Search results for "embolism"

showing 10 items of 457 documents

Predictive value of heart failure with reduced versus preserved ejection fraction for outcome in pulmonary embolism

2020

Abstract Aims This study aimed to investigate whether the risk of short‐term mortality is different in pulmonary embolism (PE) patients who have heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) as compared with those with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Methods and results Predictive value of HFrEF or HFpEF for 7‐day (intrahospital) and 30‐day all‐cause mortality was determined in the cohort of 1055 out of 1201 consecutive acute PE patients from the Serbian multicentre PE registry. Patients were classified into either HFrEF or HFpEF group, according to guideline‐proposed criteria. A 7‐day (intrahospital) and 30‐day all‐cause mortality was 18.5% vs. 7.3% vs. 4.5% …

Ejection fractionmedicine.medical_specialtyHeart failure030204 cardiovascular system & hematology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineOriginal Research ArticlesInternal medicineDiseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) systemMedicineOriginal Research Article030212 general & internal medicineMortalityRisk factorEjection fractionbusiness.industryPulmonary embolismHazard ratioAtrial fibrillationmedicine.disease3. Good healthPulmonary embolismBlood pressureRC666-701Heart failureCardiologyCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessHeart failure with preserved ejection fractionESC Heart Failure
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Managing cancer patients with acute venous thromboembolism: exploring safe alternatives to hospitalisation

2004

Acute venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a common and potentially fatal complication that frequently occurs in cancer patients. Few data are currently available about the optimal management of this category of high-risk patients. In clinical practice, physicians have to deal with many problems related to cancer patients with acute VTE. For instance, cancer patients with deep vein thrombosis (DVT) are frequently admitted to the hospital since their high rate of recurrent thrombotic events and/or bleeding-related therapy; however, most of them would prefer alternatives to prolonged hospitalisation. Then, it is not clearly whether data coming from a non-cancer population (such as that regarding t…

Emergency careCancerVenous thromboembolism
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Reversibilität von Veränderungen der links- und rechtsventrikulären Geometrie und Hämodynamik bei pulmonaler Hypertonie. Echokardiographische Charakt…

1997

Durch pulmonale Thrombendarteriektomie kann bei Patienten mit chronischer embolisch bedingter pulmonaler Hypertonie eine akute rechtsventrikulare Nachlastsenkung erzielt werden. Der Einflus auf die rechts- und linksventrikulare Geometrie und Hamodynamik wurde prospektiv mit Hilfe der transthorakalen Echokardiographie an einem Kollektiv von 14 Patienten (8 Frauen, 6 Manner; Alter 55 ± 20 Jahre) vor und nach 18 ± 12 Tagen postoperativ untersucht. Nach operativer Desobliteration der Pulmonalarterien fand sich eine Abnahme des invasiv bestimmten totalen pulmonalen Gefaswiderstands von 986 ± 318 auf 323 ± 280 dyn x s/cm5; p < 0,05. Der echokardiographisch erfaste systolische pulmonalarterielle D…

Gynecologymedicine.medical_specialtyVentricule gauchebusiness.industrymedicineVentriculo derechoCardiology and Cardiovascular Medicinemedicine.diseasebusinessPulmonary embolismZeitschrift f�r Kardiologie
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Retrograde Luftembolie bei Arrosionsaneurysma der Arteria pulmonalis

1956

Es wird uber ein Arrosionsaneurysma der A. pulmonalis berichtet, nach dessen Ruptur in einen Bronchus hinein es zu einer todlichen Luftembolie kam. Das Zustandekommen einer derartigen “retrograden” Luftembolie wird durch zwei, in ihrem Mechanismus verschiedene, aufeinanderfolgende Abschnitte erklart: Zuerst werden kleinere Luftmengen zu Beginn der Inspiration in die Lungenarterie eingesaugt, solange, bis die Pulmonalklappen schlusunfahig werden. Dann erst kommt es in einer zweiten Phase beim Husten und Wurgen zu einem aktiven Einpressen groserer Luftmengen in das rechte Herz.

Gynecologymedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryCell BiologyGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasePathology and Forensic MedicinePulmonary embolismAneurysmmedicine.arteryPulmonary arterymedicinebusinessMolecular BiologyVirchows Archiv für Pathologische Anatomie und Physiologie und für Klinische Medizin
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Lungenembolie: Weniger Rezidive durch längere orale Antikoagulation

2015

Bei Patienten mit einer Lungenembolie reduziert eine Antikoagulation uber 3–6 Monate das Rezidivrisiko. Unklar ist bislang, ob dieser Effekt auch nach dem Ende der Therapie erhalten bleibt. Aktuell wurde der Nutzen einer zusatzlichen Behandlung mit Warfarin uber 18 Monate nach einer initalen 6-monatigen Therapie mit Vitamin-K-Antagonisten untersucht.

Gynecologymedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrymedicineWarfarinGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasebusinessVenous thromboembolismCoronary heart diseasePulmonary embolismmedicine.drugDMW - Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift
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Epidural hematoma after cochlear implantation in a 2.5-year-old boy.

