Search results for "Cardiac Rupture"

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Cardiac rupture caused by traffic accident: Case reports and a literature review.

2018

The commonest cause of blunt cardiac injuries is from traffic accidents followed by violent falls, sport activities, accidents or a fight but rupture of the heart is rare and lethal. The precise incidence of cardiac injury after a blunt chest trauma is unknown as rates vary greatly in the literature from between 7% and 76% of cases. Autopsy studies have shown that the right ventricle is the most frequently ruptured, followed by the left ventricle, right atrium, intraventricular septum, left atrium and interatrial septum with decreasing frequency. Post-mortem imaging is a rapidly advancing field of post-mortem investigations of trauma victims. The available literature dealing with the compa…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyblunt chest traumaHeart RuptureHeart RupturePoison controlAutopsyWounds NonpenetratingForensic pathology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineBluntSettore MED/43 - Medicina LegalemedicineHumans030216 legal & forensic medicinebusiness.industryCardiac RuptureAccidents Traffic030208 emergency & critical care medicineGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedcardiac rupturemedicine.anatomical_structureVentriclecomputed tomography post-mortemBody regionFemaleRadiologyForensic pathology; blunt chest trauma; cardiac rupture; computed tomography post-mortembusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedInteratrial septumThe Medico-legal journal
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Indications for early PTCA after thrombolysis

1986

There are several ways to reopen an acutely occluded coronary artery. Thrombolysis can be achieved with various methods (1, 5, 7, 10). After thrombolysis we find that the residual thrombus can sometimes be seen, but in most cases, a more or less high grade coronary stenosis remains (2). It is also a question of whether it is always optimal to reopen the vessel, because if the vessel remains occluded, another occlusion cannot occur. With this situation one faces the possibility that the patient will suffer another infarction, and that the vessel will occlude again (4).

medicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentCardiac RuptureInfarctionThrombolysisCoronary stenosismedicine.diseasemedicine.anatomical_structureInternal medicineOcclusioncardiovascular systemmedicineCardiologyMyocardial infarctionThrombusbusinessArtery
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