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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (hernia)
15,856 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The clinical impression of an allergist that early surgery increases the risk for developing asthma or hayfever was followed up by three studies. First, 115 children with pyloric stenosis were followed up and showed above-average prevalence figures. Second, 47 boys with hernia repairs were followed with similar results. Thirdly, 202 children reporting asthma or hay fever were studied for early hospitalizations. They reported more hospitalizations under the age of 2 than did a control group.
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PMID:Factors associated with the development of asthma and hay fever in children: the possible risks of hospitalization, surgery, and anesthesia. 116 95

In order to better define the outcome of patients with neonatal congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH), 17 patients between 3 and 19 years of age, among 34 survivors from 100 CDH have been re-examined clinically. All had a lung radiography, lung function studies, and radionuclide (Technetium 99m, Xenon 133) lung scans. Three patients suffered from asthma, 2 had recurrent bronchitis, 4 poor tolerance to effort, 3 gastrooesophageal regurgitation leading to endobrachyoesophagus and oesophagitis in one, 3 had scoliosis. Lung scans demonstrated hypoperfusion of the herniated side (less than 40%) in 6 patients. Chest films showed hypovascularisation on the herniated side. Lung function studies, performed in 4 of these 6 patients, showed a restrictive syndrome in 1 patient. Our results confirm those in the literature: perfusion is more altered than ventilation. Chest films at one year of age, completed if necessary by radionuclide lung scans, allow identification of children who have important pulmonary hypoplasia. These children need a regular follow-up: respiratory, digestive and orthopedic complications must be treated in order to preserve the respiratory function in adulthood.
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PMID:[Long-term outcome of congenital diaphragmatic hernia. A study of 17 patients]. 179 45

A case of a bilateral pulmonary hernia of the lungs into the supraclavicular fossae is described. A man, aged 79, with severe chronic asthma and chronic bronchitis due to air pollution, complained of a cervical mass off and on for several years. The herniation was greater on the right side. It could be identified on physical examination by the presence of a soft painless supraclavicular bulge which was exaggerated by strain or cough. Radiologically this herniation could best be identified on lateral cervical roentgenogram. It is said that cervical lung hernia is a rare condition, but in our experience supraclavicular herniation of the lung is not unusual in cases of severe chronic obstructive lung disease.
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PMID:[Cervical lung hernia in a case of severe chronic asthma and bronchitis]. 188 6

The second European Atlas of Avoidable deaths, which will be shortly issued, concerns the period 1979-83 for Italy. The causes of deaths included were: tuberculosis, neoplasms of the cervix uteri and those of the uterus with no specified site, Hodgkin's disease, chronic rheumatic heart disease, hypertensive and cerebrovascular disease, childhood respiratory infections, asthma, appendicitis, abdominal hernia, cholecystitis and cholelithiasis, maternal and perinatal deaths. In Italy marked excesses for cholecystitis-cholelithiasis, Hodgkin's disease, hypertensive and cerebrovascular disease and perinatal mortality were observed. A remarkable decrease was observed in comparison with the first Atlas (1974-78); but the European countries generally maintained the differences amongst them and their rank. Proposals to assess the causes of the observed differences are suggested (death certificate quality evaluation studies, case-reference studies, cohort studies) and the role of confidential enquiries is discussed.
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PMID:[Avoidable deaths in the evaluation of the performance of health services. II. European Atlas of avoidable deaths: initial data and several reflections]. 215 27

A child with a past history of wheezing presented with an acute illness that simulated an asthma attack. Respiratory distress was not alleviated by nebulized and parenteral therapy for status asthmaticus. The diagnosis of posterolateral diaphragmatic hernia became obvious only when a radiograph demonstrated gas-filled loops of bowel in a hemithorax. The clinician must entertain the diagnosis of congenital diaphragmatic hernia in patients with apparent bronchospasm.
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PMID:Herniation of abdominal contents simulating status asthmaticus. 343 99

In order to study the problems of surgery for incisional hernia and its prognosis, 657 patients who had undergone surgery for incisional hernia between January 1974 and December 1983 in 27 hospitals were analyzed statistically by questionnaire survey. These patients consisted of 571 in whom surgery was performed for the first time and 86 in whom surgery was carried out for recurrent hernia. The ratio of male to female patients with initial surgery was 1:2.4, showing a higher frequency in females than in males. Initial surgery was most frequently carried out in the patients' 50s and 60s. The most common procedure which caused hernia was a median incision in 299 (51.6%), followed by an incision of the right hypogastrium for appendectomy in 211 (36.4%). There were many patients with systemic complications such as obesity, diabetes and asthma. The recurrence rate after radical surgery for incisional hernia was 9.1%. There was a tendency for the recurrence rate to be high in elderly patients and those who had had systemic complications (obesity, diabetes and asthma) preoperatively. The rate was very high, 33.3%, in patients with postoperative wound infection. The recurrence rate in patients with surgery for recurrent hernia was about three times as high as the 7.3% for patients with initial surgery. When the rate was determined by procedure, it was 2.4% for patients treated by a mesh prosthesis, 9.4% for those treated by celiorrhaphy and closure, and 16.7% for those treated by the overlap method. Mesh prosthesis was considered the best procedure, particularly for recurrent hernia.
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PMID:[Surgery of incisional hernia and its prognosis--statistical analysis in 657 patients]. 352 14

