306 resultados para pulmonaire
Resumo:
The unresolved issue of false-positive D-dimer results in the diagnostic workup of pulmonary embolism Pulmonary embolism (PE) remains a difficult diagnosis as it lacks specific symptoms and clinical signs. After the determination of the pretest PE probability by a validated clinical score, D-dimers (DD) is the initial blood test in the majority of patients whose probability is low or intermediate. The low specificity of DD results in a high number of false-positives that then require thoracic angio-CT. A new clinical decision rule, called the Pulmonary Embolism Rule-out criteria (PERC), identifies patients at such low risk that PE can be safely ruled-out without a DD test. Its safety has been confirmed in US emergency departments, but retrospective European studies showed that it would lead to 5-7% of undiagnosed PE. Alternative strategies are needed to reduce the proportion of false-positive DD results.
Resumo:
The incidental discovery of a solitary pulmonary nodule while performing a CT scan of the chest is a very common clinical problem. The differential diagnosis is large but the main clinical challenge is to exclude or ascertain a neoplasia. The evaluation of preexisting risk factors and the analysis of morphological characteristics of the nodule allow the clinician to solve this challenge in a significant number of cases. When the nature of the lesion remains indeterminate a careful follow-up with volumetric determination is necessary for decision making.
Resumo:
Objectifs: Connaître les derniers développements techniques dans l'exploration de l'embolie pulmonaire aigue en imagerie (scanner et IRM). Connaître l'intérêt de la probabilité clinique pré-test dans l'indication de l'imagerie. Savoir faire une interprétation intégrée du scanner dans de l'embolie pulmonaire aiguë. Connaître chez les particularités de réalisation d'un examen chez la femme enceinte. Messages à retenir: Le scanner reste indiqué si les D-dimers sont négatifs et la probabilité clinique pré-test d'une embolie pulmonaire aiguë est élevée. Le scanner a une valeur diagnostique mais aussi une valeur pronostique dans la stratification du risque d'événement fatal chez les patients porteurs d'une embolie pulmonaire aiguë. Résumé: Durant la dernière décennie, l'imagerie en coupe s'est imposée comme moyen diagnostique incontournable dans l'embolie pulmonaire aiguë (EPA). Les nouveaux développements techniques ainsi que les récentes études ont contribué à mieux définir la valeur diagnostique du scanner et de l'IRM. En particulier, trois questions méritent d'être discutées : La probabilité clinique pré-test a-t-elle une importance dans l'indication de l'imagerie? ; (2) Faut-il synchroniser le scanner au rythme cardiaque devant une suspicion d'EPA ? ; (3) Quelles précautions faut-il prendre chez la femme enceinte ? Par ailleurs, La valeur pronostique du scanner mérite d'être connue et utilisée à bon escient.
Resumo:
Pulmonary hypertension is a frequent complication of left heart disease arising from a wide range of cardiac disorders and is associated with poor prognosis. Its pathophysiology is complex with both passive mechanisms of elevated filling pressures in left cavities and occasionally reactive mechanisms of arterial vasoconstriction and remodelling to interplay. This stage, called <out-of-proportions> pulmonary hypertension, further worsens the heart failure patients' prognosis but is still a matter of debate concerning the criteria to apply for its diagnosis and concerning the best way to manage it. This article gives an overview of the importance and pathophysiology of pulmonary hypertension associated with left heart disease, and discusses the challenges associated with its diagnosis and treatment.
Resumo:
The case of a patient with severe pulmonary hypertension whose etiology has remained unknown until an autopsy was performed is discussed in a symposium of pathological anatomy. This case helped to address the diagnostic and therapeutic management of pulmonary hypertension. The broad differential diagnosis of this disease requires a diagnostic strategy to be developped. Clinical reasoning leading to a probable diagnosis based on clinical biological and radiological information is not only a difficult task for the speaker but also a rich source of learning opportunities for our medical community.
