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Query: UMLS:C0001127 (respiratory acidosis)
1,501 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Eighty-four cases of posterolateral diaphragmatic hernia in children are reviewed. The most frequent signs were respiratory insufficiency, cyanosis and costal indrawing. The diagnosis was clinically established in over one half of the cases. In most of the patients, the studies showed respiratory acidosis. Also, radiological studies showed, in most of the cases, elevation of the hemidiaphragm with basal opacity of the hemithorax. For surgical treatment, the choice route was the abdominal. Overall mortality reached 37%.
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PMID:[Congenital posterolateral diaphragmatic hernia]. 124 82

We have performed a statistical study of 1218 autopsies of neonates to extract the factors related to fatal neonatal intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH). Prematurity indicated by a short gestational period or a low birth weight was the most significant factor for IVH. Many other factors considered to be related to IVH were also related closely to prematurity. Therefore, we pose the following question throughout the study: Did the factors independently relate to IVH without any confounding effects of prematurity? To obtain the answer, we tried a statistical adjustment for gestational age to eliminate the confounding effects of prematurity. After the adjustment was made, we concluded that the following 10 items, in order, were the actual factors related to fatal IVH: prematurity, subependymal hemorrhage, subarachnoidal hemorrhage, respiratory distress syndrome, hyaline membrane disease, respiratory acidosis, intracerebral hemorrhage, cyanosis, respirator care, and low Apgar score. There were two distinctive categories in the factors that were eliminated by the adjustment. One was a group that has no significance whatsoever in any subdivided gestational groups, such as meconium aspiration syndrome, due to purely the result of the confounding effect. The other was a group that showed its statistical significance only in a certain period of gestation, such as breech presentation.
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PMID:A statistical study of autopsied cases of neonatal intraventricular hemorrhage. 239 12

The clinical experience of 661 children with bronchiolitis is reported in four-years period to gain a better understanding of diagnosis and pathogenesis of bronchiolitis. Upper airways infections, expiratory dyspnea, clear sound by chest percussion, vesicular rales and whistling by chest auscultation, air trapping on the chest radiography were considered as essential data of diagnosis. It was found in 595 patients: expiratory dyspnea, air trapping, vesicular r. and whistling in 85% and whistling only in 15%; hypoxemia in 20% combined with hypercapnic acidosis in 10%; normoxemia in 80% combined with hypocapnia in 54%; hyperlactemia in 64% combined with an increment in the serum of CPK in 50% and of GPT in 30%; virus were cultured in 27%, adenovirus and RSV were identified in 90%. Instead it was found in 66 patients: air trapping but no difficult breath, with normal chest auscultation; crisis of cyanosis or paleness-cyanosis chilly sweat in 80% were motive of admission. The clinical and/or radiological features of "air trapping" were considered as essential symptoms and signs of bronchiolitis. The insufficient systemic perfusion was considered as a frequent occurrence and as cause for sudden respiratory and circulatory emergency.
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PMID:[Bronchiolitis. Our clinical experience in the 4 years from 1981 to 1984]. 383 40

Studies of the arterial blood gas tensions and pH in 21 children during 24 acute attacks of asthma showed that all were hypoxic on admission to hospital, and in 10 there was evidence of carbon dioxide retention. Cyanosis, invariably present when the So(2) was below 85%, and restlessness in patients breathing air were the most reliable indices of the severity of hypoxia. There were no reliable clinical guides to the Pco(2) level. Conventional oxygen therapy in tents (25-40%) did not always relieve hypoxia, and in three cases the administration of oxygen at a concentration of 40% or over failed to produce a normal arterial oxygen tension. Uncontrolled oxygen therapy may aggravate respiratory acidosis, and three of our patients developed carbon dioxide narcosis while breathing oxygen. The necessity for blood gas measurements in the management of severe acute asthma in childhood is emphasized.
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PMID:Arterial blood gas tensions and pH in acute asthma in childhood. 566 2