One case of a para-oesophageal hernia and ten cases of gasto-oesophageal reflux with or without hiatal hernia are reviewed. Vomiting commenced from the first week of life and in three children progressed to stricture formation. Pulmonary manifestations of gastro-oesophagela reflux were intractable asthma and attacks of bronchiolitis. A surgical operation performed through the abdomen was successful in controlling the reflux in all cases. Follow-up barium studies in all cases showed no hernia recurrences. A conservative approach to fibrous reflux strictures has been adopted and it is found that these can be cured by dilatations once the reflux has been controlled.
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PMID:Gastro-oesophageal reflux and hiatal hernia in children. 693 48

Investigation of the composition and significance of individual components of the surfactant indicated that besides phospholipids an important role is played also by surfactant proteins. They aid not only the reduction of the surface tension of the lungs (SP-B, SP-C), but serve also in regulation of surfactant secretion (SP-A) and in local defense and immune responses in the lungs (SP-A and SP-D). Impairments of surfactant were discovered not only in RDS, but also in cases of meconium aspiration, congenital diaphragmatic hernia, pneumonia, pulmonary edema, idiopathic fibrosis of the lungs, alveolar proteinosis, pneumothorax, and bronchial asthma. Therapy by means of exogenous surfactant was proved effective in therapy of RDS. Occasional cases of exogenous surfactant therapy in other pulmonary diseases are auspicious, it is necessary, though, to develop and produce a sufficient amount of exogenous surfactant of high quality and at an acceptable price and to find an optimal manner of surfactant administration into the lungs. A significant perspective is anticipated to utilization of intrapulmonary administration of the exogenous surfactant as a carrier of further active substances for local administration into the lungs. (Ref. 36.)
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PMID:[The pulmonary surfactant factor. Current knowledge, research trends and use in clinical practice]. 788 59

Diverticula of the thoracic esophagus are uncommon disorders. The indications for surgical intervention in asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic patients are unclear. Among 20 patients referred during a 20-year period, 6 were male and 14 female, with a median age of 65 years. Two had had previous diverticulectomies. Dysphagia was present in 9 (45%) and regurgitation in 11 (55%). Nine patients had severe nocturnal cough with symptoms of aspiration. In two of these nine and in three other patients (25%), pulmonary symptoms were the only manifestation of disease, with no or minimal esophageal symptoms. In one patient the diagnosis of the presence of bronchial asthma for several years was incorrect; one patient had massive aspiration before hernia repair, in one a bronchoesophageal fistula and lung abscess developed, and two had severe persistent cough. All patients had a diagnostic barium esophagogram and endoscopy. Operation was performed in 17 patients, whereas three others declined operation. There was one hospital death. Follow-up is complete on 17 of 19 patients until June 1991. All operative survivors but one are free of symptoms. Of three patients refusing operation, one died of aspiration pneumonia, another died of myocardial infarction, and one with severe dysphagia is living. Because of the prevalence of aspiration (45%) and the potential for life-threatening pulmonary complications in some patients (15%), we conclude that operative intervention should be undertaken in all patients with thoracic esophageal diverticula regardless of the presence or absence of symptoms.
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PMID:Thoracic esophageal diverticula. Why is operation necessary? 842 53

When infants with recurrent wheezing have a clinical course inconsistent with asthma, an extensive list of alternative diagnoses needs to be considered. Anatomic malformations, such as congenital heart disease, laryngotracheomalacia, and diaphragmatic hernia, should be considered for immediate medical stabilization and early surgical correction. Life-threatening infections such as bacterial epiglottitis, retropharyngeal cellulitis, and viral myocarditis require prompt intervention. A careful history and physical examination reveal important diagnostic clues that, in this case, prompted a directed evaluation to rule out common masqueraders of asthma such as foreign body aspiration, cystic fibrosis, gastroesophageal reflux, viral pneumonitis, or pulmonary tuberculosis. On occasion, such a search is unrevealing and a diagnostic challenge remains. In those situations, judicious use of modern technology to scrutinize anatomic (high-resolution computed tomography) and functional (infant pulmonary function tests) pathology, and justifiable invasive procedures such as bronchoscopy and lung biopsy, uncover the true diagnosis, allowing for optimal management.
Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 1997 May
PMID:A wheezy infant unresponsive to bronchodilators. 916 57


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