Disease | pleural effusion disorder |
Symptom | C0013404|dyspnea |
Sentences | 25 |
PubMedID- 23475801 | pleural effusion with dyspnea is the main presenting symptom, and delayed diagnosis is frequent. |
PubMedID- 25378848 | after the diagnosis, he had a rapidly downhill clinical course due to progressively increasing dyspnea as a result of rapidly increasing pleural effusion and increase in the severity of superior vena caval compression. |
PubMedID- 26029626 | A 58-year-old woman with a 30-pack-year smoking history and remote alcoholism presented with dyspnea due to large pleural effusions (fig. |
PubMedID- 24214838 | Results: key findings include: indwelling pleural catheters and talc pleurodesis provide similar relief of dyspnea in patients with malignant pleural effusions; oxygen many not be needed to prevent dyspnea in many dying patients; docusate may not be needed in addition to sennosides to treat opioid-induced constipation; atropine is no more effective than placebo in treating respiratory rattles in dying patients; many older adult survivors of in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation (cpr) are alive up to 1 year after discharge; observing cpr may decrease family post-traumatic stress; surrogates of intensive care unit patients often interpret prognostic information optimistically; many patients with metastatic cancer feel that chemotherapy may cure their disease; viewing a goals-of-care video may decrease preference for cpr in patients being admitted to skilled nursing facilities. |
PubMedID- 22537563 | Subject: a 79-year-old woman experienced episodic dyspnea with unilateral pleural effusion for 2 years. |
PubMedID- 25874452 | Defining the minimal important difference for the visual analogue scale assessing dyspnea in patients with malignant pleural effusions. |
PubMedID- 24818116 | The patient visited to our medical center for consulting on the problem of dyspnea due to pleural effusion and hoarseness. |
PubMedID- 23189098 | Patients of pleural effusion usually present with dyspnea, chest pain and cough that generally intensify with effort and in many cases interfere with continuation of daily activities. |
PubMedID- 24407535 | Altered cardiac hemodynamics could be an important contributor in the mechanism of dyspnea in patients with large pleural effusion. |
PubMedID- 23126055 | The most common clinical manifestation of pleural mesothelioma is pleural effusion with dyspnea, which makes it a diagnostic problem since many cardiac diseases can have the same presentation. |
PubMedID- 22058351 | The first cat also had severe dyspnea due to septic pleural effusion and pneumomediastinum. |
PubMedID- 20803978 | A 73-year-old woman smoker presented with dyspnea on exertion due to massive left pleural effusion. |
PubMedID- 25962880 | The related symptoms may vary from chest pain, palpitations, dysphagia, pleural effusion with concomitant dyspnea, cough and hemoptysis, to severe life-threatening complications such as hemothorax, cardiac tamponade, esophagobronchial fistula and acute airway obstruction . |
PubMedID- 23960456 | However, the patient still had grade 2 edema, ascites, and dyspnea on exertion due to pleural effusion. |
PubMedID- 22580894 | pleural effusion with dyspnea(19) pericarditis49. |
PubMedID- 24454007 | A 40-year-old female presented to the emergency room with a three-day history of progressive dyspnea due to pleural effusion in february 2010. a computed tomography (ct) scan of the chest showed an extensive soft-tissue mass, measuring 12×8 cm in size, in the anterior mediastinum extending into the right hemithorax and pericardial space (fig. |
PubMedID- 25236357 | Despite several evacuating pleural punctions, dyspnea reoccurred due to recurrent pleural effusion, the same side as the disc resection. |
PubMedID- 24584911 | An 84-year-old woman with a nine-year history of untreated cll presented with exacerbating dyspnea due to pleural effusion. |
PubMedID- 22610520 | Effect of an indwelling pleural catheter vs chest tube and talc pleurodesis for relieving dyspnea in patients with malignant pleural effusion: the time2 randomized controlled trial. |
PubMedID- 24157052 | However, the pleural effusion progressed gradually associated with exertional dyspnea and moderate edema of his lower legs. |
PubMedID- 25548369 | The ipcs were inserted as a palliative measure in patients who had thoracentesis twice within the preceding 2 weeks, no evidence of infection and either failure to respond, complications or intolerance to maximal medical therapy, or if ipc insertion would enable discharge when the patient was hospitalized mainly for dyspnea due to pleural effusion. |
PubMedID- 26517233 | dyspnea because of heart compression, pleural effusion, lung collapse, and pulmonary emboli improved. |
PubMedID- 24826301 | The patient also received diagnostic thoracentesis 6 months before due to dyspnea and the presence of right-side pleural effusion, and he had exudative pleural effusion with lymphocyte-dominant and nondiagnostic cytology, and for this reason, he received thoracoscopy and pleural biopsy which were nondiagnostic. |
PubMedID- 20420115 | The patient was a 33-year-old man, who had progressive dyspnea with massive right pleural effusion for 2 months. |
PubMedID- 23259458 | Her recent medical history was marked by progressive dyspnea due to pleural effusions. |
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