Very little data are available on the benefits of thrombolysis versus surgical therapy for pulmonary embolism. |
|
Serious obstructions, such as a pulmonary embolism, need emergency medical treatment. |
|
An embolism can happen when something solid, semi-solid or gaseous is travelling in your bloodstream and gets stuck. |
|
A blockage in the lungs is called pulmonary embolism and can cause of sudden, unexpected death. |
|
Anticoagulation is required afterwards because the atria continue to fibrillate and the risk of systemic embolism persists. |
|
Because the traditional techniques used to assess embolism repair require destructive sampling, for a long time the evidence was indirect. |
|
The most common type of embolus is a clot of blood, but other things can cause an embolism too. |
|
Autopsy of the patient showed mild lung scarring but no evidence of acute myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, or cerebrovascular accident. |
|
Spiral computed tomography showed a pulmonary embolism in the left lower lobe. |
|
Some Welshman told me I had to read this book, though forewarned me that page 136 would induce an embolism. |
|
Other cardiovascular causes include severe mitral stenosis and pulmonary embolism. |
|
Common causes of CVA include thrombosis, embolism or hemorrhage due to an aneurysm. |
|
But when heated to body temperature in a patient's bloodstream, the toxicologists theorized, it gasified, causing a fatal pulmonary embolism. |
|
Initially, patients are often treated with anticoagulants because of the misdiagnosis of pulmonary embolism. |
|
Besides ulceration, lower leg edema can lead to tortuous varicosities, phlebitis, deep vein thrombosis, embolism, and infection, among others. |
|
The most frequently misdiagnosed diseases were coronary disease and pulmonary embolism. |
|
The registry included patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic pulmonary embolism. |
|
As a result of cavitation and embolism formation, stem hydraulic conductivity is reduced, which may be critical for a plant under drought stress. |
|
However, the patient had desquamative interstitial pneumonitis and superimposed bronchopneumonia, not pulmonary embolism. |
|
Immediate clinical manifestations of acute lung injury include pneumothorax, pulmonary oedema, and air embolism. |
|
|
Sir Edward was being treated in Salzburg for a minor stomach upset when the pulmonary embolism was discovered. |
|
Some clinicians require unequivocal angiographic proof of pulmonary embolism before they will begin thrombolysis. |
|
The duckbill valve must prevent reverse flow and airflow back to the heart, which could cause an embolism. |
|
For example, if the person has an air embolism in the arteries carrying blood to the brain, it may cause seizures. |
|
The necropsy excluded coronary embolism, myocardial infarction, or tamponade, and the patient's death remains unexplained. |
|
A computed tomographic scan demonstrated a pulmonary embolism, and anticoagulation therapy was initiated. |
|
Trees at the alpine timberline were expected to exhibit a hydraulic architecture protecting the leader shoot from winter embolism. |
|
Pulmonary embolism and lung arteriovenous fistula of the lung were excluded. |
|
Small or large vessels may be affected, with local thrombosis or thromboembolism from artery to artery or cardiac embolism. |
|
Other conditions that increase the risk of embolism include mitral stenosis, and endocarditis. |
|
Clear seasonal variations exist in admission to hospital for deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. |
|
Air embolism is one of the most common hazards of underwater diving while breathing compressed air. |
|
I could always go into Planned Parenthood, not tell them about my pulmonary embolism, and get back on the pill, but I'm not sure that it would be worth it. |
|
These have included chest pain, myocardial infarction, congestive cardiac failure, severe headache requiring hospitalization, and pulmonary embolism. |
|
Air embolism, also called Gas Embolism, blockage of an artery or vein by an air bubble. |
|
Considering the above things comprehensively, massive air embolism was considered negative. |
|
Clinically significant gas or air embolism is a rare complication of hysteroscopy. |
|
They go up towards the surface without passing through decompression levels, they are insensitive to air embolism. |
