Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0729233 (Thoracic)
6,478 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 71-year-old woman had an abdominal aortic disruption as a belted passenger in a motor vehicle accident. The diagnosis was unexpected, and the patient died during surgery. There have been 54 patients operated with this diagnosis since 1953; our patient was the fifty-fifth. This is an unusual injury, because the aorta is well protected in this position. Thoracic aortic injuries are much more common (20 times) than abdominal injuries. The causes are motor vehicle accidents, blows to the abdomen, explosions, and falls. Obstructing lesions such as thrombosis and intimal dissection are the more common presentation. False aneurysms occur occasionally. Free rupture has a very high and immediate mortality rate, and few patients arrive at the hospital alive. Diagnosis can be clinical, based on distal ischemia and neurologic abnormalities, or made with Doppler scanning, ultrasonography, computed tomography, or arteriography. Two thirds present acutely and one third subsequently months or even years after the original injury. Treatment consists of flap suture, thrombectomy, bypass grafting in more extensive injury, or extra-anatomic bypass in the face of severe contamination. Recently, endoluminal stenting has successfully been used, avoiding an abdominal operation completely.
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PMID:Blunt disruption of the abdominal aorta: report of a case and review of the literature. 915 23

A 71-year-old man was found to have right hydropneumothorax by chest X-ray film on a regular checkup. Thoracic drainage and bullectomy by thoracoscopy did not improve the pneumothorax, so pleurodesis with OK-432 was done. Pneumothorax recurred twice, requiring thoracic drainage and pleurodesis. Although pneumothorax was treated successfully, increased pleural effusion, pleural thickening and subcutaneal tumor at the thoracic drainage suture site developed. The concentration of hyaluronic acid in the pleural fluid was very high. The histological examination of the biopsied subcutaneous tumor showed mixed type malignant pleural mesothelioma. Chemotherapy with gemcitabine and vinorelbine could not control the progression.
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PMID:[A case of malignant mesothelioma presenting with recurrent pneumothorax]. 1714 77

A 71-year-old man with a retroperitoneal abscess caused by a ureteral stone was successfully treated by retroperitoneal drainage. He was considered to be at high risk of infection because of his bedridden state (resulting from a post-cerebral infarction and malignant rheumatoid disease) and steroid administration for the rheumatoid disease. He also had an empyema adjacent to the retroperitoneal abscess. This was thought to be separate from the retroperitoneal abscess because it did not resolve after the retroperitoneal drainage. Thoracic cavity drainage was undertaken, after which the empyema disappeared. The drainage fluid contained pus, similar to the fluid from the retroperitoneal drainage. Escherichia coli organisms were cultured from both drainage fluids. There were no signs of recurrence on computed tomography (CT) imaging. In conclusion, we report a case of retroperitoneal abscess perforating into the thorax, successfully treated by retroperitoneal and thoracic cavity drainage in an immunocompromised host. CT was a very effective imaging modality for this diagnosis, and we recommend early drainage of abscess in immunocompromised patients.
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PMID:Retroperitoneal abscess perforating into the thoracic cavity in an immunocompromised host. 1870 34

This article describes a patient in whom a broken cerclage wire migrated from the left hip into the left ventricle. A 71-year-old woman was admitted to the authors' hospital for preoperative examination before femoral hernia repair. Chest radiograph showed a metallic wire in the left ventricle. Twenty-four years earlier, she had a revision arthroplasty. During revision surgery, fragments of the osteotomy were fixed to the femur with multiple cerclage wires. During the past 5 years, radiographic follow-up showed progressive multiple ruptures of cerclage wires. The cerclage wiring was not removed because the patient had no related clinical symptoms. Radiograph of the left hip showed a well-fixed cemented acetabular ring and an uncemented femoral stem with a healed trochanteric osteotomy. All cerclage wires were broken into multiple parts, and it was very difficult to determine which part had migrated into the heart. Thoracic computed tomography scan showed wire that had migrated into the anterior left ventricular myocardial wall at the atrioventricular level. The patient had no clinical symptoms. Electrocardiogram showed a normal sinus rhythm and right bundle branch block. Because of the high risk of surgical left ventriculotomy associated with searching for wire that had migrated into the myocardial wall, patient monitoring was planned. Definitive management of this complication constitutes a dilemma. Although this complication is highly unusual, the possibility of intracardiac migration of broken wire should be considered when deciding on prophylactic surgical removal of hardware after fracture or osteotomy healing.
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PMID:Intravascular migration of a broken cerclage wire into the left heart. 2527 83

A 71-year-old woman presented to our hospital with fever and dyspnea. Computed tomography showed shadows of bilateral pneumonia and anterior vertebral mass. She was admitted to our hospital for respiratory failure. Despite treatment with antibiotics, she developed right thoracic empyema. A high level of inflammation and fever persisted, despite chest tube drainage and continued treatment with antibiotics. Therefore, thoracoscopic curettage was conducted. The histopathological findings of the curetted anterior vertebral body lesion revealed the diagnosis of chordoma. After confirming that all the culture results and inflammation findings had turned negative, the patient was discharged from the hospital. Thoracic vertebral chordoma is being treated at the department of orthopedics.
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PMID:[Thoracic Spinal Chordoma Need to be Differentiated from the Bacteremia-associated Paravertebral Abscess]. 3239 94