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Query: UMLS:C0034065 (pulmonary embolism)
14,979 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tha aim of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility of MRI for short-term follow-up examinations in patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE), and to assess temporal changes of pulmonary perfusion and thrombus characteristics that may be helpful in determining thrombus age. Thirty-three patients (15 female, 18 male, mean age 59.4 years) with acute PE were examined initially and 1 week later using both 16-row computed tomography (CT) and MRI with magnetic resonance angiography (MRA), real-time MRI and magnetic resonance (MR) pulmonary perfusion imaging. MRA and MR pulmonary perfusion used contrast-enhanced 3D flash sequences, and real-time MRI used true fast imaging with steady-state precession sequences (repetition time/echo time 3.1/1.5, bandwidth 975 Hz, 256 matrix size, acquisition time 0.4 s per image) in three orthogonal planes. Follow-up examinations were feasible for all patients. Diagnosis of PE was concordant between MRI and CT in all patients. The signal intensity of embolic material increased after 1 week for real-time MRI [132+/-5 vs. 232+/-22 (standard error of the mean), p<0.001], but not significantly for MRA. MR pulmonary perfusion of areas affected by PE increased (area under the curve initially 9.6+/-7.4, at follow-up 40.7+/-7.6, p<0.001). A decreasing time-to-peak in normal lung areas (15.7+/-0.96 and 13.2+/-0.55, respectively, p<0.05) indicated systemic circulatory effects of PE, and subsiding pulmonary artery obstruction improved arterial inflow for the entire lung. Follow-up examinations of patients with acute PE are feasible with MRI, and a relation between thrombus appearance and thrombus age can be implied.
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PMID:MRI for short-term follow-up of acute pulmonary embolism. Assessment of thrombus appearance and pulmonary perfusion: a feasibility study. 1589 88

Lung imaging is traditionally done using X-ray-based methods, since MRI is limited by low proton density as well as inherent magnetic field inhomogeneities of the lung tissue. After introduction of MRI using hyperpolarized noble gases, a totally new field of MRI of the chest has rapidly evolved. These techniques reveal new functional information of the lungs, which could not be obtained before. The first part of this review describes the underlying MR technology explaining distribution of static ventilation, dynamic distribution of ventilation, lung microstructure (apparent diffusion coefficient [ADC]), measurement of oxygen partial pressure (pO(2)), and safety. The clinical potential is afterwards demonstrated in the second part. Therefore, the effort in normal lungs and the mainly focused diseases chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), smoker's lung, cystic fibrosis, asthma, lung transplantation, and pulmonary embolism are reported.
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PMID:[Hyperpolarized (3)helium gas for functional magnetic resonance imaging of the lung]. 1601 Apr 78

Deep venous thrombosis (DVT) is a one of the most common problems facing the clinician in medicine today. It is often asymptomatic and goes undiagnosed with potentially fatal consequences. Ultrasound has become the "gold standard" in the diagnosis of deep venous thrombosis and with proper attention to technique sensitivity of this test is approximately 97%. An understanding of anatomy, pathophysiology, and risk factors is important. Thrombus formation usually begins beneath a valve leaflet below the knee. Approximately 40% will resolve spontaneously, 40% will become organized, and 20% will propagate. Whether or not a calf vein thrombus is identified, a repeat examination in 7 to 10 days is recommended in patients with risk factors or when deep venous thrombosis is suspected. The three main risk factors for thrombus formation are age greater than 75 years, previous history of deep venous thrombosis, and underlying malignancy. Other diagnostic studies include the contrast venogram, CT or MRI venogram, Tc99m Apcitide study, and the laboratory test D-Dimer. The D-Dimer study is being used more frequently as a screening test with 99% sensitivity in detecting thrombus, whether deep venous thrombosis or pulmonary embolism. However, specificity is only approximately 50% with many conditions leading to false-positive exams. Therefore, a negative examination is useful in avoiding other diagnostic studies, but a positive one may be misleading. Conditions that can lead to a false-positive examination include, but are not limited to diabetes, pregnancy, liver disease, heart conditions, recent surgery, and some gastrointestinal diseases. Like the sonogram, two negative D-Dimer studies a week apart exclude the diagnosis of deep venous thrombosis. Compression sonography with color Doppler remains the best overall test for deep venous thrombosis. It is easy to perform, less expensive than most "high tech" studies, can be performed as a portable examination, and is highly reliable when done properly.
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PMID:Sonography for deep venous thrombosis: current and future applications. 1634 26

