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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (
hernia
)
15,856
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tracheal instillation of perfluorochemical liquid (PFC) lowers surface tension in the lung and thus might reduce barotrauma commonly associated with conventional gas ventilation (GV) in highly immature and hypoplastic lungs. It could be a promising alternative treatment for congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
(CDH) when GV alone is proving inefficient. The authors compared data for eight newborn lambs with surgically induced CDH. The animals had GV and were studied (in 2 groups) for up to 3.5 hours. Group 1 (GV, n = 4) had gas ventilation only. In group 2 (PFC, n = 4), after 30 minutes of GV, 10 to 12 mL/kg of warmed, oxygenated PFC liquid (LiquiVent) was instilled into the lung via the trachea under pressure-volume curve monitoring. Arterial pressure, blood chemistry, and pulmonary mechanics were evaluated serially; histological analysis was performed. One preassigned animal in group 1 died after 15 minutes. After 30 minutes of life, the cardiopulmonary profile of survivors was indicative of severe respiratory distress (Pao2 < 72 mm Hg with FIO2 at 1.0, PaCO2 > 90 mm Hg, compliance < 0.10 mL/cm
H2O
/kg) and not different between groups; the severity of pulmonary hypoplasia was further confirmed postmortem; the ratio of lung weight to body weight was 41% of that observed in control lambs, in both gas-only and combined gas/PFC-ventilated animals, compared with their respective controls. After instillation of PFC, there were dramatic improvements in acid-base status and pulmonary compliance in group 2. Survival at 3.5 hours also was markedly different (4 of 4 PFC animals and 1 of 3 GV animals).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Combined gas ventilation and perfluorochemical tracheal instillation as an alternative treatment for lethal congenital diaphragmatic hernia in lambs. 747 77
Previous studies have indicated that ethylene glycol (EG) is a developmental toxicant in rats and mice primarily when ingested. This study was designed to establish no-observed-effect levels (NOELs) for developmental toxicity of EG administered by gavage in both rodent species. Dams were administered EG on Gestation Days 6-15; rats were given 0, 150, 500, 1000, or 2500 mg EG/kg/day; mice were dosed with 0, 50, 150, 500, or 1500 mg EG/kg/day. In rat dams given 2500 mg EG/kg/day,
water
consumption was increased during treatment and body weights were reduced throughout gestation; liver and kidney weights were increased at euthanization (Gestation Day 21). Relative liver weights were also increased at 1000 mg/kg/day. Effects observed in rat fetuses at 2500 mg/kg/day included the following: hydrocephaly; gastroschisis; umbilical
hernia
; fused, duplicated, or missing arches, centra, and ribs; poor ossification in thoracic and lumbar regions; and reduced body weights. Reduced body weights, duplicated or missing ribs, centra, and arches, and poor ossification were also observed in rat fetuses at 1000 mg/kg/day. In mice, there was no apparent treatment-related maternal toxicity. In mouse fetuses (Gestation Day 18), effects were observed at 1500 mg/kg/day and included reduced body weights, fused ribs and arches, poor ossification in thoracic and lumbar centra, and increased occurrence of an extra 14th rib. At 500 mg/kg/day, slight reductions in fetal body weight and increased incidences of extra ribs were observed. Under conditions of these studies, NOELs for developmental toxicity were 500 mg/kg/day for rats and 150 mg/kg/day for mice, indicating that mice were more susceptible than rats to the teratogenic effects of EG.
...
