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)

Three patients with chronic pulmonary embolism underwent successfully unilateral pulmonary arterial thromboembolectomy. In these cases, severe degree of right heart failure and respiratory distress were the primary indications to the operation. Under normothermic partial cardiopulmonary bypass, right unilateral pulmonary thromboembolectomy were performed with beating heart. Distal counter-incision was found to be facilitated to remove thrombi completely from the distal pulmonary artery. In the results of long-term study, postoperative cardiac catheterization data encouraged us to use this technique in the surgical treatment for the selective cases of this disease. All three patients have been doing well without any sign of recurrence up to 17 years of the surgery.
...
PMID:The results of three cases of unilateral pulmonary embolectomy through right thoracotomy approach for chronic pulmonary embolism. 779 Mar 43

A case of a clinically occult ovarian carcinoma leading to subacute cor pulmonale in a 62-year-old woman is described. The patient was admitted to hospital with increasing respiratory distress. Physical examination and echocardiography showed signs of pulmonary hypertension. She died from circulatory failure. Autopsy revealed a bilateral ovarian carcinoma with diffuse carcinosis of the peritoneum. No gross evidence of pulmonary embolism was present, but microscopic investigation revealed tumour-related microangiopathic lesions causing the lethal pulmonary hypertension.
...
PMID:Subacute cor pulmonale due to microscopic pulmonary tumour cell embolization. 796 40

Despite the low morbidity and mortality of laparoscopic cholecystectomy, trauma and infection have been reported. Such complications can produce a misleading clinical picture, as in two cases we observed. Case 1. A symptomatic 56-year-old female patient underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy. During the operation, the gall bladder ruptured and the contents had to be aspirated from the abdominal cavity. The patient complained of hepatalgia 2 weeks after the operation, then was not seen again for more than 1 year when fever and hepatalgia did not respond to symptomatic treatment. An inter-hepato-renal collection (6 cm in diameter) was punctured under echography. Aspirate culture yielded Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Adapted antibiotic therapy was unsuccessful and surgery was required to empty the abscess then remove a fibrous conjunctive tissue formation. Case 2. A 55-year-old female patient with a history of complete remission after mammectomy for breast cancer underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy in 1991. Two days after the operation, fever (39 degrees C) was accompanied by abdominal defence. Biliary peritonitis due to imperfect suture of the bile duct was repaired followed by peritoneal lavage-drainage. Per-operative blood samples revealed type 6 Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Despite adapted parenteral antibiotics, fever persisted at 39 degrees C and intense jaundice was observed. A second laparoscopy 14 days later showed inflammatory narrowing of the main bile duct which was drained into a small bowel loop. Eight days later computed tomography revealed multiple abscess in the liver. Transparietal cholangiography was performed and showed that the contrast medium entered the abscesses via the biliary canals. The state of sepsis persisted, jaundice worsened and hepatic encephalopathy developed with obnubilation and flapping tremor. After 1 month of general antibiotherapy, no improvement was seen on computed tomography images and needle biopsy of an abscess led to the identification of resistant type 6 P. aeruginosa. Antibiotics were adapted and administered iv with no clinical improvement. Selective catheterism of the hepatic artery via the femoral access was performed to allow intra-hepatic antibiotic delivery. Three weeks later clinical situation remained unchanged when acute respiratory distress highly suggestive of pulmonary embolism led to death. Autopsy was not performed. In both of these rare cases of infectious complications due to P. aeruginosa after laparoscopic cholecystectomy, the source of contamination remained unknown. Nosocomial infection was suspected.
...
PMID:[Celioscopic cholecystectomy. 2 cases of infectious complications]. 782 63

After left lower lobe lobectomy for lung carcinoma, a patient had acute respiratory failure secondary to pneumonia and pulmonary embolism requiring a ventilator. Tc-99m HMDP bone scan showed diffuse, intense hepatic uptake. Concurrent liver enzymes indicated hepatic necrosis. Two weeks later the patient died and a limited chest autopsy confirmed acute adult onset respiratory distress syndrome. Etiologic factors of massive hepatic necrosis in relation to hepatic localization of bone imaging agent and its prognostic outcome are discussed.
...
PMID:Diffuse and intense Tc-99m HMDP localization in the liver due to hypoxia secondary to respiratory failure. 818 95

A case is reported of a 9-year-old girl admitted with a subarachnoid haemorrhage. Her neurological recovery was favourable after the embolization of a cerebral arterio-venous malformation. She stayed in ICU with mechanical ventilation because of a bacterial pneumonia and a post-extubation laryngeal oedema. She required insertion of a polyurethane subclavian catheter, as a peripheral venous access was not available. Five days later, the child suffered a sudden respiratory distress without changes of the electrocardiogram and the chest X-ray. The diagnosis of pulmonary embolism was suspected because of the presence of the central venous catheter, a catheter dysfunction and a superior vena cava syndrome. A catheter tip thrombus was shown by angiography as well as a thrombus in the pulmonary artery, a 90% obstruction of the proximal valvular tree of the right lung, a 10 to 15% distal obstruction in the left lung, a complete obstruction of the superior vena cava (SCV). The thrombolytic therapy was contra-indicated in this case because of the neurological pathology. Heparin was given by continuous intravenous infusion. When heparin concentration was at an appropriate level, the catheter was removed. Its microbiological culture remained negative. The next day, another angiography showed a partial permeability of the SVC and a better right pulmonary perfusion. During this procedure, the haemodynamic assessment showed only moderate abnormalities. Therefore the surgical treatment was not indicated and the heparin continued. The child recovered gradually with a normalization of the lung scintigraphy.
...
PMID:[Massive pulmonary embolism caused by thrombosis formed on a central catheter in a child]. 831 58

