Class 2. Pulmonary Hypertension Associated with Pulmonary Vein Stenosis

Atresia of the common pulmonary vein

Russell V. Lucas Jr, Bertram F. Woolfrey, Ray C. Anderson, Richard G. Lester, Jesse E. EdwardsCharles T. Miller Hospital and University of Minnesota.United States PediatricsPediatrics 1962; 29: 729-739https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.29.5.729 AbstractAbstract Not Available CategoryClass II. Pulmonary Hypertension Associated with Pulmonary Vein StenosisPulmonary Vascular Pathology Age Focus: Pediatric Pulmonary Vascular Disease Fresh or Filed Publication: Filed (PHiled). Greater […]

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Congenital stenosis of pulmonary veins at their atrial junctions

Frank E. Sherman, William F. Stengel, S. Richard Bauersfeld Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh and University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.United States American Heart JournalAm Heart J 1958; 56: 908-919DOI: 10.1016/0002-8703(58)90199-6 Abstract1. A case of congenital stenosis of the pulmonary veins is presented.2. The brief literature on congenital pulmonary venous stenosis is reviewed. Only one similar case was found. Two other reported cases

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Congenital stenosis of individual pulmonary veins

John D. Shone, Kurt Amplatz, Ray C. Anderson, Paul Adams Jr, Jesse E. EdwardsCharles T. Miller Hospital and University of Minnesota.United States CirculationCirculation 1962: 26: 574-581DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.26.4.574 AbstractAbstract Not Available CategoryClass II. Pulmonary Hypertension Associated with Pulmonary Vein StenosisDiagnostic Testing for Pulmonary Vascular Disease. Invasive TestingPulmonary Vascular Pathology Age Focus: Pediatric Pulmonary Vascular Disease Fresh or

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Extrapulmonic stenosis of the pulmonary veins

Jay Bernstein, Anthony C. Nolke, Joseph O. ReedChildren’s Hospital of Michigan and Wayne State University College of Medicine.United States CirculationCirculation 1959; 19: 891-897DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.19.6.891 AbstractAbstract Not Available CategoryClass II. Pulmonary Hypertension Associated with Pulmonary Vein StenosisSymptoms and Findings Associated with Pulmonary Vascular DiseasePulmonary Vascular Pathology Age Focus: Pediatric Pulmonary Vascular Disease Fresh or Filed Publication: Filed

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The pulmonary pressures in pulmonary venous obstruction

Merritt C. Warren, Philip M. Benaron, Norman J. SissmanStanford University School of Medicine.United States CirculationCirculation 1968; 38: 1127-1135DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.38.6.1127 AbstractThe contour of the pulmonary artery wedge pressure tracing in a case of pulmonary venous obstruction was unique and may be diagnostic. Wedged pressures were obtained in both a pulmonary artery and a pulmonary vein on recatheterization

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Pulmonary venous obstruction. Report of a case mimicking primary pulmonary artery hypertension, with a review of the literature

Jon B. Tingelstad, Kurt Aterman, Edward C. LambertChildren’s Hospital, Buffalo.United States American Journal of Diseases in ChildrenAm J Dis Child 1969; 117: 219-227https://DOI: 10.1001/archpedi.1969.02100030221019 AbstractWhile the literature on the pathology of the pulmonary arteries and arterioles in cor pulmonale is extensive, only a few cases of primary changes in the small pulmonary veins and venules

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Stenosis and obstruction of the pulmonary veins associated with pulmonary artery hypertension

George Contis, Robert H. Fung, Gordon F. Vawter, Alexander NadasThe Children’s Hospital Medical Center and Harvard Medical School.United States American Journal of CardiologyAm J Cardiol 1967; 20: 718-724DOI: 10.1016/0002-9149(67)90015-x AbstractA case of stenosis and obstruction of the pulmonary veins associated with pulmonary artery hypertension and microcytic anemia, is presented. The child was completely normal until the

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Significance of the Pulmonary Vascular Bed in Congenital Heart Disease: V. Lesions of the Left Side of the Heart Causing Obstruction of the Pulmonary Venous Return

Charlotte Ferencz, J. Francis DammannJohns Hopkins University and Hospital. University of Verginia.United States CirculationCirculation 1957; 16:1046-1056DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.16.6.1046 AbstractA microscopic study was made of the lungs of 18 patients with congenital malformations of the heart in which there was obstruction of pulmonary venous drainage. Alterations in various components of the pulmonary vascular bed and of the lung

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Multilobar pulmonary venous obstruction with pulmonary hypertension; protective arterial lesions in the involved lobes

Jesse E. Edwards, Howard B. BurchellMayo ClinicUnited States American Medical Association Archives of Internal MedicineAMA Arch Intern Med 1951; 87: 372-378. DOI: 10.1001/archinte.1951.03810030045004 AbstractIN THE presence of structural obstruction to the free flow of blood from the lungs to the left ventricle, such as in classic mitral stenosis, proliferative thickening of the walls of the small arteries

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Unilateral Pulmonary Arteriosclerosis Unusual Fibrous Connective Tissue Growth Associated; Review of Literature and Discussion of Possible Physiological Mechanisms Involved in These Changes

Scott R. Inkley, George R. AbbottWestern Reserve University and University Hospitals of Cleveland.United States Journal of the American Medical Association Internal MedicineJAMA Int Med 1961; 108: 903-915 https://doi:10.1001/archinte.1961.03620120087012 AbstractAn extensive fibrous connective tissue proliferation suggestive of retroperitoneal fibrosis or chronic mediastinitis is reported here. Aside from being the most extensive involvement that we can find

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