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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Persons residing at high altitude who develop excessive polycythemia are more hypoxemic than normal high-altitude residents. We investigated the causes of hypoxemia in 20 patients with excessive polycythemia residing at an altitude of 3,100 m. Lung disease evidenced by abnormal spirometric features and results of a respiratory questionnaire was present in 10 of 20 patients and resulted in increased alveolar-arterial difference for PO2 [(A-a)PO2]. The excessive hypoxemia in the patients with normal lungs was not due to increased (A-a)PO2. We measured ventilatory responses to hypoxia and to hypercapnia to determine whether blunting of these responses was a cause of this excessive hypoxemia. We found, however, that chemical drives to breathe, although blunted, were the same in patients with polycythemia as in high-altitude control subjects. However, an
abnormal breathing
pattern was observed; the polycythemic patients had a smaller tidal volume and a greater ratio of dead space to tidal volume than did the normal subjects. In addition, the polycythemic patients had increased minute ventilation on breathing 100 percent O2, whereas the normal subjects did not. Thus, hypoxic
depression
of ventilation may have been present. Our findings suggested that blunted chemical drives are not causative in this disease, and that some other cause of hypoxemia must be present.
...
PMID:Excessive polycythemia of high altitude: role of ventilatory drive and lung disease. 70 89
A 30-year-old female patient presented in a comatose state with clinical and radiographic signs of aspiration pneumonia 16 hours following elective surgery. Subsequent clinical assessment and investigations revealed the characteristic facies, proximal muscle weakness, lenticular opacities, pulmonary function defects, arterial desaturation and
abnormal breathing
during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep often associated with myotonia dystrophica. Although these characteristic features were evident on clinical examination postoperatively they were not noted in the preoperative assessment. The aspiration pneumonia and coma were unusual presenting features of this disease. Unsuspected myotonia dystrophica should be considered in the differential diagnosis of unexplained respiratory
depression
, aspiration or comatose state following surgery. Recognition of the disorder during the preoperative assessment is the key to avoiding complications during the perioperative management of such patients.
...
PMID:Aspiration pneumonia and coma--an unusual presentation of dystrophic myotonia. 377 3
Acute hyperventilation (HV) rarely poses diagnostic or therapeutic problems. Chronic hyperventilation, however, with vague and multiple symptomatology due to respiratory alkalosis and increased breathing work, is often overlooked or misinterpreted, though it is a very common disorder of the general patient population. Chronic HV is frequently associated with emotional disturbances such as anxiety, panic and
depression
, or with psychosomatic disorders such as irritable bowel, effort syndrome and chronic pain. The diagnosis of chronic HV relies primarily on taking of a thorough history and is confirmed by an HV provocation test and arterial or cutaneous measurements of pCO2. Therapeutic measurements include psychotherapy, psychoactive drugs (antidepressants and benzodiazepines), beta-blockers and modification of
abnormal breathing
patterns.
...
PMID:[The hyperventilation syndrome]. 647 20
Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is characterized by
abnormal breathing
during sleep, and occurs when the upper airway is obstructed but respiratory effort continues. Causes of OSA include obesity, overindulgence in alcohol, and the use of sedatives. The patient complains of unrefreshed sleep, morning headaches and drowsiness, sometimes leading to
depression
and intellectual impairment. The treatment of choice is weight loss; however, the patient may also require mechanical nocturnal support to prevent the upper airway collapsing and causing OSA. A simple and effective non-surgical treatment for OSA is nasal continuous positive airway pressure.
...
PMID:Management of obstructive sleep apnoea. 837 59
Three disease-specific, health-related quality of life (HRQL) questionnaires have been introduced to assess patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD): the St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), the
Breathing Problems
Questionnaire (BPQ), and the Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire (CRQ). The purpose of the present study was to make comparisons between the SGRQ, the BPQ, and the CRQ in their discriminative properties, and to clarify the characteristics of each questionnaire. One hundred forty-three patients with mild to severe COPD completed pulmonary function tests, progressive cycle ergometer testing for exercise capacity, assessment of dyspnea, anxiety, and
depression
, and assessment of HRQL. The frequency distributions of the questionnaire scores showed that the SGRQ and the CRQ were normally distributed and that the BPQ was skewed toward low scores. Relationships between all dimensions of the three questionnaires were significant (correlation coefficients [Rs] = 0.74 to 0.86). The three questionnaires had significant but weak correlations (Rs = -0.24 to -0.36) with some physiologic variables (VC, FEV1, and DL(CO)/VA) and mild to moderate correlations with exercise capacity and assessment of dyspnea, anxiety, and
depression
. Stepwise multiple regression analyses revealed that the Baseline Dyspnea Index (BDI) score, anxiety by the Hospital Anxiety
Depression
Scale (HAD), and maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) accounted for 61% of the variance in the SGRQ and that the BDI and anxiety of the HAD accounted for 53 and 49% of the variance in the BPQ and the CRQ, respectively. Dyspnea and psychologic status impacted the HRQL in patients with COPD. Although no substantial differences between the SGRQ, the BPQ, and the CRQ were evident in the correlations with physiologic parameters and the influential factors, the BPQ was found to be less discriminatory than the SGRQ and the CRQ in evaluating HRQL cross-sectionally.