Resumo:
Most cases of emphysema are managed conservatively. However, in severe symptomatic emphysema associated with hyperinflation, lung volume reduction (LVR) may be proposed to improve dyspnea, exercice capacity, pulmonary functions, walk distance and to decrease long-term mortality. LVR may be achieved either surgically (LVRS) or endoscopically (EVLR by valves or coils) according to specific clinical criteria. Currently, the optimal approach is discussed in a multidisciplinary setting. The latter permits a personalized evaluation the patient's clinical status and allows the best possible therapeutic intervention to be proposed to the patient.
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We report a case of a fifty year old woman with Graves' disease with positive AntiTPO antibodies and positive AntiTSH receptor antibodies, who was hospitalized with a right cardiac failure. A pulmonary hypertension was discovered on echocardiography. After adequate antithyroid therapy, the right cardiac failure regressed rapidly and pulmonary pressure normalised. An autoimmune process has often been proposed to explain the association between pulmonary hypertension and hyperthyroidism. We report the arguments supporting this autoimmune etiopathogenesis. We also discuss an other hypothesis based on a direct effect of thyroid hormones on the pulmonary circulation and the effects of high cardiac output associated with hyperthyroidism.
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Lobectomy via video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) is now considered as a valid alternative to conventional thoracotomy for early-stage primary lung cancer. Various studies have reported that VATS lobectomy is a safe technique associated with fewer postoperative complications and better post-operative recovery than open thoracotomy. Furthermore, studies suggest oncological equivalence between VATS and open lobectomy.
Resumo:
Lung cancer screening has been the focus of intense interest since the publication in 2011 of the NLST trial (National Lung Screening Trial) showing a mortality reduction in smokers undergoing 3-year screening by chest computed tomography. Although these data appear promising, many issues remain to be resolved, such as high rate of false positive cases, risk of overdiagnosis, optimal intervals between screens, duration of the screening process, feasibility, and cost. Structured screening programs appear crucial to guarantee patient information, technical quality, and multidisciplinary management. Despite these uncertainties, several guidelines already state that screening should be performed in patients at risk, whereas investigators stress that more data are needed. How should the primary care physician deal with individual patients requests? This review provides some clues on this complex issue.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVE: Ultrasounds are a useful tool when looking for indirect evidence in favor of pulmonary embolism. The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of acute cor pulmonale and deep venous thrombosis revealed by ultrasonographic techniques in a population of patients presenting with pulmonary embolism. METHODS: 96 consecutive patients with a mean (+/- SD) age of 65 +/- 15 years, admitted to our hospital for pulmonary embolism were included in this study. The diagnosis of pulmonary embolism was made either by spiral computed tomography or selective pulmonary angiography. Each patient subsequently underwent both trans-thoracic echocardiography and venous ultrasonography. The diagnostic criterion used for defining acute cor pulmonale by echocardiography was the right to left ventricular end-diastolic area ratio over (or equal to) 0.6. Diagnosis of deep venous thrombosis was supported by the visualization of thrombi or vein incompressibility and/or the absence of venous flow or loss of flow variability by venous ultrasonography. RESULTS: Using ultrasounds, an acute cor pulmonale was found in 63% of our patients while 79% were found to have deep venous thrombosis and 92% of the patients had either acute cor pulmonale or deep venous thrombosis or both. All of the patients with proximal pulmonary embolism had acute cor pulmonale and/or deep venous thrombosis. The presence of acute cor pulmonale on echocardiography was significantly higher in patients with proximal pulmonary embolism (p < 0.0001). CONCLUSION: This study emphasizes the potential value of ultrasonographic techniques in the diagnosis of acute pulmonary embolism.
Resumo:
Perfusion lung scan, whether associated with a ventilation lung scan or not, is frequently used in the diagnosis of pulmonary emboli. The characteristics of perfusion lung scan are reviewed. The added diagnostic value of standard chest X-ray and of ventilation scan is discussed, as well as its use in the intensive care unit.