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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Paroxysmal hypertension occurred during the first 8 hours after cardiac valve replacement in 15 of 186 consecutive patients. The clinical characteristics of this hypertension were similar to those of hypertension after myocardial revascularization, except that this complication occurred much less frequently after valve replacement (8.1%) than after myocardial revascularisation (33%) (P less than 0.001). Hypertension resulting from hypoxia,
hypercapnia
, shivering, or arousal from anaesthesia was excluded from consideration. The rise in systemic arterial pressure (average 34/35 mmHg +/- 4.9/4.3 SE) was usually associated with a reduction in central venous pressure (12/15 patients) and a mild increase (2 to 4 cm saline) in left atrial pressure. The incidence of hypertension was not related to the valve replaced (aortic or mitral), type of lesion (stenosis or
regurgitation
), preoperative level of blood pressure, or use of hypothermia during operation. However, none of the 18 patients who had double valve replacement showed significant rise in blood pressure after operation. It is suggested that these hypertensive episodes may be related to pressor reflexes from the heart and/or great vessels.
...
PMID:Arterial hypertension in immediate postoperative period after valve replacement. 68 68
The abdominal pressure is a hydrostatic one, which can be measured in the bladder, the rectum and the stomach. In physiologic conditions, the abdominal pressure is variable, with peaks as high as 100 to 200 mmHg at the time of defecation, cough. The increase in abdominal pressure elicited by abdominal distension or compression acts directly on the abdominal compartment, indirectly on the thoracic compartment, and modifies the circulation and the ventilation. Venous return is decreased as the inferior vena cava is compressed. The systemic resistances are also increased as the abdominal vessels are compressed. Therefore the circulation is mainly distributed to the superior part of the body. Although the cardiac output is decreased, the usual haemodynamic parameters remain in the normal range: arterial pressure is increased, heart rate is unchanged, central venous pressure is increased, cardiac failure is unusual. The abdominal distension is also responsible for a restrictive respiratory syndrome, mainly due to the ascension of the diaphragm. The compression of the abdominal content explains renal effects and the decreased diuresis. A sustained increase in abdominal pressure occurs in several clinical conditions. During coelioscopy, abdominal pressure is a under control and the cardiovascular effects are minor. Insufflation with CO2 carries the risk of
hypercapnia
, gas embolism and pneumothorax. During abdominal tamponade, anuria is directly related to the level of pressures. At an abdominal pressure over 25 mmHg, anuria is common and decompression becomes essential. The G suit increases arterial pressure either by elevating vascular resistances or increasing blood content in the upper part of the body. Therefore cardiac tolerance can be decreased especially in cardiac patients. The adverse effects of abdominal pressure can also be observed in case of peritoneal dialysis and ascites. The risk of
regurgitation
associated with an increased abdominal pressure must also be kept in mind. The abdominal pressure plays an important role in anaesthesia as well as in surgery. Therefore its measurement, which is easy, should become a routine.
...
PMID:[Intra-abdominal pressure]. 799 45
The frequency and pattern of laryngeal mask airway (LMA) usage in a regional general hospital has been studied. Data were collected prospectively by means of a standardized record sheet which was completed at the time of anesthetic administration. During a 19-month period 10,150 patients underwent surgical procedures requiring general or regional anesthesia, of which 1,096 (men/ women: 791/305, ASA 3 or 4: 350, mean age: 64 years) were managed with the LMA. A clinically pattern airway was provided in 99.75% of occasions of whom 44.4% breathed spontaneously and 55.3% underwent positive pressure ventilation. The monthly frequencies of LMA usage increased significantly during the second year of the survey (25.1% vs 12.8%). Problems were recorded in 16.3% of cases: air leak 8.0%, laryngospasm 1.8%, desaturation (SpO2 < or = 90%) 1.8%, severe
hypercarbia
(PETCO2 > or = 50 mmHg) 1.0%,
regurgitation
0.09%, sore throat 3.4%. No patient required intensive care management postoperatively. There were five cases of failed intubation managed with the LMA. This survey has shown that LMA has a well established role in anesthetic practice. Use of this device is equally safe and effective for both controlled and spontaneous ventilation in a wide range of starve patients undergoing most types of surgery.
...
PMID:The laryngeal mask airway: a survey of its usage in 1,096 patients. 903 36
Charcoal has been commonly used for enteral detoxication with few adverse effects. In toddlers charcoal can often be simply applied via a gastric tube.
