of embolism. Among symptoms and signs, pleuritic chest pain, sudden onset of dyspnea, tachypnea, fever, enlarged jugular veins, enhanced pulmonary component of the second heart sound, pulmonary systolic murmur and basal hypophonesis were the most frequent signs (P less than 0.005 or less) in patients with embolism. Among radiographic signs "sausage" descending pulmonary artery, diaphragmatic elevation, pulmonary infarction, Westermark sign and azygos vein enlargement were more frequent (P less than 0.05 or less) in patients with embolism with respect to patients with unconfirmed suspicion of embolism. Among electrocardiographic signs, tachycardia, P-R segment displacement and negative T wave in V1-V2 were more frequent in patients with embolism with respect to patients with unconfirmed suspicion of embolism (P less than 0.05 or less). PO2, standard pO2 and pCO2 were significantly lower (P less than 0.001) in patients with embolism. After discriminant analysis of the whole data set most patients were correctly classified as embolic (90/97) and non-embolic (75/80).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[The diagnosis of pulmonary embolism: the role of noninvasive technics]. 174 49

A series of 92 patients presenting to an accident and emergency department with pleuritic chest pain is described. Only one of the patients had a diagnosis of pulmonary embolus. All the patients were followed up over a period of 3 months. During this time none of them suffered from mortality or morbidity which could be related to pulmonary embolism. No evidence was obtained during this study that a more aggressive approach to such patients is required in order to achieve the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Pulmonary embolism in patients attending the accident and emergency department with pleuritic chest pain. 185 94

Although there is a critical need for effective contraception in the immediate postpartum period for women who are not breastfeeding, this need must be balanced against the inherent risks. The most effective form of contraceptive protection--oral contraceptives (OCs)--can present an increased risk of thromboembolism in the period after delivery. The thrombotic changes associated with pregnancy, and the statistics and vascular damage following a delivery, can combine to create greater potential for thromboembolism after delivery than during pregnancy. Reported here is the case of a 21-year-old woman who, 4 weeks postpartum, developed pain and swelling in the right lower calf and mottled discoloration extending from the proximal thigh to the toes. A diagnosis of deep venous thrombosis was made and heparin was administered. In the hospital, the patient experienced pleuritic chest pain and diaphoresis. A ventilation-perfusion scan indicated a pulmonary embolism. 1 week after delivery, the patient had initiated use of Triphasil. Although this woman had other risk factors (obesity, light cigarette smoking, and a sedentary life-style), OC use in the immediate postpartum period may have been the final factor precipitating the thromboembolic event. It is recommended that OC use should be delayed until at least 2 weeks postpartum in women without other risk factors for thromboembolism and until 4-6 weeks postpartum in those with such factors.
...
PMID:Oral contraceptives in the immediate postpartum period. 201 Jul 44

The anamnesis is believed to be poor in identifying patients with pulmonary embolism (PE), but the method of data collection may be critical for inference on this issue. We compared the prevalences of history findings recorded after a free verbal interview (VI) by the referring physicians with those recorded after completion of a standardized questionnaire (SQ) by the admitting physicians in a group of 177 consecutive patients referred to our Emergency Unit with the suspicion of PE (subsequently confirmed in 97). VI data were incomplete in 18 patients. In the remaining 159 patients, prevalences of symptoms and predisposing factors were higher after SQ than after VI. Accordingly, 8 items (obesity, prolonged immobilization, surgery, varicose leg veins, deep venous thrombosis, pleuritic chest pain, and sudden-onset dyspnea) were significantly more prevalent in patients with confirmed PE after SQ, compared to only 2 items (prolonged immobilization and pleuritic chest pain) after VI. When we tested for the agreement between the two methods of data collection, kappa values ranged from high values (for surgery and hemoptysis) to very low values (for prolonged immobilization and recurrent phlebitis). These results show that the use of an SQ could improve the accuracy of collecting clinical data in patients with suspected PE, as they are also consistent in separating patients with PE from those with unconfirmed suspicion of PE. Moreover, it allows the clinician to be alert towards findings which could be missed when not carefully searched for and which may be useful to raise or strengthen the suspicion of this disease.
...
PMID:Improvement of screening for pulmonary embolism with a standardized questionnaire. 228 10