PMID:Determination of a no-observed-effect level for developmental toxicity of ethylene glycol administered by gavage to CD rats and CD-1 mice. 758 22
Intra-abdominal pressure (IAP) was indirectly measured, using a transurethral catheterization technique, in 20 client-owned dogs before and after elective ovariohysterectomy. Mean preoperative IAP was 4.50 +/- 0.44 cm
H2O
. Elective abdominal surgery caused significant elevations in mean postoperative IAP (mean 7.50 +/- 0.45 cm
H2O
, range 0 to 15 cm
H2O
) that persisted for at least 24 hours. However, the increase in IAP caused no clinically evident complications; thus, after elective abdominal surgery an elevation in IAP up to 15 cm
H2O
is to be expected. Intra-abdominal pressure was also measured in 20 consecutive clinical cases with gross abdominal distension, before or after laparotomy, or both. Included in this group were dogs with gastric dilation and volvulus, closed pyometra, hemoperitoneum, acute ascites, and diaphragmatic hernias. All dogs with gross abdominal distension had an elevated IAP (> or = 16 cm
H2O
) either before or after surgery. Severe elevations of IAP were associated with anuria in two dogs, necessitating surgical decompression; one with hemoperitoneum (47 cm
H2O
) and one after repair of a chronic diaphragmatic
hernia
(30 cm
H2O
).
...
PMID:Clinical determination of preoperative and postoperative intra-abdominal pressures in dogs. 765 32
In animal experiments, it has been shown that tracheal occlusion counteracts the pulmonary hypoplasia associated with congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
(CDH). Successful clinical implementation requires a reliable, reversible, and atraumatic technique of occluding the fetal trachea. With this clinical goal in mind, the authors evaluated the following three methods of tracheal occlusion in a fetal lamb CDH model: (1) an occluded foam-cuffed endotracheal tube, (2) a foam-cuffed endotracheal tube with a magnetically controlled flow valve, and (3) a tracheal insert constructed of a
water
-impermeable, expandable, polymeric foam, which is placed by a translaryngeal approach. The foam-cuffed endotracheal tube did not provide consistently reliable fetal tracheal occlusion. Although the magnetically triggered flow valve functioned well, it was not necessary to open the valve in utero (to prevent overdistension of the lungs), and the presence of the valve contributed to several occlusive failures. In contrast, the foam insert was easy to position and to remove from the trachea, while providing reliable tracheal occlusion for several weeks with consequent enlarged fetal lungs, increased lung fluid volumes, complete reduction of abdominal viscera, and improved pulmonary gas exchange after birth. Bronchoscopic evaluation of the foam-occluded neonatal tracheas showed little or no tracheal damage, which was confirmed during necropsy by gross and histological examination. Translaryngeal placement of a compressible,
water
-impermeable polymeric foam appears to be a simple and safe technique to achieve fetal tracheal occlusion.
...
PMID:The 'PLUG' odyssey: adventures in experimental fetal tracheal occlusion. 773 65
Patients with congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
(CDH) have unilateral or bilateral hypoplasia of the lungs including delayed maturation of the terminal air sacs. Because these lungs are highly susceptible to barotrauma and oxygen toxicity, even in full-term newborns, continued research into optimal ventilatory regimen is essential to improve survival rate and to prevent ongoing lung damage. Against this background, the effect of exogenous surfactant application is evaluated. In newborn rats, CDH was induced after a single dose of 2,4 dichloro-4'-nitrophenyl (Nitrofen) (400 mg/kg) on day 10 of gestation. The newborn rats were intubated immediately after hysterotomy, transferred to a heated multichambered body plethysmograph, and artificially ventilated. Inspiratory peak pressures were initially set at 17 cm
H2O
, with positive end-expiratory pressure at 0 cm
H2O
and FIO2 at 1.0. The pressure was raised in steps of 5 cm
H2O
, from 5 to 30 cm
H2O
, to obtain pressure-volume diagrams at 0, 1, and 6 hours of artificial ventilation. These measurements were obtained in controls and in CDH rats with and without endotracheal installation of bovine surfactant (n = 4 to 10 in each group). Significant differences in lung volume between CDH and control rats were observed at all time-points. Surfactant application had a positive effect on lung volume, especially in control rats at t = 1 hour. No significant differences were observed between the CDH groups at t = 1 or t = 6 hours. In this animal model, the effect of artificial ventilation as well as the beneficial short-term effect of exogenous surfactant application have been evaluated. A continued positive effect on lung volume in CDH lungs could not be determined. Routine administration of exogenous surfactant in human CDH patients is not supported by these experimental results.