Regurgitation
and aspiration is considered a rare event. We report the case of a 19-month-old boy who suffered endobronchial charcoal contamination followed by acute airway obstruction and severe respiratory failure despite a commonly used tube placement verification technique. Immediate intubation, tracheal suctioning, intravenous bronchodilators, and high frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) were used to control
hypercarbia
and hypoxia. Eventually charcoal removal by bronchoscopy was successful. Chest X-ray investigation did not reflect the true amount of charcoal deposited endobronchially at any time. We conclude that gastric tube application of charcoal in children carries a risk of aspiration. This may lead to life-threatening respiratory failure with the need to provide artificial ventilation and bronchial lavage.
...
PMID:Severe respiratory failure following charcoal application in a toddler. 1172 99
Emergency ventilation is an essential component of basic life support. Respiratory emergencies occur far more frequently than cardiac arrest and, if not treated promptly and effectively, may lead to cardiac arrest. Many respiratory emergencies require assisted ventilation to prevent the occurrence of hypoxemia,
hypercarbia
, and cardiac decompensation. Emergency assisted ventilation is often difficult to perform and is associated with several adverse complications, such as gastric inflation,
regurgitation
, and pulmonary aspiration. The American Heart Association sponsored conferences in 1999 and 2000 to review and revise guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation. This article reviews the science behind guideline changes related to pulmonary resuscitation and discusses recent advances in emergency airway management, focusing on noninvasive techniques for ventilation (mouth-to-mouth ventilation, bag-mask ventilation) and alternative airway devices (laryngeal mask airway, the Combitube).
...
PMID:Advances in airway management. 1247 83
Respiratory failure from causes exclusive of intrinsic lung disease is rare in systemic sclerosis. We report an unusual case of a young woman with diffuse systemic sclerosis who presented with proximal muscle weakness, dyspnea, weight loss, and nasal
regurgitation
. On physical examination, she had normal breath sounds but severe limitation of chest wall expansion. Pulmonary function tests (PFTs) were consistent with restrictive lung disease. Pulmonary pressures were normal on right heart catheterization and chest radiography and high-resolution computed tomography showed no evidence of intrinsic lung disease. Quadriceps muscle biopsy was consistent with type II atrophy, without any element of inflammatory myositis. After a meal, the patient aspirated, developed severe persistent
hypercapnia
, and required ventilatory support. Therapy with corticosteroids and intravenous gamma globulin failed to improve her condition, and the patient subsequently expired.
Hypercapnic
respiratory failure on the basis of chest wall involvement from systemic sclerosis may occur in the absence of intrinsic lung disease, and the prognosis, as in this case, may be grave.
...
PMID:Hypercapnic respiratory failure in systemic sclerosis. 1704 22
Broilers are susceptible to pulmonary hypertension syndrome (PHS; ascites syndrome) when their pulmonary vascular capacity is anatomically or functionally inadequate to accommodate the requisite cardiac output without an excessive elevation in pulmonary arterial pressure. The consequences of an inadequate pulmonary vascular capacity have been demonstrated experimentally and include elevated pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) attributable to noncompliant, fully engorged vascular channels; sustained pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH); systemic hypoxemia and
hypercapnia
; specific right ventricular hypertrophy, and right atrioventricular valve failure (
regurgitation
), leading to central venous hypertension and hepatic cirrhosis. Pulmonary vascular capacity is broadly defined to encompass anatomical constraints related to the compliance and effective volume of blood vessels, as well as functional limitations related to the tone (degree of constriction) maintained by the primary resistance vessels (arterioles) within the lungs. Surgical occlusion of 1 pulmonary artery halves the anatomical pulmonary vascular capacity, doubles the PVR, triggers PAH, eliminates PHS-susceptible broilers, and reveals PHS-resistant survivors whose lungs are innately capable of handling sustained increases in pulmonary arterial pressure and cardiac output. We currently are using i.v. microparticle injections to increase the PVR and trigger PAH sufficient in magnitude to eliminate PHS-susceptible individuals while allowing PHS-resistant individuals to survive as progenitors of robust broiler lines. The microparticles obstruct pulmonary arterioles and cause local tissues and responding leukocytes to release vasoactive substances, including the vasodilator NO and the highly effective vasoconstrictors thromboxane A(2) and serotonin [5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)]. Nitric oxide is the principal vasodilator responsible for modulating (attenuating) the PAH response and ensuing mortality triggered by i.v. microparticle injections, whereas microparticle-induced increases in PVR can be attributed principally to 5-HT. Our observations support the hypothesis that susceptibility to PHS is a consequence of anatomically inadequate pulmonary vascular capacity combined with the functional predominance of the vasoconstrictor 5-HT over the vasodilator NO. The contribution of TxA(2) remains to be determined. Selecting broiler lines for resistance to PHS depends upon improving both anatomical and functional components of pulmonary vascular capacity.