An esophagobronchial fistula developed in a patient who had well-differentiated squamous carcinoma of the lung that was treated with chemotherapy. Because the esophagobronchial fistula could not be surgically repaired, it was isolated with a mechanical stitch above and below it. Forty-eight hours after initiation of enteral nutrition, a perfusion lung scan was performed because of clinical suspicion of pulmonary embolism. Because the scan showed reduced pulmonary radioactivity and accumulation of activity in the kidneys and spine, an arteriovenous shunt was suspected. However, subsequent digital subtraction angiography ruled out this possibility and a recurrence of the esophagobronchial fistula was confirmed with an esophagogram. The unusual extrapulmonary activity could be related to a reversible capillary shunt in the pulmonary vasculature, secondary to acute respiratory distress syndrome.
...
PMID:Respiratory distress syndrome. A suggestive pattern of shunt effect detected by means of macroparticles. 842 14

A 73-year-old man with myasthenia gravis was treated with daily plasmapheresis. During the course of treatment, the patient developed progressive thrombocytopenia and an episode of severe acute respiratory distress suggesting pulmonary embolism. The thrombocytopenia and respiratory impairment improved after discontinuation of heparin, and both recurred on heparin rechallenge. The presence of heparin-specific antibodies was confirmed by in vitro assay. The time frame of clinical events suggests a heparin-mediated mechanism for both the thrombocytopenia and respiratory compromise. We conclude that acute respiratory distress may be the presenting manifestation of the syndrome of heparin-associated thrombocytopenia in patients treated with dialysis or apheresis.
...
PMID:Pseudopulmonary embolism: acute respiratory distress in the syndrome of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia. 904 Dec 23

A 38-year-old female is described, who was admitted with increasing respiratory distress, cough and visible blood stasis in the jugular veins. The most likely diagnosis in this young women taking oral contraceptives was pulmonary embolism, however, a ventilation-perfusion lung scan was normal. Echocardiography showed a dilated right ventricle and increased systolic pulmonary pressure. Despite administration of oxygen and intravenous heparin the patient died in circulatory collapse before further investigations could be initiated. Post-mortem examination revealed diffuse adenocarcinoma of the stomach (linitis plastica) with metastasis to local lymphnodes, lymphangiosis carcinomatosa of the liver, pancreas and spleen and tumour cell masses within the lumen of small pulmonary arteries leading to variable occlusions of the vessels. Fibrocellular intimal proliferation was found, leading to further obstruction and increased resistance to flow through the pulmonary vascular bed and to subacute cor pulmonale.
...
PMID:Lethal pulmonary hypertension in a young woman caused by unrecognized haemangiosis carcinomatosa. 962 64

A 14-year-old male neutered cat experienced pulmonary embolism 15 days following surgical debridement of a recurrent dorsolumbar abscess. Clinical signs were dominated by respiratory distress. Pulmonary embolism was suggested from the lateral thoracic radiograph by the presence of an abruptly attenuated lobar artery and a contiguous oligaemic area in the caudal lung lobe. Pulmonary hypertension was demonstrated on Doppler echocardiography by right pulmonary artery dilation and tricuspid regurgitation raising the pulmonary arterial pressure to 56 mmHg. Chronic pulmonary hypertension, assumed from right ventricular wall hypertrophy, and hypokinesia, indicating chronic cor pulmonale, was suggestive of chronic rather than acute pulmonary embolism. Postmortem histological evidence of pulmonary arteriolar occlusion confirmed the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism.
...
PMID:Pulmonary embolism and cor pulmonale in a cat. 1008 89

The utilization of cardiopulmonary bypass systems, for circulatory and/or pulmonary support of patients undergoing non-cardiac procedures, has been previously reported. There is, however, a sub-group of patients for whom total systemic anticoagulation for cardiopulmonary support is extremely undesirable or contraindicated altogether, due to the presenting pathology or procedure to be performed. Clinical and experimental reports have suggested that with the use of heparin-bonded bypass circuits, the amount of heparin required for anticoagulation of the patient may be substantially reduced, or eliminated, safely. This allows the resuscitation and/or support of patients in whom bypass would otherwise be contraindicated. We present our clinical experience with heparin-bonded, biocompatible circuits, for support of patients undergoing non-cardiac procedures. In each case, low-dose or no heparin was administered. The group includes patients with trauma related pulmonary insufficiency, pulmonary embolism, hypothermia, neurosurgery, aortic aneurysm, aortic transection, respiratory distress syndrome, pericardiectomy, and cardiogenic shock.
...
PMID:Biocompatible circuits: an adjunct to non-cardiac extracorporeal cardiopulmonary support. 1014 4


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>