...
PMID:Evaluation of lung function changes before and after surfactant application during artificial ventilation in newborn rats with congenital diaphragmatic hernia. 807 29
To improve the survival of newborns with congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
(CHD), preoperative stabilization with conventional ventilatory therapy and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) have been used. Measurements that quantify pulmonary function may allow an accurate assessment of lethal pulmonary hypoplasia and predict outcome. Pulmonary function tests (PFTs) were obtained in 20 infants preoperatively and postoperatively; these included measurements of compliance, dynamic compliance, and tidal volume. Overall survival was 75%. Six surviving infants were initially managed with ventilator therapy alone, followed by repair (group 1). The remaining 14 patients, who were moribund at presentation or whose initial ventilator therapy failed, were placed on ECMO and received repair during bypass; nine survived (group 2), and five died (group 3). Compliance, dynamic compliance, and tidal volume obtained at initial presentation and immediately preoperatively were significantly higher for group 1 as compared with groups 2 and 3. Infants whose initial compliance was greater than 0.25 mL/cm
H2O
/kg and initial tidal volume was greater than 3.5 mL/kg did not require ECMO. Ultimate improvement in compliance was noted in 5 of 6 patients in group 1, 8 of 8 patients in group 2, and 5 of 5 in group 3. This improvement followed an initial decline in compliance in 9 of 14 survivors, from 15% to 76%. All six patients in group 1 had tidal volumes of more than 4 mL/kg, as did 7 of 9 patients in group 2. Only one patient among the ECMO nonsurvivors (group 3) had a postoperative tidal volume of this magnitude. These data suggest that initial PFTs may predict which infants will require ECMO.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Predictive capabilities of preoperative and postoperative pulmonary function tests in delayed repair of congenital diaphragmatic hernia. 817 3
Before a health education program can be established, one must first know what the target population believes and does with respect to the disease in question. Therefore, we performed a study among Tanzanian rural inhabitants to identify their knowledge, attitude, and practice (KAP) toward epilepsy: 3,256 heads of households (mean age 40.2 years, range 15-90 years; M/F ratio 1:1) were interviewed. Of the respondents, 32.9% said they had never seen a seizure; 67.7% said they did not know the cause of epilepsy; 33.3% mentioned various causes including heredity, witchcraft, infection of the spinal cord,
hernia
; 40.6% believed epilepsy was infectious through physical contact, flatus, breath, excretions, sharing food; 36.8% believed epilepsy could not be cured and 17.1% believed it could not even be controlled; 45.3% believed epilepsy could be treated by traditional healers, and only 50.8% believed hospital drugs were of any use; and 62.7% of the respondents would not allow an epileptic child to go to school for various reasons, including mental subnormality (54.0%), fear of the child falling while alone (65.9%), and fear that the epileptic child would infect other children (11.2%). Concerning what is to be done when a seizure occurs, 33.5% of the respondents would keep away and not touch the person; 16.5% would take some potentially harmful measure such as forcing a mouth gag or forcing a drink such as
water
(1 even mentioned urine); 5.2% would take unnecessary measures such as rushing the patient to a hospital. Only 35.7% of respondents would perform at least some of the currently recommended first-aid measures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Knowledge, attitude, and practice toward epilepsy among rural Tanzanian residents. 824 50
The aim of this study was to assess the impact of surfactant deficiency on the pathophysiology of congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
(CDH). Pregnant ewes were operated on at 80 days of gestation for creation of a diaphragmatic
hernia
in the lambs. Twenty-one lambs survived to be delivered by cesarean section and were studied. Compliance was improved when surface tension effects were removed by saline solution in lungs of both control animals and lambs with CDH; however, the lungs of the lambs with CDH still had significantly impaired compliance. In a second series of experiments, two groups were studied: a surfactant-treated and a control, nontreated group. Surfactant was given prophylactically into the liquid-filled lungs before the first breath. All lambs were paralyzed and sedated and their lungs mechanically ventilated with 100% oxygen for 30 minutes; gas exchange was then assessed, pressure-volume data were obtained, and compliance was calculated. Surfactant significantly improved gas exchange; arterial oxygen pressure increased from 39 +/- 11.4 to 316 +/- 53.6 mm Hg, arterial carbon dioxide pressure decreased from 148 to 63 mm Hg, and pH increased from 6.87 to 7.16 (p < 0.001). Lung volume at 25 cm
