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  • Title: [Massive pulmonary embolism. Clinical aspects and treatment].
    Author: Ruberti U, Odero A, Giordanengo F, Miani S.
    Journal: Minerva Med; 1978 May 26; 69(26):1785-95. PubMed ID: 662181.
    Abstract:
    The frequency of pulmonary embolization seems to be increasing. Venostasis, intimal damage and hypercoagulability of blood are the more recognized causes of pulmonary thromboembolism. It is especially threatening to the elderly, obese, immobilized (for an accident or an operation) patients. Pulmonary isotopic scans or angiograms are most often relied upon to establish the diagnosis. A properly performed pulmonary angiography is necessary to establish or refute the diagnosis in almost every case. With the exception of the patients suddenly dying for a massive pulmonary embolism, the period of time between onset of symptoms and death is usually adequate for substantiating a diagnosis and promptly beginning a fit anticoagulation therapy using continuous intravenous heparin or fibrinolytic agents infusion. Although it is not proper to separate surgical and medical treatment of thromboembolism, the Authors, on the ground of their experience on 5 patients affected by massive pulmonary embolism, in 3 of whom was performed a successful embolectomy, think that heparin anticoagulation treatment is at any rate to apply for treating pulmonary embolism, but in patients in whom the shock is unresponsive to vasopressors or in whom anticoagulation therapy is controindicated, the surgical removal of pulmonary emboly, with the support of a pump oxygenator, is the treatment of choice for the acute massive pulmonary thromboembolism.
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