Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149871 (deep vein thrombosis)
12,364 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In patients with deep venous thrombosis, there is a recent trend towards surgical thrombectomy to avoid late complications. However, up to 10% of these patients suffer from severe intraoperative pulmonary embolism, 30 to 40% of whom die on the operating table. Treatment options for massive pulmonary embolism include embolectomy (high mortality), transvenous thrombus fragmentation techniques, and thrombolytic therapy. However, while thrombolysis is recommended as the treatment of choice for PTE, it is usually considered contraindicated in surgical patients because of bleeding complications. We report on 5 cases of severe pulmonary thromboembolism with marked cardiogenic shock during venous thrombectomy. Three patients were treated successfully by intraoperative thrombolysis alone or in combination with mechanical fragmentation of the embolus using a catheter technique under fluoroscopy (one case). Diagnosis was established by a sudden decrease of mean arterial pressure (from 83 to 45 mmHg), a marked increase of mean pulmonary artery pressure (MPAP) (from 16 to 43 mmHg), hypoxaemia (SaO2 < 90%), an increased arterial-to-end-tidal CO2-difference (from 7 to 42 mmHg), and/or pulmonary angiography (2 cases). All patients had to be treated with high dosages of catecholamines (norepinephrine 0.5 microgram.kg-1.min-1 or epinephrine 0.1 microgram.kg-1.min-1, and dopamine 6-15 micrograms.kg-1.min-1). Three patients required CPR prior to or during thrombolytic therapy. Thrombolysis was started intraoperatively with rt-PA with dosages ranging from 20 to 90 mg, applied in single injections (5-75 mg) followed by infusions (5 or 10 mg.h-1) for up to 8 hours.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Intraoperative thrombolysis with rt-PA in massive pulmonary embolism during venous thrombectomy]. 781 77

Central pulmonary embolism represents one of the most threatening complications in surgical patients. In most cases deep vein thrombosis of the lower extremities is the source of emboli. Despite the introduction of hypocoagulative drugs in standard surgical concepts the incidence of deep vein thrombosis remains about 10% in trauma patients. Estimated numbers of unknown cases of pulmonary embolism are supposed to be rather high too. In haemodynamically symptomatic pulmonary embolism events and especially when the patient has to be reanimated, mortality rates of up to 93% are reported in literature. After introduction of the heart- and lung-machine in the surgical concept of therapy, survival rates have increased significantly. We report on three cases of successful surgical embolectomy after CPR. In a review of literature current concepts of treatment in central pulmonary embolism are discussed.
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PMID:[Surgical embolectomy after reanimation in central pulmonary embolism]. 1035 44