Intracardiac thrombi: frequency, location, etiology, and complications: a morphologic review--Part V

Clinical Cardiology
B F WallerJ Fetters

Abstract

Intracardiac thrombus may develop as a consequence of multiple underlying cardiac disorders. Other systemic disorders may predispose formation of thrombus within the heart, or the heart may be the site of emboli in transit--thrombus originating elsewhere and traveling through the heart to the pulmonary or arterial circulation. Part V of this five-part series on intracardiac thrombus will focus on "migrating thrombi," miscellaneous systemic conditions associated with intracardiac thrombi, and echocardiographic detection of intracardiac thrombus.

References

Oct 1, 1979·Archives of Internal Medicine·R S RajpalV S Bamrah
May 1, 1985·Journal of the American College of Cardiology·J CameronA L Murphy
Jun 1, 1985·Chest·W F ArmstrongJ C Dillon
Jul 1, 1983·The American Journal of Cardiology·W C Roberts, B F Waller

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Citations

Mar 2, 2002·The American Journal of Geriatric Cardiology·Ijaz A Khan
Jan 1, 2009·BMJ Case Reports·Julio Flávio Meirelles MarchiniAndre Schmidt
Sep 14, 2011·Case Reports in Medicine·H O SavageD L Lefroy

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