2005

OBJECTIVE Report a case of an epidural hematoma after cochlear implantation in a 2.5-year-old boy, the diagnostic and therapeutical emergency management, as well as the postinterventional course and rehabilitation of the child. STUDY DESIGN Retrospective case review. PATIENT Two and a half-year-old boy, suffering from early onset, profound sensorineural hearing loss had been diagnosed at an age of 1.5 years, which had been more severe on the right side initially, but had progressed to bilateral deafness. INTERVENTION AND COMPLICATION: Cochlear implantation on the left side, followed up by an extensive epidural hematoma, causing intracranial compression with a midline shift of 15 mm to the r…

Hematoma Epidural CranialMaleReoperationmedicine.medical_specialtyCritical CareInfarctionBilateral DeafnessAudiologyDeafnessDiagnosis DifferentialInfarction Posterior Cerebral ArteryEpidural hematomaPostoperative ComplicationsMidline shiftmedicine.arteryAnterior cerebral arterymedicineElectrocoagulationHumansDominance CerebralNeurologic Examinationbusiness.industryInfarction Middle Cerebral Arterymedicine.diseaseCochlear ImplantationMagnetic Resonance ImagingMeningeal ArteriesSensory SystemsTentoriumTemporal LobeSurgeryEpistaxisOtorhinolaryngologyIntracranial EmbolismChild PreschoolNeurology (clinical)ImplantOccipital LobeComplicationbusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedFollow-Up StudiesOtologyneurotology : official publication of the American Otological Society, American Neurotology Society [and] European Academy of Otology and Neurotology
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Thromboelastographic profiles as a tool for thrombotic risk in digestive tract cancer

2007

Background: Quantification of the magnitude of thrombotic risk associated with malignancy and with anti-cancer therapy is indispensable to use anticoagulant drugs which selectively interfere with haemostatic mechanisms protecting patients from venous thromboembolism (VTE) and probably from tumor progression. However, none of activation coagulation markers has any predictive value for the occurrence of the thrombotic events in one individual patient. Current clotting methods can’t reveal the overall dynamic clot formation; in contrast thromboelastographic methods specifically assess overall coagulation kinetics and its strength in whole blood. Aim: Objective of study was to evaluate if the a…

KineticMaleOriginal contributionsRisk FactorCarcinomaSex FactorBlood Coagulation TestMiddle AgedThrombelastographyKineticsSex FactorsReference ValuesRisk FactorsStomach NeoplasmsStomach NeoplasmCase-Control StudiesArea Under CurveThromboembolismHumansFemaleReference ValueBlood Coagulation TestsCase-Control StudieAgedHuman
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High-intensity transient signals during laparoscopic surgery in children.

2009

Background Laparoscopic interventions in children gain increasing popularity. Pneumoperitoneum as applied during laparoscopic surgery can induce gas emboli formation, but it is unclear whether this is associated with cerebral embolic events. To investigate the hypothesis that pneumoperitoneum causes cerebral emboli in children, the number and intensity of high-intensity transient signals (HITS) detected using transcranial Doppler ultrasonography were assessed before and after induction of pneumoperitoneum. Methods Twenty children were monitored during laparoscopic surgery. General anaesthesia was performed using sevoflurane and sufentanil or alfentanil. Pressure-controlled ventilation was a…

Laparoscopic surgeryMalemedicine.medical_specialtyMean arterial pressureUltrasonography Doppler Transcranialmedicine.medical_treatmentBlood PressurePneumoperitoneummedicineHumansGeneral anaesthesiaAlfentanilChildIntraoperative Complicationsbusiness.industryInfantBlood flowmedicine.diseaseSurgeryTranscranial Dopplerbody regionsAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineCerebral blood flowIntracranial EmbolismAnesthesiaCerebrovascular CirculationChild PreschoolFemaleLaparoscopybusinessPneumoperitoneum ArtificialBlood Flow Velocitymedicine.drugBritish journal of anaesthesia
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MRI of the pulmonary parenchyma.

1999

Imaging of the pulmonary parenchyma represents a unique challenge for MRI. Limited signal is caused by low proton density, susceptibility artifacts, and physiological motion (cardiac pulsation, respiration). Recently, further improvements in MRI techniques have widened the potential for investigations of pulmonary parenchymal disease. These include very short echo times, ultrafast turbo-spin-echo acquisitions, projection reconstruction technique, breathhold imaging, ECG triggering, contrast agents (perfusion imaging, aerosols), sodium imaging, hyperpolarized noble gas imaging, and oxygen enhancement. By using widely available techniques, MRI is helpful in the assessment of (a) acute alveoli…

Lung DiseasesChronic bronchitismedicine.medical_specialtyPulmonary FibrosisContrast MediaAtelectasisPerfusion scanningPulmonary EdemaSensitivity and SpecificityDiagnosis DifferentialMedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingLungNeuroradiologyBronchiectasisLungbusiness.industryGeneral MedicinePneumoniamedicine.diseasePulmonary edemaImage EnhancementMagnetic Resonance ImagingPneumoniamedicine.anatomical_structureInjections IntravenousRadiologybusinessPulmonary EmbolismEuropean radiology
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Contrast-enhanced MRI of the lung

2000

The lung has long been neglected by MR imaging. This is due to unique intrinsic difficulties: (1) signal loss due to cardiac pulsation and respiration; (2) susceptibility artifacts caused by multiple air-tissue interfaces; (3) low proton density. There are many MR strategies to overcome these problems. They consist of breath-hold imaging, respiratory and cardiac gating procedures, use of short repetition and echo times, increase of the relaxivity of existing spins by administration of intravenous contrast agents, and enrichment of spin density by hyperpolarized noble gases or oxygen. Improvements in scanner performance and frequent use of contrast media have increased the interest in MR ima…

Lung DiseasesMalemedicine.medical_specialtyLung NeoplasmsContrast MediaPerfusion scanningSensitivity and SpecificityVentilation/perfusion ratiomedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingVascular DiseasesNeoplasm StagingLungbusiness.industryRespiratory diseaseInterstitial lung diseaseGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingPulmonary embolismContrast mediumCarcinoma Bronchogenicmedicine.anatomical_structureBreathingFemaleRadiologyPulmonary EmbolismPulmonary VentilationbusinessMagnetic Resonance AngiographyEuropean Journal of Radiology
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