We report here on a case of primary alveolar hypoventilation in a 9 yr old child. From the age of 8 years, the patient has suffered from episodes of bronchopneumonia associated with severe respiratory insufficiency and lethargy. After recovery, cyanosis developed during the night and, later on, during the day. On two occasions, serious respiratory depression followed ketamine sedation for cardiac catheterization and total anaesthesia for cerebral angiography. Pulmonary function tests showed normal volumes and normal mechanics of breathing; blood gas analysis revealed a slight hypercapnic acidosis and hypoxia. The ventilatory response to CO2 was virtually absent, whereas voluntary hyperventilation normalized blood gas values. A polygraphic recording during sleep showed a marked worsening of hypoventilation, which occurred soon after falling asleep and continued throughout all sleep stages; sporadic central apnoeas, at times prolonged, were recorded only during light sleep. The patient, now 14 yr old, is maintained in satisfactory condition with low flow nocturnal oxygen administration combined with the use of a body respirator during sleep twice a week.
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PMID:A polygraphic study of one case of primary alveolar hypoventilation (Ondine's curse). 672 66

Agenesis of the trachea is a rare anomaly. The main signs are respiratory distress and cyanosis, inability to vocalize and impossible tracheal intubation. In most cases concomitant congenital anomalies of the heart, digestive tract or genitourinary tract are present. Endoscopy and X ray studies will confirm the diagnosis. There is no long-term surgical solution because no suitable material for a tracheal prosthesis is available at present, therefore the condition is ultimately fatal. We report a case of tracheal agenesis. After the diagnosis was established the baby's lungs were ventilated for several hours via an oesophageal tube and two broncho-oesophageal fistulae, but she finally died from untreatable respiratory acidosis. Autopsy revealed a Floyd's type III tracheal agenesis and a laryngeal cleft.
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PMID:Tracheal agenesis. 797 36

Twenty-three foals, between 1 and 7 months old, with signs of acute respiratory distress, were examined at the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital (VMTH), University of California, Davis, between 1984 and 1989. Characteristic features included sudden onset of severe respiratory distress and tachypnea, cyanosis unresponsive to nasal oxygen, pyrexia, hypoxemia, hypercapneic respiratory acidosis, poor response to treatment, and histopathologic lesions of bronchiolitis and bronchointerstitial pneumonia. Seven of the 23 foals were normal before the onset of respiratory distress, 3 foals were found dead, and 13 foals were being treated for respiratory tract infections at the time of presentation. Laboratory data obtained for 13 horses showed increased plasma fibrinogen concentration (630.7 +/- 193 mg/dL), leukocytosis (18,607 +/- 7,784/microL), and neutrophilia (13,737 +/- 8,211/microL). Thoracic radiographs showed a diffuse increase in interstitial and bronchointerstitial pulmonary opacity and, in 5 foals, an alveolar pulmonary pattern of increased density was also seen. In 3 foals heavy interstitial infiltration proceeded to a coalescing nodular radiographic appearance. Microbiological culture of tracheobronchial aspirates (TBA) from 9 foals yielded bacterial growth, but no one bacterial species was consistently isolated. Microbiological culture of postmortem specimens of the lung from 6 foals yielded growth of bacteria that included Escherichia coli, Enterobacter spp., Proteus mirabilis, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Rhodococcus equi, or beta-hemolytic Streptococcus spp. Tracheobronchial aspirates from 4 foals and lung samples collected from a further 4 foals at necropsy yielded no bacterial growth. Cultures were not taken from two foals premortem or postmortem. Virologic examination of TBA, lung tissue, or pooled organ tissue from 12 foals was negative. Viral culture of TBA from 1 foal showed cytopathic effects and positive immunofluorescence for equine herpes virus type II (EHV-II). In addition to the 3 foals that were found dead, 11 foals died or were euthanatized. Pathologic lesions were limited to the lungs in 50% of the foals; the remainder also had bowel lesions suggestive of hypoxic injury. The predominant histopathologic pulmonary lesions included bronchiolitis, bronchiolar and alveolar epithelial hyperplasia, and necrosis. Many bronchioles were filled with mucoid and fibrinocellular exudate. The peribronchiolar interstitium and adjacent alveolar spaces were also infiltrated with inflammatory cells and contained proteinaceous edema fluid. Type II cell hyperplasia and hyaline membrane formation were observed in the majority of foals and in 2 foals alveolar multinucleate giant cells were also present.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Bronchointerstitial pneumonia and respiratory distress in young horses: clinical, clinicopathologic, radiographic, and pathological findings in 23 cases (1984-1989). 826 46

