Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0034065 (
pulmonary embolism
)
14,979
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pulmonary embolism
is the fourth leading cause of pleural effusion. The possibility of pulmonary embolus should be evaluated for all patients who have undiagnosed pleural effusion. The mechanism of pleural effusion caused by pulmonary embolus is usually increased interstitial fluid in the lungs as a result of ischemia or the release of vasoactive cytokines. Approximately 75% of patients with pulmonary emboli and pleural effusion have
pleuritic chest pain
. The most common cause of
pleuritic chest pain
and pleural effusion in patients under 40 years old is pulmonary emboli. Pleural effusion resulting from a pulmonary embolus usually occupies less than one-third of the hemithorax. Dyspnea is frequently out of proportion to the size of the pleural effusion. Pleural fluid caused by pulmonary emboli is usually exudative but is occasionally transudative. d-Dimer testing is a good screen for pulmonary emboli. If d-dimer results are positive, then a spiral computed tomograph should be obtained to confirm the diagnosis. Low-molecular-weight-heparin has become the initial treatment of choice for patients with pulmonary emboli and pleural effusion.
...
PMID:Pleural effusion due to pulmonary emboli. 1147 Sep 74
The diagnosis of
pulmonary embolism
(PE) presents a considerable challenge and requires a high index of clinical suspicion from the attending physician. In addition, diagnosing PE may require the use of one or more direct and indirect diagnostic methods. Here, transthoracic sonography (TS) provides an alternative and attractive bedside approach which is based on (1) detecting alterations in the lung parenchyma, (2) involvement of the pleura and (3) peripheral perfusion characteristics associated with thromboembolism. Using a 5 MHz or 3.5 MHz convex scanner, occasionally supplemented by a 7.5 MHz linear scanner or colour-flow Doppler mode, the intercostal areas are systematically examined by TS. Most of the PE-related lesions are localised in the lower lobes of the lung and are often associated with an area of
pleuritic chest pain
. The characteristic sonographic findings of TS in PE are multiple, hypoechoic, pleural-based parenchymal lesions which adopt a wedge-shape. In addition, a central echo may occasionally be detectable within the lesion. Another regular sonographic feature is the involvement of the pleura manifesting as either localised effusion, basal effusion or both. However, several differential diagnoses such as pneumonia, bronchogenic carcinoma, metastases of extra-pulmonary malignancies, and simple pleurisy need to be excluded. Since localisation of PE-associated lesions may occasionally escape sonographic detection, an inconspicuous sonographic result does not fully exclude PE. As detection of PE-associated lesions using chest ultrasonography has a high specificity and sensitivity, can be rapidly performed, is widely available, non-invasive, cost-effective, and avoids transport of critically ill patients to the investigation site, the technique may prove a valuable tool in the diagnosis of PE at bedside facilitating immediate treatment decision. Further, because the method focuses on detection of peripheral lesions it complements other diagnostic techniques employed when PE is suspected.
...
PMID:Transthoracic ultrasound of lung and pleura in the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism: a novel non-invasive bedside approach. 1466 64
The patient presented to the emergency room with hemoptysis and
pleuritic chest pain
. A chest x-ray revealed a broken dialysis catheter tip lodged in the pulmonary artery. The fractured catheter tip was removed via the femoral vein using a loop snare. As has been described for central lines and venous ports, a fractured catheter tip from a hemodialysis catheter may also lead to
pulmonary embolism
.
...
PMID:Pulmonary embolism due to catheter fracture from a tunneled dialysis catheter. 1475 Jan 19
Despite progress in early detection and treatment, the rates of mortality and recurrences of
pulmonary embolism
remain high. Cardiovascular specialists must keep
pulmonary embolism
in mind when they evaluate patients with unexplained substernal or
pleuritic chest pain
, dyspnea and syncope because these symptoms constitute the cardinal clinical presentation of
pulmonary embolism
. Authors are presenting a case report of a patient with repeating
pleuritic chest pain
with pleural effusion. The patient was treated as suspected tuberculous pleuritis. Authors diagnosed
pulmonary embolism
as a cause of pleural effusion by elevated plasmatic D-dimer and perfusion lung scan. Thrombosis in left subclavian vein established by angiography was source of embolus. Patient was evaluated regarding primary risk factors for venous thromboembolism and Prothrombin 20210A mutation was detected. Subsequent adequate medical treatment led to significant clinical upturn in this patient.
...
PMID:[Pulmonary embolism, prolonged diagnosis in young man]. 1563 37
The case of a 43-year-old man with diabetes and alcoholism admitted to the emergency room with shock, fever,
pleuritic chest pain
and systemic symptoms is presented. Laboratory tests revealed anemia, leukocytosis, thrombocytopenia, high sedimentation rate and D-dimers, hypoxemia and hypocapnea. He also had sinus tachycardia, rSR' in V1 and an opacity on the periphery of the right pulmonary field. Blood and urine cultures were negative, as were serological markers. The echocardiogram showed a large mass adhering to the tricuspid valve, suggestive of myxoma. The patient underwent surgery, and anatomopathological examination of the mass showed it to be a bacterial vegetation, with no agent isolated. It is pointed out that differential diagnosis is difficult between a myxoma with systemic symptomatology associated with a possible
pulmonary embolism
, and tricuspid endocarditis with negative blood culture associated with a septic
pulmonary embolism
, which turned out to be the diagnosis in this patient.
