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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Six black infants and young children with high titers of milk precipitins were identified by screening the sera of 160 children with idiopathic chronic lung disease. None of the six had immunoglobulin deficiency, elevation of sweat chlorides, SS hemoglobin, or recurrent aspiration. All six children had typical manifestations of milk-induced pulmonary hemosiderosis: recurrent pulmonary infiltrates (6/6), hemosiderin-laden pulmonary macrophages (5/6), intermittent wheezing (5/6), eosinophilia (4/6), anemia (4/6), iron deficiency (4/4),
failure to thrive
(4/6), and elevated levels of serum IgE (4/4). Three children also had chronic rhinitis and eventually developed large adenoids,
hypercapnia
and acidosis during sleep, and right heart failure. Elimination of cow milk from the diet, symptomatic therapy, and adenoidectomy when indicated resulted in improvement of all six patients. Pulmonary hemosiderosis and some cases of upper airway obstruction with pulmonary hypertension appear to be two stages, early and delayed, of the same immunophysiologic process. Early dietary intervention may prevent the cardiovascular complications of this process.
...
PMID:Hyperreactivity to cow milk in young children with pulmonary hemosiderosis and cor pulmonale secondary to nasopharyngeal obstruction. 117 19
The clinical and physiologic features of 28 infants with Pierre Robin syndrome and those of 20 infants with various types of nasal obstruction were reviewed to determine whether different causes of upper airway obstructure may lead to a common syndrome. The patients had no significant differences in distribution of main clinical manifestations. Their features included cyanosis with respiratory distress, apneic spells, oropharyngeal dysphagia, vomiting,
failure to thrive
, cor pulmonale, brain damage, and sudden death during sleep. The common physiologic manifestation appeared to be an oropharyngeal obstruction caused by glossoptosis, which occurred mainly during wakefulness. Upper airway obstruction led to hypoxemia, which, in many instances, was not associated with
hypercapnia
and was not relieved by oxygen administration. It is concluded that regardless of a specific cause, any airway obstruction that results in a decreased inspiratory pressure overcoming the airway maintaining genioglossus action causes a glossoptosis-apnea syndrome.
...
PMID:Glossoptosis-apnea syndrome in infancy. 399 Dec 69
Twenty-two infants and children were found to have clinically significant obstructive sleep apnea. A history suggesting complete or partial airway obstruction during sleep was obtained on all patients, and physical examination of the sleeping patient revealed snoring, retractions, or OSA in 21 patients. Nevertheless, the mean delay in referral for 20 patients first seen after the neonatal period was 23 +15 (+ SD) months. Sixteen of 22 patients (73%) developed serious sequelae: cor pulmonale in 12 (55%),
failure to thrive
in six (27%), permanent neurologic damage in two (9%), and behavioral disturbances, hypersomnolence, or developmental delays in five (23%). Clinical and radiologic evaluations revealed anatomic abnormalities which narrowed the upper airway in 21 patients; enlarged tonsils and/or adenoids in 14, micrognathia in three,generalized facial abnormalities in three, and cleft palate repair/tonsillar hypertrophy in one. In five patients, upper airway fluoroscopy was performed and was helpful in establishing the site and mechanism of obstruction. Polygraphic monitoring was utilized to quantify the frequency and duration of OSA. Prolonged partial airway obstruction during sleep resulted in significant
hypercarbia
in 11 patients and hypoxemia in five. Twenty patients improved after surgery which relieved or bypassed the pharyngeal airway obstruction; two cases are pending. Increased awareness of OSA and examination of the sleeping patient should result in earlier treatment and less morbidity for infants and children with OSA.
...
PMID:Obstructive sleep apnea in infants and children. 705 14
Although laparoscopic fundoplication is now performed commonly in children, its long-term results in neurologically impaired (NI) children is unknown. We present a single surgeon's experience. During an 8.5 year period, 54 consecutive NI children (age 5 months to 16 years; weight 2.7 to 42 kg) who had failed medical treatment for severe gastroesophageal reflux (GER) underwent laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication without (7) or with (47) gastrostomy. Indications for surgery included
failure to thrive
and feeding difficulties in all, major vomiting in 42, recurrent chest infections in 44, and inability to take oral medication in 14. Hiatus hernia was present in 14 and delayed gastric emptying in 6 patients. Eight (15%) had undergone previous abdominal surgery. Access was modified according to individual anatomy and 4 or 5 cannulae were used in each patient. Postoperative epidural/morphine analgesia was used in the first 12 to 24 hours, and fluid intake and feeding were started on day 1 and 2, respectively. The average operating time for fundoplication was 2.2 hours (range 1.05 to 3) and for fundoplication and gastrostomy 2.3 hours (range 1.22 to 4.10). Three patients had conversion to open surgery (1 perforated esophagus, 1
hypercarbia
and hepatomegaly, 1 camera failure). There were no other operative complications or mortality. One child with Down syndrome developed a food bolus obstruction 3 days postoperatively. The vast majority of patients were discharged home 3 to 4 days following fundoplication and 5 to 7 days following fundoplication and gastrostomy. Postoperative gas bloat was common, diarrhea developed in 4, dumping in 3, and major gastrostomy infection in 1 case. During follow-up (median 5.2, range 3 months to 8.6 years), 9 (16%) children showed signs of persistent/recurrent problems. Investigations showed a recurrent hiatus hernia in 1 (requiring re-operation) and minor reflux in 3 patients. To date 6 (11%) children have died of their background conditions. In NI children, laparoscopic fundoplication is safe and successful. Awareness of the differences in access and risks for NI and normal children is important. Compared with historical data for open technique, laparoscopic fundoplication produces lower mortality and morbidity and similar intermediate and long-term results.
...
PMID:Results of laparoscopic antireflux procedures in neurologically impaired children. 1240 29