We report three cases of patients with blunt thoracic trauma, who underwent transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) because of high index of clinical suspicion for acute traumatic aortic syndrome. TEE revealed three different locations of aortic injury one of which was not diagnosed with aortography.
We report the case of a patient who was admitted to the hospital with acute pulmonary embolism 2 weeks after a complicated pelvis fracture. Echocardiography revealed a large, long, and mobile thrombus in the right atrium. The patient was scheduled to undergo urgent surgical thrombectomy. Preoperative echocardiography did not detect any thrombi in the right heart and pulmonary artery. The obvious embolism of this large thrombus in the pulmonary circulation was silent as the patient remained asymptomatic and hemodynamically stable. We discuss the contribution of echocardiography to the appropriate therapeutic management of right atrial thrombi and particularly to the cancellation of urgent operative thrombectomy.
We present the case of a patient with acute pulmonary embolism and a large right atrial and a smaller pulmonary artery thrombus. Thrombi were successfully treated with intravenous heparin. Echocardiography was used to document the morphological evolution of thrombi and to evaluate the medical treatment.
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