...
PMID:Pulmonary embolism associated with a large tricuspid-related mass. 1612 78
A 65 year-old man with heart failure due to hypertensive and ischemic heart disease was admitted to the hospital with dyspnea, bloody sputum and
pleuritic chest pain
after a 52-hour bus trip. Clinical and laboratory evaluation included chest helical tomography that demonstrated a filling defect of the right main branch of the pulmonary artery and a regular peripheral opacity of triangular shape in the inferior lobe of the lower lung. The diagnosis of pulmonary thromboembolism was made and therapy with heparin, followed by warfarin was introduced. The patient was discharged from the hospital. The diagnosis of
pulmonary embolism
should be considered in patients with complaints like this patient after long-distance bus travel.
...
PMID:[Economy class syndrome after long duration bus travel]. 1675 45
Pleuritic chest pain
is a common presenting symptom and has many causes, which range from life-threatening to benign, self-limited conditions.
Pulmonary embolism
is the most common potentially life-threatening cause, found in 5 to 20 percent of patients who present to the emergency department with pleuritic pain. Other clinically significant conditions that may cause pleuritic pain include pericarditis, pneumonia, myocardial infarction, and pneumothorax. Patients should be evaluated appropriately for these conditions before an alternative diagnosis is made. History, physical examination, and chest radiography are recommended for all patients with
pleuritic chest pain
. Electrocardiography is helpful, especially if there is clinical suspicion of myocardial infarction,
pulmonary embolism
, or pericarditis. When these other significant causes of pleuritic pain have been excluded, the diagnosis of pleurisy can be made. There are numerous causes of pleurisy, with viral pleurisy among the most common. Other etiologies may be evaluated through additional diagnostic testing in selected patients. Treatment of pleurisy typically consists of pain management with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, as well as specific treatments targeted at the underlying cause.
...
PMID:Pleurisy. 1750 31
We present three cases of septic
pulmonary embolism
which occurred as a result of three different causes. The first case, was a 23 year old woman suffering from cough, sputum, hemopthisis and
pleuritic chest pain
. She had a right subclavian port. On her thorax computed tomography (CT) scans there were widespread bilateral, irregular parenchymal nodular infiltrates and some of them beginning to cavitate. Meticilin resistant stafilococus aureus (MRSA) was isolated from the blood culture and septic embolism was diagnosed. A month after antibiotic theraphy her parenchymal nodules have considerably decreased in size. The second case was a 40 year old woman admitted to our hospital with the same complaints. Her radiological findings were similar. Meticilin sensitive stafilococus aureus (MSSA) was isolated from the blood cultures and antibiotic theraphy was initiated. To investigate the etiology of the nodules due to septic embolism, echocardiography was performed and infective endocarditis was diagnosed. After the antibiotic theraphy and a tricuspid valve operation her parenchymal nodules disappeared. The final case involved a 51 year old man suffering from fever, fatigue, cough and pain in the left arm for one week. His general status was bad. His radiological findings were also similar to the others. Staphillococcus aureus was isolated from blood and wound culture. Following clinical and radiological findings we thought it was a case of septic
pulmonary embolism
and antibiotic theraphy was started. Despite the therapy we did not take fever response and he died five days after antibiotic therapy. In conclusion, septic
pulmonary embolism
should be considered in bilateral cavitary nodular infiltrates and must be managed fast.
...
PMID:Septic pulmonary embolism: three case reports. 1883 21
Pulmonary embolism
(PE) is often evoked in patients with new-onset or worsening dyspnea, especially when it is associated with
pleuritic chest pain
. However, the prevalence of PE in patients with a clinical suspicion ranges from 20 % to as low as 5 %. Unfortunately, what exactly constitutes a clinical suspicion of PE in a patient with dyspnea can not be accurately standardized. The presence of risk factors for venous thromboembolism should prompt the search for PE. However, their absence does not rule out PE as the cause of the patient's symptoms, since around 30 % of patients with a first episode of PE have no risk or precipitating factors. Once PE is suspected, the diagnostic workup can be standardized and based on a large body of evidence, combining clinical assessment by a prediction rule, D-dimer measurement and CT angiography in patients with an elevated D-dimer level or a high clinical probability of PE. Patients with obvious alternative diagnoses such as acute left heart failure, pneumonia or acute coronary syndrome should not be investigated for PE.
...
PMID:From dyspnea to pulmonary embolism. 1972 8
We report the case of a 42-year-old man with
pleuritic chest pain
, shortness of breath, and associated tachycardia. Three months before, he had been treated for similar features with the diagnosis of pulmonary emboli. Computed tomography scan showed multiple bilateral pulmonary emboli. He had no clinical evidence of deep venous thrombosis, but an accurate venous duplex examination revealed a thrombosis of the posterior tibial vein aneurysm. Thrombolysis, a temporary inferior cava filter (ICV filter), and tangential aneurysmectomy and lateral venorrhaphy were performed. Accurate duplex scan evaluation of lower limb venous system is mandatory in all cases of
pulmonary embolism
; anticoagulation may be ineffective in preventing
pulmonary embolism
, and the surgical repair is treatment of choice of this pathology because it is safe and effective.
...
PMID:Primary tibial vein aneurysm with recurrent pulmonary emboli. 2057 Apr 71
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next >>