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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Definition of lung emphysema is based on morphologic criteria (irreversible destruction of alveolar space). In advanced stages of the disease, emphysema may be suspected clinically, by lung auscultation, lung function tests, and radiology. In early stages, there are characteristic functional findings, such as an irreversible decrease in forced expiratory volumes or flows. These simple tests are easily available. In this article, the natural course of lung emphysema is described, based on long term changes in lung function. The typical discrepancy between normal airway resistance and a decrease in FEV1 allows suspicion of early emphysema. In the further development of emphysema, an increase of airway resistance together with
hypercapnia
indicates severe functional disturbances and
cor pulmonale
.
...
PMID:[Long-term follow-up of pulmonary emphysema]. 837 43
There is intriguing evidence suggesting pathophysiologic relationships among dyspnea, hyperventilation, and panic anxiety. The symptoms of panic attacks and pulmonary disease overlap, so that panic anxiety can reflect underlying
cardiopulmonary disease
and dyspnea can reflect an underlying anxiety disorder. The pathogenesis of panic may be related to respiratory physiology by several mechanisms: the anxiogenic effects of hyperventilation, the catastrophic misinterpretation of respiratory symptoms, and/or a neurobiologic sensitivity to CO2, lactate, or other signals of suffocation. In a subset of patients with PD, incipient pulmonary dysfunction may also contribute to their anxiety symptoms. Patients with pulmonary disease, particularly those with obstructive lung disease, have a high rate of panic symptoms and PD. There is reason to believe that pulmonary disease constitutes a risk factor for the development of panic related to repeated experiences with dyspnea and life-threatening exacerbations of pulmonary dysfunction, repeated episodes of
hypercapnia
or hyperventilation, the use of anxiogenic medications, and the stress of coping with chronic disease. Panic in pulmonary patients may carry significant morbidity, including phobic avoidance of activity, overly aggressive treatment with anxiogenic medications, and more prolonged and frequent hospitalization. Successful treatment of panic in these patients can improve functional status and quality of life by relieving anxiety and dyspnea. Nonpharmacologic treatment of panic, including cognitive-behavioral approaches, can be useful in patients with concomitant respiratory disease. Sedating medications such as benzodiazepines should be used with caution in patients with pulmonary disease to avoid respiratory depression. Serotonergic antidepressants (SSRIs) and anxiolytics (buspirone) may be effective treatments for panic or generalized anxiety in pulmonary patients and have relatively little potential for significant adverse effects.
...
PMID:Panic anxiety, dyspnea, and respiratory disease. Theoretical and clinical considerations. 868 Jul
Data concerning the occurrence of chronic-obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) vary between 11 and 20% due to the underlying definition of COPD. We investigated the frequency of COPD in 202 patients with OSAS. The obstructive pattern was defined by bodyplethysmography (Rt > 0.35 kPa x 1(-1) x s(-1)), flow-volume-curve (MEF50 < 50% pred.), Tiffeneau-index (FEV1/IVC < 70% pred.) and anamnesis (cough and/or sputum). Prevalence of COPD in our 202 patients with OSAS was 16.3%. Patients with OSAS and COPD had a higher body-mass-index (BMI), lower PaO2 and spent more time in an oxygen saturation < or = 90% in relation to total recording time (t90). Polysomnographically there was no difference between the two groups with regard to the ventilatory parameters apnea-index (AI) and apnea-hypopnea-index (AHI). As there is a high risk of developing
hypercapnia
, pulmonary arterial hypertension and
cor pulmonale
in patients with OSAS and COPD there is need for early diagnosis of the combination of both diseases.
...
PMID:[Incidence of chronic obstructive respiratory tract disease in patients with obstructive sleep apnea]. 868 3
A 48-year-old man was referred to our hospital because of hypoxemia (PaO2 = 43 mmHg),
hypercapnia
(PaCO2 = 70 mmHg), complete atrio-ventricular block, and heart failure. He also had limitation of spine flexion, scoliosis, deformity of the rib cage, and constriction of the ankle joints, complicated by
cor pulmonale
. These findings were compatible with rigid spine syndrome. To avoid progressive pulmonary hypertension and hypoxemia, nasal BiPAP and home oxygen therapy (0.5 liters/minute) were begun. Rigid spine syndrome is clinically characterized by limitation of spine flexion, and the limitation of thoracic movement often causes severe constrictive respiratory dysfunction. This syndrome should be considered when evaluating patients who have both thoracic deformity, especially scoliosis, and respiratory failure.
...
