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)

Given the increased number of patients hospitalized for acute medical illnesses and the associated risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE), the use of prophylaxis has become a public health matter. Thromboprophylaxis is not widely practiced in acutely ill medical patients, due in part to the heterogeneity of this group and the perceived difficulty in assessing those who would most benefit from treatment. Nevertheless, the results of recent well-conducted clinical trials support the evidence-based recommendations for more widespread systematic use of low-dose low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) or unfractionated heparin (UFH) in this population. Three large well-controlled studies (MEDENOX, PREVENT, and ARTEMIS) in acutely ill medical patients confirm previous findings that different at-risk patient populations show a consistent 50% reduction in VTE events with LMWH and fondaparinux. A meta-analysis in nearly 5000 patients in internal medicine comparing UFH and LMWH revealed a trend for reduction of deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism with LMWH. Based on duration of use in clinical trials in acutely ill medical patients, prophylactic treatment with UFH and LMWH is recommended for 2 weeks.
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PMID:Preventing venous thromboembolism in medical patients. 1559 42

Fondaparinux (Arixtra) is the first selective factor Xa inhibitor approved for use in thromboprophylaxis after orthopaedic surgery. New recently completed trials have also demonstrated the potential of fondaparinux in the prevention of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in other surgical and medical settings and in the treatment of established VTE. In the randomized double-blind PEGASUS study in high-risk abdominal surgery patients, fondaparinux reduced the incidence of VTE from 6.1% with dalteparin to 4.6% (odds ratio reduction = 25.8%, P = 0.14), without increasing the bleeding risk. In the randomized double-blind ARTEMIS trial in acutely ill medical patients, fondaparinux reduced the incidence of VTE from 10.5% with placebo to 5.6% (odds ratio reduction = 49.5%, P = 0.029), without increasing the bleeding risk; there was no pulmonary embolism in the fondaparinux group compared with five, all fatal, in the placebo group (P = 0.029). In the two MATISSE trials, both the efficacy and safety of once daily fondaparinux were at least as good as enoxaparin in the treatment of deep-vein thrombosis (MATISSE-DVT) and unfractionated heparin in the treatment of pulmonary embolism (MATISSE-PE). In patients with coronary artery disease, promising results were obtained in phase II trials and large phase III trials are ongoing. In conclusion, fondaparinux may further improve and simplify the prevention and treatment of thrombosis in a large range of medical and surgical settings.
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PMID:Fondaparinux: an update on new study results. 1570 Nov 45

Diagnosis of pulmonary embolism (PE) in pregnancy is notoriously difficult and lacking high quality evidence. Three studies (DiPEP, ARTEMIS and CT-PE-Pregnancy) evaluating a systematic approach to PE diagnosis have recently been published. DiPEP is a retrospective case-control study that found a poor utility of clinical decision rules or D-dimer testing for PE diagnosis in pregnancy. ARTEMIS and CT-PE-Pregnancy are well conducted prospective management studies that proposed two algorithms with different clinical decision rules and D-dimer criteria for the diagnosis of PE in pregnancy. They included few events in high risk patients, which makes difficult the assessment of both algorithm's safety in women with a high probability of PE. Considering this new evidence, D-dimer testing might be useful to avoid radiation imaging in pregnant women considered at low risk for PE. In contrast, a negative D-dimer cannot be considered sufficiently safe to rule out PE when clinicians estimate that PE is the most likely diagnosis.
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PMID:New evidence in diagnosis of pulmonary embolism during pregnancy. 3309 63