Cargando…

Gender Differences in the Symptoms, Signs, Disease History, Lesion Position and Pathophysiology in Patients with Pulmonary Embolism

Advances in research relating to pulmonary embolisms (PE) can assist physicians in selecting the best management strategies for PE patients. However, the symptoms, signs, disease history, lesion position and pathophysiology linked to different genders in patients with PE have rarely been evaluated....

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Deng, Xingqi, Li, Yanyan, Zhou, Ling, Liu, Chunyan, Liu, Mei, Ding, Nianchang, Shao, Jinyan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4514738/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26208352
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0133993
_version_ 1782382801579933696
author Deng, Xingqi
Li, Yanyan
Zhou, Ling
Liu, Chunyan
Liu, Mei
Ding, Nianchang
Shao, Jinyan
author_facet Deng, Xingqi
Li, Yanyan
Zhou, Ling
Liu, Chunyan
Liu, Mei
Ding, Nianchang
Shao, Jinyan
author_sort Deng, Xingqi
collection PubMed
description Advances in research relating to pulmonary embolisms (PE) can assist physicians in selecting the best management strategies for PE patients. However, the symptoms, signs, disease history, lesion position and pathophysiology linked to different genders in patients with PE have rarely been evaluated. One hundred and forty-nine PE patients (73 males and 76 females) were sequentially recruited to this study over the last five years whilst attending our Emergency Department. Data relating to the symptoms, signs, disease history, biochemical testing, cardiac electrophysiology, imaging detection, treatment and outcome were collected and the gender differences were analyzed. We found that embolisms occurred significantly more frequently in the right lung (89.7%) than in the left lung (42.6%). The presence of dyspnea, the number of patients presenting with tumors, the number of patients with chronic pulmonary disease, those with emboli in the right pulmonary artery and emboli in the right lung, as well as the average systolic and diastolic blood pressure were: 78.1%, 15.1%, 31.5%, 32.9%, 94.5%, 129.9+20.0 and 75.0+11.2 in the male patients and 59.2%, 1.3%, 14.5%, 17.1%, 69.7%, 125.1+14.6 and 69.3+11.0 in the female patients. These indicators were found to be significantly higher in male patients. In contrast, the rate of V1-V4 T-wave inversion and level of D-dimer in the blood were significantly lower in males than in females. No significant difference was observed in the remaining observational indicators. Gender differences regarding the symptoms, signs, disease history, lesion position and pathophysiology exist in patients with PE and should be considered in clinical practice.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4514738
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-45147382015-07-29 Gender Differences in the Symptoms, Signs, Disease History, Lesion Position and Pathophysiology in Patients with Pulmonary Embolism Deng, Xingqi Li, Yanyan Zhou, Ling Liu, Chunyan Liu, Mei Ding, Nianchang Shao, Jinyan PLoS One Research Article Advances in research relating to pulmonary embolisms (PE) can assist physicians in selecting the best management strategies for PE patients. However, the symptoms, signs, disease history, lesion position and pathophysiology linked to different genders in patients with PE have rarely been evaluated. One hundred and forty-nine PE patients (73 males and 76 females) were sequentially recruited to this study over the last five years whilst attending our Emergency Department. Data relating to the symptoms, signs, disease history, biochemical testing, cardiac electrophysiology, imaging detection, treatment and outcome were collected and the gender differences were analyzed. We found that embolisms occurred significantly more frequently in the right lung (89.7%) than in the left lung (42.6%). The presence of dyspnea, the number of patients presenting with tumors, the number of patients with chronic pulmonary disease, those with emboli in the right pulmonary artery and emboli in the right lung, as well as the average systolic and diastolic blood pressure were: 78.1%, 15.1%, 31.5%, 32.9%, 94.5%, 129.9+20.0 and 75.0+11.2 in the male patients and 59.2%, 1.3%, 14.5%, 17.1%, 69.7%, 125.1+14.6 and 69.3+11.0 in the female patients. These indicators were found to be significantly higher in male patients. In contrast, the rate of V1-V4 T-wave inversion and level of D-dimer in the blood were significantly lower in males than in females. No significant difference was observed in the remaining observational indicators. Gender differences regarding the symptoms, signs, disease history, lesion position and pathophysiology exist in patients with PE and should be considered in clinical practice. Public Library of Science 2015-07-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4514738/ /pubmed/26208352 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0133993 Text en © 2015 Deng et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Deng, Xingqi
Li, Yanyan
Zhou, Ling
Liu, Chunyan
Liu, Mei
Ding, Nianchang
Shao, Jinyan
Gender Differences in the Symptoms, Signs, Disease History, Lesion Position and Pathophysiology in Patients with Pulmonary Embolism
title Gender Differences in the Symptoms, Signs, Disease History, Lesion Position and Pathophysiology in Patients with Pulmonary Embolism
title_full Gender Differences in the Symptoms, Signs, Disease History, Lesion Position and Pathophysiology in Patients with Pulmonary Embolism
title_fullStr Gender Differences in the Symptoms, Signs, Disease History, Lesion Position and Pathophysiology in Patients with Pulmonary Embolism
title_full_unstemmed Gender Differences in the Symptoms, Signs, Disease History, Lesion Position and Pathophysiology in Patients with Pulmonary Embolism
title_short Gender Differences in the Symptoms, Signs, Disease History, Lesion Position and Pathophysiology in Patients with Pulmonary Embolism
title_sort gender differences in the symptoms, signs, disease history, lesion position and pathophysiology in patients with pulmonary embolism
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4514738/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26208352
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0133993
work_keys_str_mv AT dengxingqi genderdifferencesinthesymptomssignsdiseasehistorylesionpositionandpathophysiologyinpatientswithpulmonaryembolism
AT liyanyan genderdifferencesinthesymptomssignsdiseasehistorylesionpositionandpathophysiologyinpatientswithpulmonaryembolism
AT zhouling genderdifferencesinthesymptomssignsdiseasehistorylesionpositionandpathophysiologyinpatientswithpulmonaryembolism
AT liuchunyan genderdifferencesinthesymptomssignsdiseasehistorylesionpositionandpathophysiologyinpatientswithpulmonaryembolism
AT liumei genderdifferencesinthesymptomssignsdiseasehistorylesionpositionandpathophysiologyinpatientswithpulmonaryembolism
AT dingnianchang genderdifferencesinthesymptomssignsdiseasehistorylesionpositionandpathophysiologyinpatientswithpulmonaryembolism
AT shaojinyan genderdifferencesinthesymptomssignsdiseasehistorylesionpositionandpathophysiologyinpatientswithpulmonaryembolism