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Query: UMLS:C0149871 (
deep vein thrombosis
)
12,364
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The incidence of surgical complications after trans-sphenoidal surgery for pituitary lesions is low. The influence of size of the lesion and its pathology on the incidence of different types of complications and the remission rate of functioning adenomas are addressed in this retrospective study. Between 1996 and 2001, 126 trans-sphenoidal operations were performed on 108 patients with pituitary pathologies. Diabetes insipidus (DI) was the commonest (23%) and the incidence was higher with microadenomas and in those with Cushing's disease (p < 0.05). Other important complications were: postoperative hypopituitarism 22%, CSF leak 13%, meningitis 5.5%, pneumocephalus 2.4%, visual deterioration 1.5%, haematoma 0.8% and 30-day mortality rate of 0.8%. Other complications encountered were subdural haematoma, epistaxis, SIADH, sphenoid abscess,
deep vein thrombosis
, thalamic infarct and hydrocephalus. No vascular injuries were encountered. The overall remission rate for acromegaly and Cushing's disease (22 patients each) was 77 and 81%, respectively. The remission rate was 100% for microadenomas, 89% for both acromegaly and Cushing's disease. More
aggressiveness
towards complete tumour removal increases the biochemical cure rate of functioning adenomas and on the other hand results in higher incidence of CSF leak and hypopituitarism.
...
PMID:Complications after trans-sphenoidal surgery: our experience and a review of the literature. 1579 55
Management of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in patients with cancer is challenging. In addition, cancer-associated thrombosis (CAT) is becoming an increasingly prevalent condition because of the aging population, the
aggressiveness
of anticancer therapies, and the improved survival of patients with cancer. Diagnosis of CAT can be difficult because many cancer patients without acute thrombosis often have with signs and symptoms that mimic those of
deep vein thrombosis
or pulmonary embolism, while others are found to have clinically silent VTE incidentally on routine staging investigations for their cancer. Prevention of CAT is important for reducing the burden of disease but it has received very little attention from clinicians and researchers. Treatment of CAT is also challenging because oncology patients have a high risk of recurrent thrombosis and major bleeding even while receiving anticoagulant therapy. This review will focus on the current standards of practice for the diagnosis, prevention and treatment of VTE in patients with cancer.
...
PMID:VTE in patients with cancer--diagnosis, prevention, and treatment. 1882 56
A suicide bomb blast in 2013 at a distant city of Pakistan killed 84 and wounded more than 150 people. Some patients were transferred to our tertiary care hospital because of extreme load on medical services there. This patient arrived at the Aga Khan Hospital, 2 days after the bomb blast injury and underwent an orthopedic procedure. Next day, he developed sudden tachypnea, desaturation, and circulatory collapse. After initial cardiopulmonary resuscitation, he was immediately transferred to surgical intensive care unit. Based on history, echocardiography findings and patient parameters, a clinical diagnosis of massive pulmonary embolism was made and immediate thrombolytic therapy with alteplase was started. The immediate improvement in hemodynamic status was evident following 2 hours of alteplase infusion. This case also highlights the
aggressiveness
of resuscitation, decision making in initiating thrombolytic therapy on clinical grounds, importance of
deep venous thrombosis
prophylaxis, and exhaustion of health resources due to blast related mass destruction.
...
PMID:Bomb Blast and Its Consequences: Successful Intensive Care Management of Massive Pulmonary Embolsim. 2737 30
Surveillance bias may threaten the accuracy of inpatient complication measures. A systematic literature review was conducted to examine whether surveillance bias influences the validity of selected Patient Safety Indicator- and health care associated infection-related measures. Ten venous thromboembolism (VTE) articles were identified: 7 trauma related, 3 postoperative, and 1 central line-associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI) article. Nine VTE articles found positive associations between
deep vein thrombosis
imaging and VTE diagnoses. Because imaging also may be symptom driven, most studies performed additional analyses to corroborate findings. Six trauma-related and 2 postoperative VTE studies concluded that surveillance bias was present, the latter based on circumstantial evidence. The non-VTE study found a significant positive correlation between surveillance
aggressiveness
and intensive care unit CLABSI rates. Even considering VTE, relatively little is known about the impact of surveillance bias on inpatient complication measures. Given the implications of misclassifying hospitals on quality, this issue requires further investigation using more direct measurement methods.
...
PMID:Does Surveillance Bias Influence the Validity of Measures of Inpatient Complications? A Systematic Review. 2895 53