| Literature DB >> 19918276 |
Ahmet Demircan, Gulbin Aygencel, Ayfer Keles, Ozgur Ozsoylar, Fikret Bildik.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Despite the high incidence of pulmonary embolism its diagnosis continues to be difficult, primarily because of the vagaries of symptoms and signs in presentation. Conversely, syncope is a relatively easy clinical symptom to detect, but has varied etiologies that lead to a documented cause in only 58% of syncopal events. Syncope as the presenting symptom of pulmonary embolism has proven to be a difficult clinical correlation to make. CASEEntities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19918276 PMCID: PMC2767138 DOI: 10.4076/1752-1947-3-7440
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Figure 1Decreased perfusion is seen to the right lung (particularly evident in the right lower lobe on the RPO image) in our case (perfusion scan was performed with Tc-99m MAA).
Figure 2There is no significant ventilation defect in our case (ventilation scan was performed with Xe-133 gas).