H2O
, functional residual capacity, and compliance were all increased (p < 0.02). Thus, in the CDH lamb model, pulmonary mechanics are impaired by both parenchymal and surfactant abnormalities. Both lung mechanics and gas exchange are markedly improved by exogenous surfactant therapy.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of congenital diaphragmatic hernia. V. Effect of exogenous surfactant therapy on gas exchange and lung mechanics in the lamb congenital diaphragmatic hernia model. 830 41
Pulmonary hypoplasia has a definite clinical impact in a variety of congenital diseases such as renal dysplasia and congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
. These diseases have in common inadequate growth and development of fetal lungs. Previous reports have demonstrated increased lung growth with in utero tracheal ligation. The purpose of this study was to determine if lung growth can be accelerated in the setting of experimental pulmonary hypoplasia. Ninety-five-day gestation fetal sheep were divided into four experimental groups: nephrectomy, nephrectomy with tracheal ligation, tracheal ligation alone, and sham-operated control animals. Animals were delivered near term and their lungs inflation fixed at 25 cm
H2O
. Total alveolar number (Alv#), total alveolar surface area (AlvSA), and lung volume to body weight ratios (LV:BW) were determined for apical and basilar segments of each animal and then averaged. Total lung DNA and protein content were also analyzed. The nephrectomy group had smaller lungs than control animals with decreased Alv#, AlvSA, and LV:BW. In contrast, nephrectomy with tracheal ligation produced large lungs which had increased Alv#, AlvSA, and LV:BW when compared with both the nephrectomy and the control group (P < .01). Total lung DNA and protein concentrations were both markedly elevated in the tracheally obstructed groups. However, the DNA/protein ratios remained constant in all four groups, suggesting that lung growth had occurred through cell multiplication. Photomicrographs of the lung demonstrated a histologically immature appearance in the nephrectomy group and a histologically mature appearance in the tracheally obstructed groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Experimental fetal tracheal ligation prevents the pulmonary hypoplasia associated with fetal nephrectomy: possible application for congenital diaphragmatic hernia. 830 55
This research proposes a new treatment for pulmonary hypertension secondary to perivascular emphysema, the so-called air-block syndrome. Vibrations applied on the thorax can fraction air bubbles around the vessels into smaller ones, facilitating their redistribution and reabsorption, thus reducing the extrinsic compression on pulmonary vasculature. In cats, pulmonary lesions were obtained by continuous insufflation of air at 40 cm
H2O
for 2 minutes in a lower lobe of the lung. Vibrations applied on the thorax were produced with the same apparatus as used by physiotherapists to eliminate pulmonary secretions. Thirty-three cats were divided into three groups: lesions without treatment, lesions treated by vibrations, and controls. A catheter was inserted in the pulmonary artery for pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) measurements. One carotid was cannulated for arterial pressure and blood gases monitoring. Morphometric analysis of the lung had also to be carried out in all cases. Results showed a very significant decrease on pulmonary hypertension in the treated group after only 20 minutes of treatment by vibrations (P < .004). Results also confirmed the very strong relationship between PAP variations and perivascular emphysema found on postmortem examination (r2 = .64, P < .01). Extrinsic compression decreased from 29% in the untreated group to 21% in the treated one (n = 10 pairs, P < .08). These data suggest that vibrations may be a new simple treatment for pulmonary hypertension, when perivascular emphysema is involved, and could be useful in congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
as well in other neonatal pathologies.
...
PMID:A new method of treatment for pulmonary hypertension in congenital diaphragmatic hernia: experimental study in cats. 830 66
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