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Query: UMLS:C0729233 (Thoracic)
6,478 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A Standardbred filly was admitted for evaluation of pleuritis and pneumonia. Heart rate was 80 to 120 beats/min, and the pulse was barely palpable. Thoracic and abdominal ultrasonography and echocardiography revealed substantial pericardial effusion with cardiac tamponade, fibrinous pericarditis, pleural effusion, and ascites. Initial electrocardiography revealed normal sinus rhythm with decreased amplitude of the QRS complexes consistent with pericardial effusion. Following thoracentesis, echocardiogram-guided pericardiocentesis was performed. Bacterial culture yielded no growth from any of the fluids, and bacteria were not seen on cytologic examination. Initial treatment included broad-spectrum antibiotic treatments, IV fluid therapy, and anti-inflammatory agent administration. On the basis of negative culture results, an immune-mediated cause was considered, and dexamethasone was instituted in a decreasing dosage regimen. Pericardial effusion, ventral edema, and ascites began to resolve within 3 days after beginning dexamethasone treatment. Thirty days following discharge, the filly was reexamined, and at that time, the prognosis for athletic performance was considered good so the horse was returned to race training. The final diagnosis in this case was idiopathic, effusive, nonconstrictive pericarditis with tamponade. Early identification, clinical understanding, and application of knowledge of the pathophysiologic mechanisms of pericarditis in horses, combined with use of diagnostic aids such as ultrasonography and aggressive therapy consisting of effusion drainage, pericardial lavage, antibiotics that penetrate the pericardium, and corticosteroids when indicated are critical for a successful outcome in horses with pericarditis.
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PMID:Idiopathic, aseptic, effusive, fibrinous, nonconstrictive pericarditis with tamponade in a standardbred filly. 128 43

A case of tuberculous pericarditis successfully managed with medical treatment alone was reported. A 78-year-old male was admitted because of cough, dyspnea and fever. Chest X-P and echocardiogram revealed massive pericardial effusion. His clinical symptoms and signs suggested cardiac tamponade. Mycobacterium tuberculosis was detected from pericardial fluid. ADA activity in pericardial fluid was high. Thoracic CT scan showed tracheobronchial, pretracheal, paratracheal and superior mediastinal lymph-node swelling. The diagnosis of tuberculous pericarditis was confirmed. Anti-tuberculous therapy consisting of INH, RFP, EB in combination with prednisolone was started. One month later pericardial effusion was controlled and six months later he was in good clinical condition without surgical treatment.
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PMID:[A case of tuberculous pericarditis]. 231 58

The case of a 31 year-old intravenous drug addict female patient with infection by the human immunodeficiency virus who had recurrent cardiac tamponade and who was diagnosed by pericardic biopsy as Kaposi's sarcoma is reported. The patient demonstrated involvement by cutaneous, mucosal, lymph node and probably pleuropulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma. Thoracic radiography, computerized tomography and echocardiography only showed the presence of pericardic effusion. Neither did the pericardic fluid obtained by pericardiocentesis provide any significant ethiologic data. Only the pericardic biopsy showed the typical lesions of Kaposi's sarcoma in this localization confirming diagnosis. This is the first case of pericardic Kaposi's sarcoma described in an alive patient and the difficulties of achieving the diagnosis of the cardiac involvement by Kaposi's sarcoma in AIDS patients are commented upon.
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PMID:[Cardiac tamponade and Kaposi's sarcoma]. 820 10

A 31 year old man presented with a left hilar mass. Thoracic tomography showed this mass to be the pulmonary artery, and subsequently idiopathic dilatation of the pulmonary artery was diagnosed. He remained well until 11 years later when he died suddenly. Postmortem examination confirmed idiopathic dilatation of the pulmonary artery with death due to pulmonary artery dissection and cardiac tamponade. It seems likely that idiopathic dilatation of the pulmonary artery predisposed to fatal pulmonary artery dissection.
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PMID:Pulmonary artery dissection in a patient with idiopathic dilatation of the pulmonary artery: a rare cause of sudden cardiac death. 846 Dec 30