...
PMID:Comparison of discriminative properties among disease-specific questionnaires for measuring health-related quality of life in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. 951 91
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a major cause of morbidity in old age. It leads to reduced quality of life (QoL), but the factors that contribute to this are less understood. There is no consensus on measurement of QoL in elderly COPD patients. We assessed (a) factors predicting QoL in elderly COPD out-patients and (b) specificity (SP), sensitivity (SEN), positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV) and repeatability of two disease-specific QoL instruments, the Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire (CRQ) and the
Breathing Problems
Questionnaire (BPQ) in elderly people. All subjects also completed an ADL measure [Nottingham Extended ADL (NEADL)] and a measure of psychological well-being [Brief Assessment of
Depression
Cards (BASDEC)] as well as a 6-min walk test. Subjects comprised 96 (56 men) elderly out-patients with irreversible COPD aged 70-93 years (mean 78) who were clinically stable for > or = 6 weeks. Controls were 55 (23 men) aged 71-90 years (mean 78) with normal lung function. All were cognitively intact. Mean FEV1/FVC in COPD subjects was 45.5 (SE = 1.4)% and for controls was 71.4 (SE = 1.3)%. Repeatability was good for both BPQ and CRQ with no significant difference. There were no significant differences in specificity and positive predictive values between the two questionnaires but BPQ performed better than CRQ with regard to sensitivity (P = 0.02) and NPV (P < 0.001). A multiple regression analysis was used to identify variables that best predicted BPQ and CRQ in COPD subjects. For BPQ predictive values were NEADL (P < 0.0001); BASDEC (P < 0.0001); age (P < 0.0001); 6-min walk distance (P = 0.001); body mass index (P < 0.05); resting oxygen saturation (P < 0.05); and household composition (living alone or with relatives, P = 0.05). In contrast only the following predicted CRQ: NEADL, BASDEC and resting oxygen saturation. Sixteen per cent of the variance in BPQ was accounted for by NEADL score, 9% by BASDEC, 4% by age and 3% by 6-min walk distance (total r2 = 0.70). It was concluded that: (1) BPQ provides more valid assessment than CRQ of QoL in elderly COPD subjects; (2) severity of disease in terms of its impact on QoL is not predicted by lung function tests; (3) the most important determinants of QoL are ADL score and emotional status.
...
PMID:Quality of life in elderly patients with COPD: measurement and predictive factors. 992 54
Respiratory
depression
, the most serious side-effect of opioid treatment, is well documented for morphine, the most commonly used opioid in neonatal care. Less is known about methadone, a clinically relevant opioid analgesic, especially during neonatal development. This study was undertaken to determine the neonatal respiratory effects of methadone. We hypothesize that methadone is equipotent to morphine, compared to our previous morphine results in the same animal model, but has a much longer duration of action, due to its longer elimination half-life. Neonatal guinea pigs (3-14 days old) randomly received a single subcutaneous dose of methadone or saline. Using a non-invasive plethysmographic method, we measured ventilatory and metabolic parameters before injection and at intervals for 32 hr after injection while pups breathed "room air" or 5% CO(2) gas mixtures. Methadone-induced
depression
of ventilation was most evident during 5% CO(2) challenge. The onset of drug effects was within 15 min for all ages and doses, but the duration of action decreased with age. While the depth of methadone-induced respiratory
depression
did not depend on pup age, the control of breathing was different in 3-day-old pups, where inspiratory time increased fourfold; twice that of older pups. We conclude that methadone induces a naloxone reversible respiratory
depression
in guinea pig neonates and, in the very young, causes an
abnormal breathing
pattern due to changes in respiratory timing. Methadone is more potent than morphine with respect to neonatal respiratory
depression
, but surprisingly, the duration of methadone action was not longer than morphine.
...
PMID:Methadone-induced respiratory depression in the neonatal guinea pig. 1796 93
BACKGROUND Asymptomatic postoperative atrial fibrillation (AF) may go undetected. As part of a multicenter observational trial designed to develop a risk prediction score for respiratory
depression
, the respiratory patterns of patients admitted to standard wards were continuously assessed with capnography and pulse oximetry. The monitor measured end-tidal carbon dioxide, respiratory rate, heart rate (HR), and oxyhemoglobin saturation. CASE REPORT Two men ages 75 and 72 experienced abrupt and variable postoperative changes in HR consistent with AF with rapid ventricular response, coinciding with an
abnormal breathing
pattern with apneic episodes. In both cases, the changes were not detected by routine clinical monitoring. CONCLUSIONS Continuous capnography identified respiratory distress in 2 patients who experienced symptoms of AF. Continuous monitoring devices can help health care providers minimize the risk of morbidity and mortality for patients at risk of respiratory
depression
.
...
PMID:New-Onset Atrial Fibrillation Detected by Continuous Capnography Monitoring: A Case Report. 3294 38