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Recurrent pulmonary embolism and pulmonary hypertension in chronic tetraplegia.

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TLDR
Recurrent pulmonary emboli resulted in chronic pulmonary hypertension and eventual death in a patient with chronic tetraplegia and was described in an unusual case of progressive pulmonary hypertension in a chronically paralyzed spinal cord injury patient.
Abstract
Case report. To describe an unusual case of progressive pulmonary hypertension due to recurrent pulmonary embolism in a chronically paralyzed spinal cord injury patient. Veterans Administration Hospital, West Roxbury, MA, USA. A 57-year-old man, tetraplegic, sensory incomplete and motor complete for 30 years due to a diving accident, complained of lightheadedness and shortness of breath intermittently for 7 years. Examination during the latest episode revealed anxiety, confusion, respirations 28 per min, blood pressure 80/60 mmHg, and arterial pH 7.41, 28 mmHg, 95 mmHg on 2 l of oxygen. A chest film 2 weeks earlier had revealed a right-sided cutoff of pulmonary vasculature; the current film showed right-sided pleural effusion. Review of EKGs showed a trend of increasing right axis deviation with recovery and recurrences during the previous 9 years and a current incomplete right bundle branch block with clockwise rotation and inverted T waves in V1–4. Computerized tomography with contrast material revealed small pulmonary emboli, but only in retrospect. The patient died shortly after scanning. The pulmonary arteries were free of thromboemboli on gross examination but medium and small-sized arteries were constricted or obliterated with thrombotic material microscopically. The estimated ages of the thromboemboli ranged from days to years. The right ventricle was hypertrophied; the coronary arteries were patent. Recurrent pulmonary emboli resulted in chronic pulmonary hypertension and eventual death in a patient with chronic tetraplegia.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Cause of Death for Patients with Spinal Cord Injuries

TL;DR: Pneumonia was the leading cause of death among quadriplegics and persons at least 55 years of age, while among paraplegic and persons who were less than 55 years old, subsequent unintentional injuries and suicides were the leading causes of death.
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Orthostatic hypotension in the first month following acute spinal cord injury

TL;DR: Patients with cervical and upper thoracic motor complete SCI are more likely to experience persistent OH than those with lower level or motor incomplete SCI during the first month of rehabilitation.
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The prevalence of pulmonary embolism in chronically paralyzed subjects: a review of available evidence.

TL;DR: PE is not infrequent in the chronic SCI subject; but its presentation may be subclinical; and its apparent recurrence may lead to pulmonary hypertension.
Journal ArticleDOI

Right Bundle Branch Block as a Screening Test for Pulmonary Embolism in Chronic Spinal Cord Injury

TL;DR: RBBB may be a useful initial screening test for PE complicating chronicSCI, and PE, often recurrent and sometimes fatal, is prevalent in chronic SCI.
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Complicaciones respiratorias de la tetraplejia: Una mirada a las alternativas terapéuticas actuales

TL;DR: Agarwal et al. as discussed by the authors revisar las opciones terapeuticas currently vigentes and despertar el interes entre los clinicos for profundizar mas en this importante tema.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

The Cardiovascular System

Journal ArticleDOI

Primary pulmonary hypertension: natural history and the importance of thrombosis.

TL;DR: In more than half the patients undergoing autopsy the major histologic feature was thrombi without any evidence of plexiform lesions, and the two groups were similar with respect to their clinical and hemodynamic features and short survival.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The discovery of mutations in the coding region of the gene for bone morphogenetic protein receptor 2 in patients with familial and sporadic PPH may help not only to elucidate pathogenesis but also to direct future treatment options.
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The osmoregulation of vasopressin.

TL;DR: New assay methods now have made it possible to begin to characterize osmoregulatory function in a more concrete and comprehensive way and also to use such information to analyze systematically certain clinical disorders of salt and water balance.
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