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Query: UMLS:C0009443 (
cold
)
92,137
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An area of major concern in considering increased coal production and utilization is the health and safety of increased numbers of workers who mine, process, or utilize coal. Hazards related to mining activities in the past have been especially serious, resulting in many mine related accidental deaths, disabling injuries, and disability and death from chronic
lung disease
. Underground coal mines are clearly less safe than surface mines. Over one-third of currently employed underground miners experience chronic
lung disease
. Other stresses include noise and extremes of heat and
cold
. Newly emphasized technologies of the use of diesel powered mining equipment and the use of longwall mining techniques may be associated with serious health effects. Workers at coal-fired power plants are also potentially at risk of occupational diseases. Occupational safety and health aspects of coal mining are understood well enough today to justify implementing necessary and technically feasible and available control measures to minimize potential problems associated with increased coal production and use in the future. Increased emphasis on safety and health training for inexperienced coal miners expected to enter the work force is clearly needed. The recently enacted Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977 will provide impetus for increased control over hazards in coal mining.
...
PMID:Occupational safety and health implications of increased coal utilization. 54 Jun 21
Physiological and pathological respiratory responses are triggered by various conditions of exposure to
cold
climates. Beside airway smooth muscle, both the pulmonary and the tracheobronchial vasculatures are major effectors of respiratory responses to
cold
. General exposure to
cold
causes pulmonary vasoconstriction known as "Raynaud's phenomenon of the lung" in subjects with primary Raynaud syndrome and favors acute pulmonary oedema in subjects with congestive heart failure. In healthy subjects acute hyperventilation of very
cold
air has led to acute respiratory failure closely similar to hypoxic pulmonary oedema. In outdoor exercising people years long repetition of hyperventilation of subfreezing air causes "eskimo lung" made of obstructive
lung disease
and increased wall thickness of pulmonary arteries. At a lesser degree hyperventilation of dry air cools the central airways and triggers subclinical bronchial obstruction in healthy subjects. In asthmatic subjects hyperventilation of dry air causes asthma attacks. Results of recent animal and human experiments point to a key role of mucosal vessels in thermal balance of the airways. Simultaneously, there is increasing evidence that hyperventilation-induced asthma is triggered by a thermal stimulus.
...
PMID:Cold and the airways. 148 69
Unilateral lung transplantation has provided effective short-term therapy in adults with end-stage
lung disease
. Rejection continues to be the most common cause of transplant failure. Living-related lung transplantation may decrease the recipient immune response. The purpose of this study is to test the technical and physiological feasibility of living-related lobar lung transplantation from adult beagles into beagle puppies in a chronic model. Twenty purebred adult beagle donors underwent left thoracotomy with harvest of the left lower lobe using
cold
perfusion of the pulmonary artery and
cold
immersion. Twenty recipient purebred beagle puppies from the same colony underwent left thoracotomy, left pneumonectomy, and implantation of the donor adult lobe. Anastomoses were performed in sequence: pulmonary vein to left atrium, bronchus, pulmonary artery. Postoperative immunosuppression was with Cyclosporine. Respiratory function of the implanted lobe was evaluated by pulmonary angiography and during balloon occlusion of the right pulmonary artery with arterial blood gases 1 month after transplantation. Ten recipient puppies died of rejection (4), infection (3), or bronchial dehiscence (3) prior to angiography. Seventeen pulmonary angiograms in 10 surviving animals showed normal left pulmonary arterial blood flow (2), diminished left pulmonary arterial flow (5), and occluded left pulmonary artery (3). In two recipients balloon occlusion of the right pulmonary artery was performed and respiratory function was maintained solely by the transplanted lobe for 2 days in one recipient and for 30 minutes at 1 month and 2 months postimplant in a second recipient. Living-related lung transplantation of adult beagle lobes into pneumonectomized beagle puppies is technically feasible. High mortality rates in a chronic model are related to infection and rejection.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Living-related lobar lung transplantation in beagle puppies. 205 3
The cases are examined of 13 males, mean age 53, granted disability pensions by the Turin I.N.A.I.L. in 1975-86 as suffering from
lung disease
caused by the inhalation of dust and exhalation of aluminium. The patients had worked in bauxite smelting for Al2O3 production and the preparation of synthetic abrasives (8 cases), in milling using synthetic abrasives (1 case) in the
cold
grinding of aluminium for paint production (3 cases) and in the electrolytic processing of aluminium (1 case). In line with the latest reports in the literature the present series confirms the possibility that interstitial fibrosis can be caused by exposure to aluminium in industries other than bauxite processing. The relatively benign character of modern aluminium lung is also confirmed.
...
PMID:[Aluminum lung as an occupational disease. Case reports]. 265 1
Retrospective research has been carried out on the clinical reports of 618 cases of patients suffering from silicosis admitted to the S. Luigi Gonzaga Hospital in 1973-1987 (1.4% of all
pneumopathy
admittances). A comparative evaluation of the five-year periods 1973-77, 1978-82, 1983-87 showed a steady reduction in the percentage of silicosis to total cases (from 1.62% to 1.55% and 1.16%). Among the 618 cases assessed, the following pneumopathies were associated with silicosis either alone or in combination: chronic obstructive bronchopneumopathy (89.4%), pulmonary tuberculosis (22.2%), bronchogenic carcinoma (8.4%), acute aspecific infections (26.1%), mycosis (0.6%), sarcoidosis (0.3%), other pneumopathies (1.1%). Comparison between the three five-year periods shows an increase in the frequency of the silicosis-carcinoma association and a fall in the silicosis-tuberculosis and silicosis-
COLD
associations.