|
Physiotherapy also helps prevent medical complications such as deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. |
|
When an embolus becomes lodged in another vessel where it completely occludes blood flow, it causes an embolism. |
|
|
Even so, thrombolytic therapy of pulmonary embolism does not dissolve the clot completely as it does with acute coronary thrombosis, and increases the risk of bleeding. |
|
In the absence of treatment, the clot may migrate and cause pulmonary embolism, an often fatal condition. |
|
If the clot detaches from the vein wall and travels to the pulmonary arteries, it can ultimately lead to a pulmonary embolism. |
|
The treatment aims at preventing pulmonary embolism, an immediate complication originating from thrombophlebitis. |
|
Idrabiotaparinux is also being assessed for the prevention of stroke and systemic embolism in patients with atrial fibrillation. |
|
Pulmonary embolism is the underlying cause of cardiac arrest of presumed origin in perhaps two-thirds of patients. |
|
We are, to use other words, we are like there are sicknesses or infirmities, or after an accident or sometimes after a cerebral embolism. |
|
McPherson died of a pulmonary embolism, though a coroner originally cited prolonged dehydration and bedrest as the cause. |
|
One witness who failed to appear suffered a pulmonary embolism and died before he could. |
|
Hemorrhage, infection, and pulmonary embolism are all more common following a surgical birth. |
|
We report the case of an acute intraoperative pulmonary tumour embolism during resection of a renal cell carcinoma. |
|
The president himself was abroad, recovering from an embolism. |
|
Previously, she was off the Tour for 17 months after suffering a life-threatening pulmonary embolism, before returning in triumph at Wimbledon to lift her fifth title there. |
|
The danger of a relaxed condition of the uterus would give rise to hemorrhage, embolism, retention of dots, favoring sepsis and subinvolution. |
|
Cardiac arrest is not a heart attack, but heart attack or pulmonary embolism is the underlying cause of cardiac arrest in perhaps two-third of patients. |
|
As with other cytotoxic agents, thrombophlebitis and thromboembolic phenomena, including pulmonary embolism, have been coincidentally reported with the use of idarubicin. |
|
The priest introduces it with a short phrase and follows it up with a prayer called the embolism and the people respond with the doxology. |
|
When serious, depending on the fractures type and location, complications may include flail chest, compartment syndromes or fat embolism. |
|
Pulmonary endarteritis and subsequent pulmonary embolism associated with clinically silent patent ductus arteriosus. |
|
These high insufflation pressures are probably involved in the genesis of sub-cutaneous emphysemas, and therefore of hypercapnia and in theory increase the risk of gas embolism. |
|
|
In cases of Brugadaphenocopy associated with acute pulmonary embolism, patients frequently present with shock and hypotension. |
|
On the contrary, team approach between cardiologists and surgeons demonstrated improved outcomes of critical pulmonary embolism. |
|
The management of pulmonary embolism is initially conservative, using either intravenous unfractionated heparin or low-molecular-weight heparin. |
|
Urine and plasma levels of fibrinopeptide B in patients with deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. |
|
Pulmonary and cerebral embolism can result from inadvertent intravascular injection or intravasation of Lipiodol. |
|
Respiratory, thoracic and mediastinal disorders: cough, dyspnea, nasal secretion, pharyngolaryngeal pain, pneumonitis, pulmonary embolism, respiratory insufficiency, vocal disturbance. |
|
Venous oxygen embolism produced by injection of hydrogen peroxide into an enterocutaneous fistula. |
|
One in a pulmonary artery causes a pulmonary embolism. |
|
Minimizing contrast medium doses to diagnose pulmonary embolism with 80-kVp multidetector computed tomography in azotemic patients. |
|
All steps in catheter removal are important in preventing pulmonary air embolism. |
|
Air embolism is one of the most sudden conditions to arise which would bring a fatal result. |
|
Forensic divers may experience additional risks, including hypothermia, hyperthermia, air embolism, and dehydration. |