A 46-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital for a severe asthma attack. On admission, systemic cyanosis was observed, and her consciousness state was drowsy. Arterial blood gas showed severe respiratory acidosis, hypoxia, and hypercapnea, with pH, PaO2, and PaCO2 of 7.163, 29.9 torr and 81.3 torr, respectively. Immediately, mechanical ventilation was commerced but on the third hospital day pneumomediastinum and subcutaneous emphysema appeared, and on the sixth day pneumoperitoneum also appeared. The chest CT scan on the sixth day showed free air around bilateral internal mammary vessels. This indicated that air moved from the mediastinum into the peritoneal cavity through an anterior route, via the sternocostal triangle formed by the xiphoid origins of the diaphragm medially and the costal origins laterally.
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PMID:[A case of status asthmaticus complicated by with pneumoperitoneum during mechanical ventilation therapy]. 834 12

Fifty eight admissions for 52 adult asthmatics who required intubation were reviewed for the years of 1988-1995 to examine factors related to specific clinical patterns and profile the course of these patients. Of the 56 admissions where patients were intubated for respiratory failure and/or cyanosis, 5 were associated with significant complications of mechanical ventilation/intubation (pneumothorax, subcutaneous emphysema, aspiration pneumonia, and laryngeal edema) and there were no fatalities. Patients > or = 35 years of age had significantly more profound respiratory acidosis in initial arterial blood gases (pH = 7.14 versus 7.23, p = 0.03). In contrast, patients with a history of drug abuse or psychiatric disorders had lower mean pCO2 (p < = 0.01). The overall mean length of intubation was 17.6 hours, while the overall mean hospital stay was 6.6 days. Longer intubation times were associated with the occurrence of major complications, female gender, and hospital administration of ipratropium. Hospital stay was correlated with length of intubation, later month of admission, and earlier year of admission. Common precipitating factors noted for first admissions were upper respiratory infections (61%), followed by allergy or smoke exposure (13%), compliance related problems (12%), and drug abuse/inhalation (6%). Inhaled anti-inflammatory drugs, oral steroids or either were taken at the time of admission by 35%, 35% and 65% of the patients, respectively. There was an even distribution of patients with respect to medical insurance coverage type, admissions per season or year, ethnicity, marital status, and gender. We conclude that severe asthma resulting in respiratory failure is common despite the frequent use of anti-inflammatory asthma medications. Mechanical ventilatory support can be administered safely in the majority of these patients and should be considered early in acute asthma.
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PMID:Clinical characteristics of adult asthmatics requiring intubation. 872 3

Noninvasive mechanical ventilation (NMV) now represents the first step in the management of acute on chronic respiratory failure (A/CRF). During the last 5 yrs, many studies have confirmed the feasibility of NMV in an acute setting, either by facial or nasal interface, used in addition to volumetric or barometric respirators, to manage A/CRF. The best indications for NMV are slowly progressive A/CRF, frequently represented by chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), or restrictive pulmonary disease. The criteria to initiate NMV in such patients are worsening of respiratory status and arterial blood gas (ABG) values, with increased hypoxia, hypercapnia and respiratory acidosis, despite optimal management with medication, physiotherapy and oxygen therapy. Respiratory encephalopathy is not an absolute contraindication; however, bronchial hypersecretion indicates that care is needed under NMV. Invasive mechanical ventilation with endotracheal (ET) intubation is discussed in the case of failure of NMV, when clinical status and ABG values worsen in spite of it. The signal for ET intubation is then obvious, represented by severe dyspnoea leading to respiratory pauses or arrest, severe cyanosis, and signs of haemodynamic instability. Despite immediate evidence of ominous cardiorespiratory inefficiency, ET intubation may be delayed and often avoided with the help of NMV. Criteria should be studied to identify guidelines for cessation of NMV, in order not to continue with the technique too long considering the safety of the patient. Indications for NMV in other kinds of ARF have received less study and are more controversial.
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PMID:Noninvasive mechanical ventilation and acute respiratory failure: indications and limitations. 915 23


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