Lung perfusion is a crucial prerequisite for effective gas exchange. Quantification of pulmonary perfusion is important for diagnostic considerations and treatment planning in various diseases of the lungs. Besides disorders of pulmonary vessels such as acute pulmonary embolism and pulmonary hypertension, these also include diseases of the respiratory tract and lung tissue as well as pulmonary tumors. This contribution presents the possibilities and technical requirements of MRI for diagnostic work-up of pulmonary perfusion.
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PMID:[MRI of pulmonary perfusion]. 1643 37

A 70-year old man presented with retrosternal chest pain. His electrocardiogram showed nonspecific T wave changes. Cardiac-specific troponin I (cTnI) was elevated. His condition was managed as acute coronary syndrome, following which he had two minor episodes of hemoptysis. A CT pulmonary angiogram showed no evidence of pulmonary embolism, but a large mass lesion was seen in the mediastinum. Echocardiography and cardiac MRI demonstrated a large solid mass, arising from the right ventricular outflow tract and causing compression of the main pulmonary artery (MPA). The differential diagnosis included pericardial and myocardial tumors and clotted aneurysm of the MPA. At surgery, a clotted aneurysmal sac was identified originating from the MPA and the defect was healed. Aneurysms of the MPA are rare. They most commonly present with dyspnea and chest pain. Compression of surrounding structures produces protean manifestations. A high index of suspicion coupled with imaging modalities establishes the diagnosis. Blunt trauma to the chest, at the time of an accident 4 years previously, may explain this aneurysm. The patient's presentation with chest pain was probably due to compression and/or stretching of surrounding structures. Coronary artery compression simulating acute coronary syndrome has been documented in the literature. The rise in cTnI may have been due to right ventricular strain, as a result of right ventricular outflow obstruction by the aneurysm. This has not been reported previously in the literature. The saccular morphology and narrow neck of the aneurysm predisposed to stagnation leading to clotting of the lumen and healing of the tear, which caused the diagnostic difficulty.
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PMID:An unusual aneurysm of the main pulmonary artery presenting as acute coronary syndrome. 1660 8

Primary pulmonary artery leiomyosarcomas are rare, and the diagnosis is usually confused with other, more common, diseases, especially pulmonary embolism. A 52-year-old male, previously healthy, sustained a cardiac arrest. Chest CT-angiography diagnosed a "saddle embolus". Local thrombolysis was tried without any obvious success. At this point, the possibility of neoplasm was entertained. A cardiac MRI showed a nonhomogeneous mass in the proximal pulmonary artery. Successful surgery was performed, and histological examination of the resected mass was consistent with leiomyosarcoma. A follow-up cardiac MRI showed no residual mass. The dilemma associated with diagnosing pulmonary artery leiomyosarcomas will be discussed.
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PMID:A unique case of pulmonary artery leiomyosarcoma. 1722 49