The creation of a drainage orifice in the pericardium for the release of an accumulated effusion has been proven to be an effective means to eliminate the physiologic effects of a cardiac tamponade. Numerous surgical approaches have been used to create an opening in the pericardium for this purpose. Thoracic and thoracoscopic approaches have been found to produce a fair amount of morbidity by further compromising an already compromised cardiopulmonary system by necessitating an invasion into the hemithorax and the requirement of a thoracostomy tube. This report identifies a laparoscopic technique for the creation of a pericardial window with low morbidity that has been successfully used in 14 patients who presented to the Department of Surgery of the Rapid City Medical Center with clinical evidence of pericardial effusion and tamponade.
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PMID:Laparoscopic pericardial window. 928 65

Thoracic trauma frequently involve damage to the cardiac structures and in the worst cases, the progressive degeneration and necrosis of the damaged tissue lead to cardiac rupture. The high mortality resulting from cardiac tamponade requires the prompt execution of diagnostic tests to provide as much useful information as rapidly as possible in order to start immediate therapy. A case of cardiac rupture manifested by the onset of atrial fibrillation in a patient admitted to Intensive Care after a car accident is described. The scarce significance of objective examination, the aspecific nature of chest X-ray and ECG alterations prompted the execution of a more thorough diagnosis. Transthoracic and transesophageal ultrasonography are both minimally invasive and highly specific: in a short time, not only did they confirm cardiac rupture, but they also focalised the site of the lesion, thus allowing a more targeted and rapid surgical approach. The relative frequency of cardiac lesions following closed thoracic trauma, the lack of incontrovertible signs and symptoms of late cardiac rupture, and the extreme severity of its clinical consequences argue in favour of using specific and sensitive diagnostic tests that can not only exclude or ascertain the presence of these lesions, but also allow subsequent serial controls aimed at diagnosing late cardiac ruptures.
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PMID:[Cardiac rupture in thoracic trauma]. 1096 Oct 60

A 7-year-old, female spayed rottweiler was referred with a history of an acute onset of collapse attributable to cardiac tamponade. Thoracic radiographs revealed an enlarged cardiac silhouette compatible with pericardial effusion, sternal osteomyelitis, and an unusual mineralized lesion determined later to be within the aortic wall. The pericardial effusion was a septic exudate secondary to infection with Staphylococcus species and hemorrhage into the pericardium through a mineralized aortic lesion. The case demonstrates the importance of complete evaluation of thoracic radiographs in a patient with cardiac disease and the potential value of cytopathological evaluation of pericardial fluid.
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PMID:Septic pericarditis, aortic endarteritis, and osteomyelitis in a dog. 1473 16

We describe an unusual case of cardiac tamponade and pulmonary compression due to acute volvulus of colon interposition occuring late after oesophagectomy. Clinical signs were suggestive of cardiac tamponade but there was no evidence of pericardial effusion by transthoracic echocardiography. Thoracic-CT provided the diagnostic clue in revealing the extrapericardial nature (a major dilatation of the colonic transplant) of the tamponade. This diagnosis should be considered in case of acute cardiopulmonary distress occuring early or late after oesophagectomy.
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PMID:Cardiac tamponade and pulmonary compression due to volvulus of oesophageal coloplasty. 1526 5

Thoracic and abdominal aortic aneurysms have potential risk of sudden death, because they have a tendency of rupture. The risk of rupture is high, if they are saccular type or the diameters of them are large enough. Acute aortic dissection has a high risk of sudden death due to cardiac tamponade, if the dissection involves the ascending aorta.
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PMID:[Aortic aneurysm]. 1600 87

Thoracic injury is a relevant and common complication in multiply injured patients. Typical patterns of injury comprise rib fractures, serious lung trauma as well as diaphragmatic and aortic rupture. In contrast, posttraumatic tension pneumopericardium following blunt thoracic trauma is a very rare complication. However, if unrecognized it might provoke cardiac tamponade and death. For the development of a pneumopericardium, free air follows the vessel bundles up to the pericardium. Hence, if the number of ruptured alveoli is high, or these alveoli are placed close to the heart, and if additional risk factors, such as high inspiratory ventilation pressure, are present, a tension pneumopericardium can induce cardiac tamponade. The aim of this report is to illuminate diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for posttraumatic pneumopericardium by presentation of a case from our trauma centre and a critical discussion of the present literature.
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PMID:[Tension pneumopericardium--a rare complication in multiply injured patients]. 1627 Jan 90


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