|
The air should have gone into a tube leading to the baby's stomach but he injected it into a venous drip by mistake causing a fatal air embolism. |
|
Potential risks associated with obstetric use include amniotic fluid embolism and maternal exposure to fetal red cells. |
|
A post-mortem has since revealed she died of amniotic fluid embolism, an extremely rare condition that affects women in childbirth. |
|
Mr Cabrera was told immediately afterwards by doctors that she had died from an amniotic fluid embolism. |
|
De Rooij et al reported a patient in the third trimester with amniotic fluid embolism. |
|
Management of pulmonary embolism complicated with right heart thrombus is controversial. |
|
The incidence of transfusion associated air embolism is unknown. |
|
Communication as result of clinical practice in which a patient suffered an air embolism and subsequently died, to heighten clinical awareness of the potential consequences of such an unintended connection. |
|
|
Adverse reactions, such as phrenic nerve injury, pulmonary vein stenosis, atrio-esophageal fistula, air embolism should be mentioned in the labelling. |
|
Admission findings of ACS patients reveal a complaint of pain, hypoxia, decreasing hemoglobin, pulmonary fat embolism and multilobar pneumonia. |
|
In patients receiving rFVIIa during delivery or post partum, thrombotic events such as myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, deep venous thrombosis, retinal artery occlusion, or cerebral ischemia were observed. |
|
If the embolus gets lodged in a pulmonary artery or one of its branches, it can interrupt further blood flow and cut off oxygen supply to the body, leading to a life-threatening condition known as pulmonary embolism. |
|
Comparison by controlled clinical trial of streptokinase and heparin in treatment of life-threatening pulmonay embolism. |
|
In the NSABP P-1 trial, the relative risk of NOLVADEX compared to placebo was 3.1 for endometrial cancer, 4.0 for uterine sarcomas, 1.6 for stroke, 3.0 for pulmonary embolism, and 1.6 for deep vein thrombosis. |
|
It is hypothesized that root pressure in vines helps reduce the risk of water stress-induced embolism. |
|
Symptomatic paradoxical air embolism may be more likely in patients with septal heart defects. |
|
One of them is that an embolism can form in the machine and travel into the brain, causing stroke. |
|
A 29-year-old man died of pulmonary embolism while none of hospitals in Bishkek accepted him for hospitalization for 6 hours. |
|
Embolus location affects the sensitivity of a rapid quantitative D-dimer assay in the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. |
|
Abdominal venous aneurysms in general carry risks for developing complications, such as pulmonary embolism, abdominal pain, and intra-abdominal bleeding. |
|
At noon, Santos was transferred to the ER at Rio Grande Regional Hospital, where she underwent an embolectomy to remove an embolism that had developed in her right leg. |
|
We read with interest the case presentation by Ghatak et al, because we have also experienced similar electrocardiogram cases with massive pulmonary embolism. |
|
As of August 31 she had suffered a massive pulmonary embolism, acute renal failure, anasarca, a surgical wound infection, and physical deconditioning. |
|
However, the technique went wrong when the air injected into the knee joint leaked into Mr Belcuore's bloodstream, triggering an embolism that caused a fatal heart attack. |
|
Depth changes without adequate time for the divers to equalize pressure in internal air spaces could result in barotrauma, air embolism, or other related problems. |
|
Sitting in front of the TV for five or more hours on average per day leads to twice the risk of fatal pulmonary embolism as watching less than two and a half hours per day. |
|
The most serious potential complications of the technique are the introduction of an air embolism and perforation of any of the involved vascular structures. |
|
The main complications include right heart failure, severe exacerbations, pulmonary embolism, pneumothoraces, erythrocytosis and chronic respiratory failure. |
|
|
Pulmonary embolism is a blockage of the main artery of the lung or one of its branches by a substance that has travelled from elsewhere in the body through the bloodstream. |
|