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Query: UMLS:C0392680 (
shortness of breath
)
5,217
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pneumopericardium is defined as the presence of air in the pericardial cavity. It is a rare condition in adults, usually due to trauma; it is commoner in the more exposed neonate and usually iatrogenic. The clinical presentation of chest pain and
shortness of breath
is associated with the pathognomonic auscultatory sign described by Bricheteau: a water-mill bruit. The diagnosis is confirmed by chest X-ray which shows the air-gap sign surrounding the cardiac silhouette. The principal differential diagnosis is a pneumomediastinum. The prognosis of pneumopericardium depends on the cause and complications of which tamponade and infection are the most serious and potentially life-threatening. The treatment of pneumopericardium is bed rest and surveillance when uncomplicated: evacuation of the air becomes necessary when complications set in.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1991 Jan
PMID:[Spontaneous pneumopericardium. Review of the literature apropos of 2 cases in the young adult]. 201 79
The case of a 36 year old woman with a calcified tumour of the tricuspid valve is reported. The clinical signs suggested tricuspid stenosis with a right to left shunt via a patent foramen ovale simulating a cyanotic heart lesion. Preoperative diagnostic investigations were discordant. Echocardiography showed a stenotic tumoural tricuspid valve. Catheterisation and selective right ventriculography were more suggestive of dominant tricuspid incompetence. The patient was referred for surgery because of the severity of her
shortness of breath
and cyanosis, and tumoral involvement of the three tricuspid leaflets was found. This was removed and replaced by a bioprosthesis with good results 27 months after surgery. 17 other cases of tricuspid tumours have been previously reported. Their clinical presentation was usually that of a right ventricular tumour with stenosis of the right failure, positional syncope and pericardial effusion in the malignant forms. Signs of tricuspid stenosis with cyanosis and polycythaemia are very rare. The relative diagnostic values of angiography and echocardiography are discussed.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1985 Mar
PMID:[Tumor of the tricuspid valve operated on with success. Apropos of a case simulating cyanotic heart disease]. 392 75
Ten pericardial mesotheliomas (8 of which had associated unilateral pleural involvement) were observed over a 22 year period in subjects over 50 years of age. The diagnosis was only confirmed several months after the presenting symptoms (
shortness of breath
, chest pain), usually by histological studies of pericardial biopsies performed during construction of a pleuro-pericardial window because of tamponade or of pleural biopsy in cases of pleuro-pericardial disease. There is no specific diagnostic feature and even modern imaging methods are unable to distinguish mesothelioma from pericardial tuberculosis. In 7 cases, there were large haemorrhagic pericardial effusions. At present, there is no effective treatment for mesothelioma and the physician's goal is to make the patient's short survival time as comfortable as possible with respect to the severe pain and recurrent pleuro-pericardial effusions. The pericardial mesothelioma is rare (less than 1% compared with 96% pleural and 3% peritoneal localisations) and possibly related to exposure to asbestos, at least in those cases with associated pleural involvement. The authors underline the utility of histological analysis of the utility of histological analysis of the pericardium if only to establish the diagnosis of mesothelioma and to enable administration of curative treatment of other pathologies (tuberculosis, malignant lymphoma) with identical clinical presentations.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1994 Feb
PMID:[Malignant mesothelioma of the pericardium. An anatomo-clinical study of 10 cases]. 780 34
Shortness of breath
is a common cause of consultation in the emergency unit. Therefore, it is essential to diagnose cases of cardiac failure. This may be difficult in some cases. The authors set out to assess the value of measuring brain natiuretic peptide in this context. Brain natiuretic peptide (BNP) was measured by an ultrafast method (Biosite/BMD) on arrival of 125 patients to the emergency unit. The results were then compared with the diagnoses made in the emergency unit and those of the hospital discharge summary. Nearly 18% of patients were wrongly classified in the emergency room; 1/3 were falsely diagnosed as cardiac failure and 2/3 were not recognised initially as having cardiac failure. In 90% of patients, in particular in the group wrongly considered as not having cardiac failure, BNP measurement could have helped correct the mistake. The optimal threshold value of BNP for diagnosis of cardiac failure in this study was 300 pg/mL, with positive and negative predictive values of 92.4 and 90.2%, respectively.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 2002 Sep
PMID:[Value of type B natriuretic peptide in the emergency management of patients with suspected cardiac failure. Report of 125 cases]. 1240 89
The scimitar syndrome or pulmonary venolobar syndrome is a rare, complex and variable malformation of the right lung characterized by an abnormal right sided pulmonary venous drainage in the inferior vena cava, malformation of the right lung, abnormal arterial supply and sometimes cardiac malformations. We present a case in which this diagnosis was suspected on an abnormal routine chest radiograph in a 38-year-old asymptomatic woman. Most patients are asymptomatic; symptomatic patients have a marked left-to-right shunt or a severe congenital heart disease. They usually suffer from
shortness of breath
, asthenia or repeated chest infections. Usually, the posteroanterior chest radiograph can confirm the diagnostic. It shows the abnormal vein draining into the inferior vena cava as a curved vascular shadow with a scimitar like appearance. However, in some cases, when the scimitar vein is masked by the overlying cardiac shadow, computed tomography, angiography and magnetic resonance imaging can be helpful by showing the abnormal vein and its insertion into the inferior vena cava. Scimitar syndrome seldom necessitates surgical intervention. However, repeated lung infections can sometimes require lobectomy or pneumonectomy, left-to-right shunt vascular surgery to redirect the scimitar vein into the left atrium.
Rev
Mal
Respir 2001 Feb
PMID:[An unusual opacity of the right base]. 1463 83
Historically, unpleasant odors have been considered warning signs or indicators of potential risks to human health but not necessarily direct triggers of health effects. However, citizen complaints to public health agencies suggest that odors may not simply serve as a warning of potential risks but that odor sensations themselves may cause health symptoms.
Mal
-odors emitted from large animal production facilities and wastewater treatment plants, for example, elicit complaints of eye, nose, and throat irritation, headache, nausea, diarrhea, hoarseness, sore throat, cough, chest tightness, nasal congestion, palpitations,
shortness of breath
, stress, drowsiness, and alterations in mood. There are at least three mechanisms by which ambient odors may produce health symptoms. First, symptoms can be induced by exposure to odorants (compounds with odor properties) at levels that also cause irritation or other toxicological effects. That is, irritation--rather than the odor--is the cause of the health symptoms, and odor (the sensation) simply serves as an exposure marker. Second, health symptoms from odorants at non-irritant concentrations can be due to innate (genetically coded) or learned aversions. Third, symptoms may be due to a co-pollutant (such as endotoxin) that is part of an odorant mixture. Objective biomarkers of health symptoms must be obtained, however, to determine if health complaints constitute health effects. One industry that is receiving much attention, worldwide, related to this subject is concentrated animal production agriculture. Sustainability of this industry will likely necessitate the development of new technologies to mitigate odorous aerial emissions. Examples of such "environmentally superior technologies" (EST) developed under the initiative sponsored through agreements between the Attorney General of North Carolina and Smithfield Foods and Premium Standard Farms are described.
...
PMID:Science of odor as a potential health issue. 1564 42