...
PMID:[Lung diseases associated with silicosis. Study of 618 cases]. 281 84
Wheezing is a significant problem in some patients with cystic fibrosis. Currently available tests are not reliable at determining whether this wheezing is due to co-existent asthma or to the underlying pulmonary disease. The reproducibility of hyperventilation of
cold
dry air (HVCDA) was studied over eight days in 11 children with cystic fibrosis. A group with mild
lung disease
were selected to minimize the variability due to underlying pulmonary disease. Fifty-six per cent of subjects had consistent responses to HVCDA. A test of reproducibility was performed on the respiratory heat exchange, the percentage fall in FEV1 after HVCDA and the ratio of these two (R). Respiratory heat exchange was found to be highly reproducible with a reproducibility co-efficient of 0.97. The percentage fall in FEV1 after HVCDA and R were not reproducible over the eight-day period. Hyperventilation of
cold
dry air did not give reproducible results in children with cystic fibrosis, suggesting that a single test may not be suitable for judging bronchial liability.
...
PMID:Reproducibility of hyperventilation of cold dry air in children with cystic fibrosis. 346 61
Five workers at a precious metal refinery developed granulomatous
lung disease
between 1972 and 1985. The original diagnosis was sarcoidosis, but 4 of the workers were subsequently proved to have hypersensitivity to beryllium by in vitro proliferative responses of lymphocytes obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage. Review of medical records of coworkers and extensive industrial hygiene surveillance of the plant demonstrated that 4 cases occurred in the furnace area where air concentrations of beryllium fume were consistently below the permissible exposure limit of 2 micrograms/M3. A single case has been recognized from parts of the refinery where exposures to
cold
beryllium dust often exceeded the standard by as much as 20-fold. These data demonstrate that chronic beryllium disease still occurs and confirm the importance of specific immunologic testing in patients suspected of having sarcoidosis but with potential exposure to beryllium. The data raise concern about the adequacy of modern industrial controls, especially in the setting of exposure to highly respirable beryllium fume.
...
PMID:Chronic beryllium disease in a precious metal refinery. Clinical epidemiologic and immunologic evidence for continuing risk from exposure to low level beryllium fume. 349 58
Thirty-four patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) were assessed for baseline pulmonary functions before, and 5 and 15 minutes after
cold
air challenge (CACh). Most of the patients had no change in forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) and maximum expiratory flow at 25% vital capacity (Vmax25%VC) post-CACh. Five patients responded with reduced FEV1 and 13 with reduced Vmax25%VC. However, paradoxical increases were noted in 10 patients for FEV1 and in 5 for Vmax25%VC. Paradoxical responses were most frequent in patients with severe
lung disease
. The explanation for this variability may lie in the varying degrees of airway instability and volume of airway contribution (VAC) to early flows, resulting from the damage caused by chronic infection. Conventional challenges may be useless in determining the true incidence of bronchial hyperreactivity in patients with CF.
...
PMID:Cold air provocation of airway hyperreactivity in patients with cystic fibrosis. 371 45
To evaluate the P wave changes in the electrocardiogram (ECG) in chronic lung diseases, we examined ECGs from twenty patients with interstitial pulmonary fibrosis (the FLD group) and twenty patients with chronic obstructive lung disease (fifteen with pulmonary emphysema and five with bronchial asthma, the
COLD
group). In the
COLD
group, the amplitude of P waves in leads II and III increased and the axis of the P wave shifted rightward. In the FLD group, however, these changes were not observed. Furthermore, the axis of the P wave exceeded +70 degrees in all the patients in the
COLD
group, and was less than +70 degrees for all the patients in the FLD group. The increased P wave terminal force in lead V1 was found in nine patients (45%) of the FLD group and in ten patients (50%) in the
COLD
group. We concluded that the rightward shift of the axis of the P wave was a characteristic of obstructive
lung disease
and that it was mainly caused by the overinflation of the lung. This P wave change was not observed in interstitial pulmonary fibrosis.
...
PMID:P-wave changes in obstructive and restrictive lung diseases. 403 26
An echocardiographic M-mode study has been performed on 58 patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension at rest or on exercise, with chronic
lung disease
, either obstructive (41 cases of
COLD
) or restrictive (17 cases of interstitial lung disease, ILD) in nature. The average Ppa was practically the same (i.e. 27.3 +/- 11.7 mmHg and 26.0 +/- 8.0 mmHg respectively) in the two groups of patients, even though the
COLD
patients were older than the ILD patients (58.7 +/- 9.3 vs 38 +/- 11 years). The echo detection of the pulmonary valve was successful in only 35% of
COLD
patients and in 86% of ILD patients (p less than 0.01). A multiple regression analysis disclosed a rather weak, but nevertheless statistically significant, correlation (p less than 0.01) between 1) Ppa and the ratio of right ventricular to left ventricular end-diastolic volume, and 2) between right ventricular end-diastolic pressure and septal systolic displacement. The standard error of estimated versus actual Ppa taking into account the ventricular and septal echo variables was as high as +/- 7.63 mmHg, thus preventing a reliable prediction of Ppa in individual cases. An echocardiographic pattern of pansystolic mitral valve prolapse was observed in 29% of ILD patients, but never in cases with
COLD
.
...
PMID:Echocardiographic aspects of pulmonary arterial hypertension in chronic lung disease. 674 67
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