Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0231807 (exertional dyspnea)
3,402 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pregnancy and oral contraceptives (OCs) reduce the levels of the natural anticoagulant protein S and about 50% and 20%. respectively. Original work on the link between OCs and development of deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism do not necessarily confirm an association, today since it included cohort studies of women using high estrogen OCs. Also, physicians tended to actively diagnose thrombophlebitis in women they knew were using OCs. Objective diagnostic measures, e.g., venography, were not used in the cohort studies. Decreased estrogen content of current OCs and a case control study design show the likelihood of thrombotic complications of OS use has decreased significantly. Women who have experienced an episode of venous thrombosis and are not on oral anticoagulation therapy should not use OCs, because as many of 30% experience a second episode. Women with a strong family history of thromboembolism and those with antiphospholipid antibodies who have experienced a thrombotic event should also not use OCs. Current or past use of low estrogen Ocs does not significantly increase the risk of myocardial infarction, but smoking does. Physicians doe not know, however, whether women who use an OC with at the most 30 mcg estrogen and who smoke are at greater risk than those who smoke but do not use OCs. Just one study suggests a possible association between OC use and mitral valve prolapse leading to a cerebrovascular accident. The likelihood of developing calf vein clots in women who use low-dose OCs appears to be reduced, if they use sequential compression stockings and subcutaneous low molecular weight heparin following surgery. Since OCs decrease the chance of serious bleeding during ovulation and of heavy menstrual flow, oral anticoagulation is not a contraindication to OC use. The risk of OC-associated thromboembolism is considerably lower than that of pregnancy-associated thromboembolism.
...
PMID:Contraceptive choices in women with coagulation disorders. 851 43

A 32-year-old woman was hospitalized with recurrent left-sided chest pain and dyspnea on exertion, which had progressed for approximately 10 years. Since age 18 she had been spending more than twelve hours per day in a predominantly seated position on a floor mat, engaged in Japanese dressmaking. A chest roentgenogram showed marked dilation of the main pulmonary arteries, bilateral oligemia in the upper lung fields and a peripheral infiltration in the middle field of the left lung. The (99m)Tc-MAA perfusion lung scan showed multiple defects in both lungs, but no abnormal findings were detected on a 133Xe ventilation scan. A pulmonary angiogram showed multiple occlusions of pulmonary arteries in both lungs. Because recurrent chest pain and dyspnea had been present for a long time, and because ultrasonic cardiography revealed pulmonary hypertension repeatedly for several years, pulmonary thromboembolism was considered to be chronic and recurrent. The patient had none of the following risk factors for pulmonary emboli: malignancy, neurological disease, heart disease, obesity, pregnancy, or a congenital coagulative abnormality such as deficiency of AT-III, protein C, protein S, or plasminogen. Because no other cause could be found, the chronic recurrent pulmonary thromboembolism most likely resulted from extensive sedentary work that caused stagnation of venous return and deep vein thrombosis.
...
PMID:[Chronic recurrent pulmonary thromboembolism associated with sedentary work]. 862 76