A 43 year-old black man with sickle cell trait documented by hemoglobin electrophoresis presented with severe pleuritic chest pain and hypoxemia three weeks after discharge following abdominal surgery. A pulmonary embolus was diagnosed by angiography and he was treated with heparin; the minimum arterial pO2 was 55 torr while O2 was being administered at a rate of 3 L/min. During this therapy, he developed abdominal pain. Computerized tomography suggested splenic infarction, which was documented by radionuclide liver-spleen scan and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); the patient's spleen had been normal at exploratory laparotomy three weeks previously. No source for emboli was identified in the deep venous system by MRI. Although splenic infarction has been reported in patients with sickle cell trait at high altitude, this is the first reported case of splenic infarction secondary to the hypoxemia of pulmonary embolism in a patient with sickle cell trait. The spleen is subject to infarction in sickle cell trait because blood flow is slow through a hypoxemic and acidemic environment. The additional hypoxemia due to pulmonary embolism is presumed, in our patient, to have created a local splenic environment which permitted infarction to occur.
...
PMID:Pulmonary embolism and splenic infarction in a patient with sickle cell trait. 231 14

Pleuritic chest pain is a frequent complaint in patients coming to the emergency room, but the proportion of such patients with pulmonary embolism is uncertain. In a prospective study, we evaluated the diagnostic outcomes in 173 consecutive patients who came to the emergency room with pleuritic chest pain. Pulmonary embolism, as demonstrated by angiography or autopsy, was present in 36 (21%). The need for objective testing is clearly indicated by our finding that the sensitivity (85%) and specificity (37%) of predetermined clinical variables for pulmonary embolism were insufficient to allow a definitive treatment decision. Optimal sensitivity and specificity are obtained by using pulmonary angiography in combination with lung scanning. The proportion of patients requiring angiography is substantially reduced, from 43% to 26%, without significant loss of accuracy, if ventilation imaging and impedance plethysmography are used together with perfusion scanning.
...
PMID:Pulmonary embolism in outpatients with pleuritic chest pain. 335 4

Pulmonary embolism, a major complication of thromboembolic disease, remains an important cause of mortality, both in surgical and medical practice. In recent literature, one finds two different currents: the first one asserts that pulmonary embolism is overdiagnosed and, therefore, "overtreated" with iatrogenic hemorrhagic complications, when other authors assert that pulmonary embolism is underdiagnosed and "undertreated". It is obvious that clinical diagnosis of non massive, acute pulmonary embolism remains difficult and that the classical triad pleuritic chest pain, hemoptysis and signs of deep venous thrombosis is not frequently found. The clinician should be attentive to the different symptoms and clinical signs which might arouse a suspicion of pulmonary embolism. A large range of investigations is available to confirm the clinical diagnosis. In deep venous thrombosis preceding or accompanying pulmonary embolism, treatment should be instituted at the first signs of venous attack. A precise diagnosis will secondarily be confirmed by phlebography. Any delay in effective early treatment of thromboembolic disease will increase the risk of pulmonary embolism and of the mortality inherent in this dreadful complication.
...
PMID:[Clinical diagnosis of pulmonary embolism]. 371 25

The clinical presentation and radiographic progression of Legionnaires' disease is described in 10 renal transplant patients, the majority undergoing treatment for rejection. Presentation with pleuritic chest pain, fever, hypoxia, and hemoptysis was typical and in some cases led to confusion with pulmonary embolism. The radiographic appearance was that of rapidly progressive, dense, sublobar consolidation, occasionally showing patchy spread to other areas and usually accompanied by pleural effusion. Cavitation occurred in seven of 10 patients.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease in the renal transplant patient: clinical presentation and radiographic progression. 638 84


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Next >>