Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0034065 (pulmonary embolism)
14,979 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intravenous drug use patients present to the head and neck surgeon when injections are directed "in the pocket," or more appropriately, toward the internal jugular vein in the neck. The more common complications of this practice include the development of cellulitis, abscess, and venous thrombophlebitis and, potentially, pulmonary embolism and pseudoaneurysm of the carotid and subclavian arteries. Vocal cord paralysis as a result of neck injection in the intravenous drug-using population is rarely described, and a review of the literature has yielded only two reports addressing this uncommon phenomenon. During a 7 1/2-year period between October 1981 and June 1989, nine patients presented to Detroit Medical Center with hoarseness, upper-airway obstruction, or both following the injection of heroin or related substances into the neck. Otolaryngologic evaluation demonstrated unilateral or bilateral vocal cord paralysis coincident with recent neck injections. The clinical signs and symptoms, location of the injections, acute management, and subsequent complications are catalogued. Acute management of these patients consisted of airway assurance via tracheotomies when indicated and observation for the development of cellulitis, abscess, or more life-threatening neurovascular complications. Follow-up laryngeal examinations ranged from 4 months to 4 1/2 years and found no demonstrable return of vocal cord function in any of the nine patients.
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PMID:Vocal cord paralysis resulting from neck injections in the intravenous drug use population. 232 8

Skull base osteomyelitis (SBO) is difficult to diagnose when a patient presents with multiple cranial nerve palsies but no obvious infectious focus. There is no report about SBO with septic pulmonary embolism. A 51-yr-old man presented to our hospital with headache, hoarseness, dysphagia, frequent choking, fever, cough, and sputum production. He was diagnosed of having masked mastoiditis complicated by SBO with multiple cranial nerve palsies, sigmoid sinus thrombosis, and septic pulmonary embolism. We successfully treated him with antibiotics and anticoagulants alone, with no surgical intervention. His neurologic deficits were completely recovered. Decrease of pulmonary nodules and thrombus in the sinus was evident on the follow-up imaging one month later. In selected cases of intracranial complications of SBO and septic pulmonary embolism, secondary to mastoiditis with early response to antibiotic therapy, conservative treatment may be considered and surgical intervention may be withheld.
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PMID:A case of atypical skull base osteomyelitis with septic pulmonary embolism. 2173 54