In chronic pulmonary embolism branches of the pulmonary arterial tree remain partially or totally occluded. This may lead to pulmonary hypertension with the development of right ventricular hypertrophy as well as structural changes of pulmonary arteries. Imaging of chronic pulmonary embolism should prove vessel occlusions (pulmonary angiography, MSCT, MRI) and reduction of regional lung perfusion (lung scanning, MSCT, MRI). According to current guidelines ventilation-perfusion lung scanning and pulmonary angiography are still recommended as the methods of choice. MSCT and MRI provide technical alternatives which are helpful in differential diagnosis versus other types of pulmonary hypertension. In spite of medical and surgical measures (in rare cases pulmonary thromboendarterectomy) the prognosis of chronic pulmonary embolism remains unfavourable.
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PMID:[Chronic pulmonary embolism--radiological imaging and differential diagnosis]. 1762 9

Recent technical developments have substantially improved the potential of MRI for the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. On the MR scanner side this includes the development of short magnets and dedicated whole-body MRI systems, which allow a comprehensive evaluation of pulmonary embolism and deep venous thrombosis in a single exam. The introduction of parallel imaging has substantially improved the spatial and temporal resolution of pulmonary MR angiography. By combining time-resolved pulmonary perfusion MRI with high-resolution pulmonary MRA a sensitivity and specificity of over 90% is achievable, which is comparable to the accuracy of CTA. Thus, for certain patient groups, such as patients with contraindications to iodinated contrast media and young women with a low clinical probability for pulmonary embolism, MRI can be considered as a first-line imaging tool for the assessment of pulmonary embolism.
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PMID:[MRI of pulmonary embolism]. 1767 70

Elevated plasma homocysteine levels are associated with an increased risk of deep vein thrombosis. Herein we report a case of familial hyperhomocysteinemia-related cerebral venous sinus thrombosis and pulmonary embolism in a 21-year-old man who presented with severe headache over bilateral frontal areas. Neurological examination revealed no evidence of focal neurological deficit. Chest CT showed pulmonary thromboembolism in bilateral basal lung fields and brain MRI disclosed right transverse and sigmoid venous sinus thrombosis. Routine immunological tests, coagulation factors and occult tumor screening were normal, as were vitamin B12 and folate levels. The DIC profile was negative, The only risk factor we were able to identify was an elevated serum homocysteine level, namely 46.23 microM/L. Hyperhomocysteinemia was also noted in the patient's asymptomatic elder brother (68.0 microM/L) and, to a lesser extent, in his parents (father 12.5 microM/L; mother 11.7 microM/L). In conclusion, the cause of cerebral venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism in this young patient was most likely related to familial hyperhomocysteinemia, with the thromboembolic events precipitated by a preceding systemic infection. After anticoagulation therapy; the patient recovered completely without any residual neurological deficit.
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PMID:Familial hyperhomocysteinemia-related cerebral venous sinus thrombosis and pulmonary embolism: a case report. 1768 34

Kyphoplasty, the newest of the tools treating vertebral osteoporotic compression fractures (VOCF) is the evolution of vertebroplasty, allowing not only pain control and strengthening of the fractured vertebra, but also offering the possibility to restore vertebral height with a lower risk of complications. We present our series of 41 consecutive VOCF treated by kyphoplasty in 30 patients between October 2003 and March 2006. Systematic spinal X rays and CT scan have be performed, occasionally followed by bone scintigraphy or spinal MRI. The mean preoperative duration of symptoms before surgery was 52 days. Pain control after the operation was considered excellent in all cases and all patients were mobilized the day after surgery. Kyphoplasty allowed a 50% restoration of vertebral height in 66% of the treated vertebras. The results were better when surgery was performed within the first three months after the fracture. The mean vertebral deformity correction by comparison of the pre- and postoperative Cobb angles was 9.7 degrees. One patient showed cement leakage in the spinal canal without neurological deterioration. The mean postoperative stay was 2.5 days. We found kyphoplasty to be a safe technique allowing immediate pain control after VOCF, with minimal risks of cement leakage or pulmonary embolism. Vertebral height and deformity correction are best achieved with early surgery, but pain control is always excellent even with a delayed procedure.
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PMID:[Balloon kyphoplasty for treatment of vertebral osteoporotic compression fractures]. 1770 71


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