PMID:[Rigid spine syndrome associated with marked hypoxemia and hypercapnia]. 875 23
The primary goal of this study was to evaluate differences in carbon dioxide metabolism between patients undergoing transperitoneal or extraperitoneal laparoscopic pelvic lymph node dissection (L-PLND) for staging of adenocarcinoma of the prostate (CaP). Eighteen candidates undergoing L-PLND were divided between the transperitoneal (N = 12) and extraperitoneal (N = 6) approaches. End-tidal partial pressure of CO2 (PeCO2) and minute volume of expired CO2 (VCO2) were considered indicators of CO2 absorption. These two parameters were monitored intraoperatively utilizing a metabolic cart and Ohmeda Rascal-II. The cardiostimulatory effect of increasing serum CO2 and the ventilatory countermeasures used to correct the iatrogenic
hypercapnia
associated with CO2 insufflation were also measured. With the exception of the region of CO2 insufflation, the operative procedure and perioperative care were identical for the two groups. Preoperative patient characteristics were similar. The mean time of CO2 insufflation was 136 minutes for the transperitoneal group and 120 minutes for the extraperitoneal group. The absorption of CO2 was significantly greater and more rapid during extraperitoneal L-PLND. This may be attributable to more profound CO2 absorption from the parietal peritoneal surface compounded by subcutaneous CO2 emphysema. Disruption of microvascular and lymphatic channels during the development of the extraperitoneal working space facilitates direct CO2 absorption into the intravascular space. A minor increase in heart rate and systolic blood pressure was noted during CO2 insufflation. In all but one patient (extraperitoneal group),
hypercarbia
and acidemia were prevented by an increased ventilatory rate. The potential dysrhythmogenicity of
hypercarbia
may contraindicate the extraperitoneal approach in patients with
cardiopulmonary disease
.
...
PMID:Carbon dioxide homeostasis during transperitoneal or extraperitoneal laparoscopic pelvic lymphadenectomy: a real-time intraoperative comparison. 887 27
In order to describe the outcomes of patients hospitalized with an acute exacerbation of severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and determine the relationship between patient characteristics and length of survival, we studied a prospective cohort of 1,016 adult patients from five hospitals who were admitted with an exacerbation of COPD and a PaCO2 of 50 mm Hg or more. Patient characteristics and acute physiology were determined. Outcomes were evaluated over a 6 mo period. Although only 11% of the patients died during the index hospital stay, the 60-d, 180-d, 1-yr, and 2-yr mortality was high (20%, 33%, 43%, and 49%, respectively). The median cost of the index hospital stay was $7,100 ($4,100 to $16,000; interquartile range). The median length of the index hospital stay was 9 d (5 to 15 d). After discharge, 446 patients were readmitted 754 times in the next 6 mo. At 6 mo, only 26% of the cohort were both alive and able to report a good, very good, or excellent quality of life. Survival time was independently related to severity of illness, body mass index (BMI), age, prior functional status, PaO2/FI(O2), congestive heart failure, serum albumin, and the presence of
cor pulmonale
. Patients and caregivers should be aware of the likelihood of poor outcomes following hospitalization for exacerbation of COPD associated with
hypercarbia
.
...
PMID:Outcomes following acute exacerbation of severe chronic obstructive lung disease. The SUPPORT investigators (Study to Understand Prognoses and Preferences for Outcomes and Risks of Treatments) 888 92
Cardiac arrhythmias are common in patients with respiratory failure from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Several factors may be potentially arrhythmogenic in these patients, including hypoxemia and
hypercapnia
, acid-base disturbances,
cor pulmonale
and the use of digitalis, methylxanthines, and sympathomimetic drugs. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of hypoxemia and
hypercapnia
on QTc dispersion (QTcD) in COPD patients, and to evaluate the effect of a partial correction of one of these pro-arrhythmic factors, the hypoxemia, on Qtc dispersion, as QTcD has been proposed as a marker of heterogeneous repolarization and, hence of ventricular electrical instability. We showed that in 15 hypoxemic/hypercapnic COPD patients, compared to 20 controls, the QTcD was significantly higher (49.7 +/- 10.6 vs. 22.9 +/- 9.8 ms; P = 0.0001); furthermore, after only 24 h of oxygen therapy, and hence after a partial correction of hypoxemia, there was a significant reduction in QTcD in COPD patients (49.7 +/- 10.6 vs. 36.3 +/- 10.1 ms; P = 0.018). The data of the present study suggest that the increase in QTcD may be an early marker of a blood gas mediated electropathy in COPD patients.
...