...
PMID:An inadequate pulmonary vascular capacity and susceptibility to pulmonary arterial hypertension in broilers. 1743 37
Rigid spine syndrome (RSS) is a group of childhood-onset muscle disorders characterized by marked limitation of flexion of the spine. Various cardiac changes have been documented in case reports. This study reports on a cardiac evaluation of nine patients with the "vacuolar variant" of RSS. Noninvasive cardiac evaluation entailed creatine kinase levels, full-inspiration chest roentgenograms, standard 12-lead ECG, and 24-h ambulatory ECG recording, as well as M-mode and two-dimensional echocardiography with Doppler study. Heart auscultation was abnormal in five patients. Creatine kinase MB fraction was normal in all patients. Chest roentgenogram showed scoliosis (five of nine), kyphosis (one of nine), severe anterior-posterior flattening of the chest cavity (two of nine), elevated hemidiaphragm (one of nine), caved-in appearance of upper lobes (two of nine), and symmetry of lung volumes (one of nine). Twelve-lead ECG abnormalities indicated right-sided heart disease (three of nine). Echocardiogram showed mitral valve prolapse (five of nine) with
regurgitation
(three of five) and evidence of pulmonary hypertension (three of nine). Ambulatory ECG recorded paroxysmal tachyarrhythmias in hypoxic or hypercapnic patients (three of nine). There was no correlation between any cardiac abnormalities and patient weakness. Mitral prolapse/
regurgitation
may have a developmental association with this congenital myopathy. Findings of cor pulmonale were due to the restrictive chest wall defect and respiratory muscle weakness. Paroxysmal tachyarrhythmias were due to hypoxia or
hypercapnia
. There was no evidence of a primary cardiomyopathy.
...
PMID:Rigid spine syndrome: a noninvasive cardiac evaluation. 1782 62
In pediatric and neonate intensive care units, the most common causes of pulmonary hypertension (PHT) are congenital cardiac malformations, whether operated or not, respiratory diseases leading to acute or chronic hypoxemia, and left heart failure. In children and neonates, ultrasound is now the reference exam to detect and/or diagnose a PHT. Most often, the changes in morphology of the right ventricle and/or septal kinetics provide the diagnosis; the presence of valvular
regurgitation
(tricuspid, pulmonary) as well as cardiac or extrapulmonary shunts enables quantifying pulmonary arterial pressures with the Doppler flow. Monitoring the factors favoring PHT (hypoxemia, acidosis,
hypercapnia
, stress, etc.), oxygenation, ventilation, and systemic hemodynamics is crucial before planning specific treatment. Nitric oxide is the first treatment attempted in the ICU; other treatments (prostacyclin, sildenafil, bosentan) can be used in severe PHT, but cautiously because their usefulness in children has only been suggested in small case series.
...
PMID:[Pulmonary hypertension in pediatric and neonatal intensive care unit. Part II: diagnosis and treatment]. 2121 70
Idiopathic achalasia is a motility disorder of the esophagus with important implications on anesthesia and periprocedural management. As new and more complex treatment options develop, anesthesiologists are increasingly involved with these patients. The cardinal symptoms of achalasia are as follows: dysphagia,
regurgitation
, chest pain, and weight loss. Achalasia is also associated with an increased risk of aspiration. Patients are frequently treated by endoscopic botulinum toxin injections, pneumatic dilation of the lower esophageal sphincter, laparoscopic Heller myotomy, or peroral endoscopic myotomy (POEM). The POEM procedure is based on the concept of "natural orifice transluminal endoscopic surgery." Because the integrity of the esophageal wall is deliberately interrupted during POEM, the mediastinum and the peritoneal cavity may be exposed. Thus, the insufflated carbon dioxide frequently causes
hypercapnia
, tension capnoperitoneum, capnomediastinum, or pneumothoraces. An interdisciplinary team, skilled in diagnostics and emergency measures such as therapeutic hyperventilation, percutaneous abdominal needle decompression, or pleural drainage, is essential for the successful periprocedural management of POEM. POEM is one endoscopic procedure that requires general anesthesia. But neither anesthesia-specific care algorithms nor evidence-based recommendations are currently available for these patients. Because institutional experience varies broadly across the globe, this review examines anesthesia recommendations and perioperative management of POEM procedures based on 7 retrospective case series, 1 prospective study, and our personal experience.
...
PMID:Anesthesia for Patients Undergoing Peroral Endoscopic Myotomy Procedures: A Review of the Literature. 3151 73
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