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      Echocardiographic findings in patients with proved pulmonary embolism.

      American Heart Journal
      Acute Disease, Adult, Aged, Echocardiography, methods, Female, Humans, Lung, radionuclide imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Pulmonary Artery, radiography, Pulmonary Embolism, diagnosis, Recurrence, Technetium Tc 99m Aggregated Albumin, diagnostic use

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          Abstract

          Echocardiographic studies were performed in 105 patients with acute and recurrent pulmonary emboli. Pulmonary embolism was confirmed by pulmonary angiography (n = 48), autopsy (n = 6), and lung perfusion scintigraphy (n = 51). Seventy of 93 patients (75%) displayed a dilated right ventricle, 38 of 91 patients (42%) had reduced left ventricular cavity dimension, 41 of 82 patients (50%) had a decreased EF slope of the mitral valve, and 78 of 101 patients (77%) showed dilatation of the right pulmonary artery. The motion of the interventricular septum was abnormal in 41 of 93 patients (44%). Right-sided thrombi were seen in 13 patients within the right pulmonary artery (n = 11) and in the right ventricle (n = 3); in one patient they were found in the superior vena cava, in the innominate vein, and the right atrium. Two patients suffered from right-sided endocarditis. Thus echocardiographic changes were frequently found in patients with proved pulmonary emboli. The echocardiographic findings of right-sided cardiac and pulmonary artery abnormalities indicate hemodynamically active pulmonary emboli.

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