PMID:Effect of blood gas derangement on QTc dispersion in severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: evidence of an electropathy? 907 57
To know the changes of TXA2 and PGI2 in serum of patients with
cor pulmonale
, the levels of their stable metabolites TXB2 and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha in serum were examined in 28 patients with
cor pulmonale
during alleviation, 29 patients with
cor pulmonale
during exacerbation before and after treatment and 10 healthy subjects. TXB2 and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha were 109.74 +/- 56.14 ng/L and 54.76 +/- 35.62 ng/L respectively in healthy subjects; TXB2/6-keto-PGF1 alpha = 2.004. The TXB2 level of patients with
cor pulmonale
at every stage was higher than that of healthy subjects (P < 0.05-0.01). Patients with
cor pulmonale
during exacerbation had the highest TXB2 level of 709.22 +/- 354.49 ng/L, which decreased to 408.24 +/- 289.41 ng/L (P < 0.05) after treatment with traditional Chinese medicine combined with western medicine and the decreased level as such was not significantly different from that during alleviation (333.14 +/- 324.14 ng/L). The 6-keto-PGF1 alpha level in patients with
cor pulmonale
at every stage was not significantly different from that of healthy subjects. Since TXB2 increased, the value TXB2/6-keto-PGF1 alpha of patients with
cor pulmonale
was greater than that of healthy subjects. It is most likely that chronic hypoxia and
hypercapnia
lead to prostaglandin release in the lung of patients with
cor pulmonale
; hypoxia and
hypercapnia
become more severe during exacerbation resulting from infection; which lead to increased prostaglandin release, then high TXB2 level ensue as the result. TXB2 decreases after amelioration of hypoxia during treatment. But the change of 6-keto-PGF1 alpha is not obvious.
...
PMID:[Observation on TXB2 and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha in serum of patients with cor pulmonale]. 938 73
Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), especially during acute exacerbations of their disease, show a greater incidence of cardiac arrhythmias than healthy subjects of the same age. The type of arrhythmias found may be supraventricular (premature atrial beats, paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, multifocal atrial tachycardia, atrial flutter, atrial fibrillation) or ventricular (premature ventricular beats, sustained ventricular tachycardia, torsades de pointes, ventricular fibrillation) that may lead to sudden cardiac death. The pathogenesis of arrhythmias is complex and many factors may be involved such as hypoxemia,
hypercapnia
, respiratory acidosis, metabolic and respiratory alchalosis, hypokalemia, concomitant ischemic heart disease, chronic
cor pulmonale
, left ventricular diastolic dysfunction. Remarkable attention has been drawn to the possible arrhythmogenic effect of drugs such as theophylline, beta-adrenergic stimulants and digitalis which are commonly used in the therapy of COPD. Both of the main classes of bronchodilators (methylxanthynes and beta-adrenergic agonists), even when used together, apparently do not increase the incidence of dangerous cardiac arrhythmias. However, these drugs should be used with caution in the elderly, in patients with preexisting cardiac arrhythmias, with heart disease or with reduced hepatic function. In these cases Holter monitoring, repeated measurements of plasma drugs concentration and prompt hospitalization of high risk patients in Intensive Care Unit may be needed.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of hyperkinetic cardiac arrhythmia in chronic obstructive bronchopneumopathy]. 944 64
In kyphoscoliosis restrictive ventilatory defect occurs. In idiopathic scoliosis vital capacity failure is significantly correlated with Cobb angle, vertebral rotation, and thoracic lordosis. Maximum voluntary ventilation is the most affected measurement. Forced expiratory volume in 1 second is reduced. Residual volume remains longtime normal. Hypoxemia due to decrease of diffusing capacity occurs, with initially reflex hyperventilation hypocapnia, and secondary
hypercapnia
. Pulmonary hypertension and
cor pulmonale
is related to hypoventilation and hypoxia. The lung situated on the concave side of the scoliosis curve shows a more functional derangement. Ventilatory pattern consists of low tidal volume and high respiratory rate with increase of ventilatory work. Scoliosis that appears in the earlier stage of the life has the worst respiratory prognosis (before 5 years of age) with impairement of lung and thoracic growth. To stimulate pulmonary and thoracic growth, intermittent ventilatory assistance by pressure preset ventilator should be performed as soon as possible and pursued up to 8 years of age, at least, more if necessity. In over 60 degrees angle idiopathic scoliosis, respiratory failure appears after 40 to 50 years of age. Non invasive ventilatory assistance with preset pressure ventilator by oral way in moderate cases and nocturnal nasal ventilation by volume ventilator or inspiratory assistance ventilator, in the most severe cases are efficient. In very severe and acute respiratory insufficiency (scoliosis over 90 degrees) ventilation by intubation then tractheostomy may be required. Earlier orthopedic management and surgical procedure to correct and stabilize spinal deformities is the best to prevent respiratory insufficiency. For scoliosis below 60 degrees, post operative pulmonary complications are very low, with no requirement of post operative ventilatory support. In very severe respiratory insufficiency treatment of respiratory failure precedes, and follows, orthotic treatment and surgical procedures; it shouldle pursued afterwards.
...
PMID:[Respiratory problems in severe scoliosis]. 1043 94
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