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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In 85 patients (22 with myocardial infarct and 63 with valvular heart disease) echocardiographical examination simultaneously by classical and transesophageal methods was done. The transesophageal method was better in assessing the aortic valve and similar to the classical method in reference to the mitral valve. Heart contractility assessment was better with the classical method. Transesophageal echocardiography is the method of choice in patients in whom classical echocardiography cannot be done (obesity, emphysema, chest deformation).
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PMID:[Transesophageal and classical echocardiography in myocardial infarction and heart valve disease (comparison study)]. 194 59

The respiratory system and nutrition are linked. Obesity is sometimes seen in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), but its prevalence, the morbidity and mortality induced by it are not known. In addition, the prevalence of malnutrition is high in COPD and the more severe the COPD is, the higher percentage of malnutrition is present. Emphysematous patients are more frequently undernourished than those suffering from chronic bronchitis. Malnutrition is the consequence of the hypermetabolism induced by the higher cost of breathing in emphysema. The survival rate of these patients is negatively affected by malnutrition. A careful assessment of nutritional status must be performed in all COPD patients, especially during an episode of acute respiratory failure. When signs of malnutrition are present, a nutritional intervention should be initiated rapidly. An amount of calories sufficient to meet the energy expenditure increased by the disease must be given. Excessive intake may overstress the respiratory system whose functional reserve is limited in COPD. The diet must include a well balanced percentage of fat, carbohydrates and proteins. Preservation of the fat-free mass is the minimum goal to reach in acute respiratory failure. After the resolution of the acute phase, a gain of weight should be attempted within a rehabilitation program.
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PMID:[Nutrition in chronic obstructive bronchopneumopathy]. 195 47

With the combination of a noninvasive saturation measurement and plethysmography, pulse oximetry has become an important monitoring method for peripheral perfusion and oxygen supply. Indications for pulse oximetry is practically every anaesthesia especially in geriatric patients and patients with one-lung-anaesthesia, obesity, asthma and emphysema. Pulse oximetry has proved its worth in the transport of emergency patients. Sources of error are a bad perfusion at the site of measurement (hypotension, hypothermia), dyshaemoglobinaemia (Met-carboxy-haemoglobin) and interference of colours (dark skin, intravenous colours, high light intensity). Accuracy of response of most currently available pulse oximeters lies between 2-3% (SD) with oxygen saturations between 80-100%. Deviations increase at lower oxygen saturations. Pulse oximetry will soon be regarded as minimal monitoring standard worldwide together with the ECG, blood pressure, pulse and respiratory monitoring.
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PMID:[The importance of pulse oximetry for anesthesia]. 204 38

Transoesophageal echocardiography (TEE) is a new diagnostic method introduced for clinical practice about 1985. The method is particularly useful for the evaluation of the aorta and mitral valves. Twenty-seven patients with pathological changes of the valves of the left side of the heart were studied. In all patients the result of transthoracic echocardiography--TTE was non-diagnostic due to obesity, emphysema, deformity of the chest. In TEE diagnostic findings in the structures of the chest were obtained, their morphology and function were assessed, the clinical diagnosis was confirmed or verified. TEE was found to be useful in the evaluation of the valves, making possible establishing of correct diagnosis, especially in cases in which TTE was insufficient for providing of adequate information.
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PMID:[Transesophageal echocardiography--a method of evaluation of the aortic and mitral valves]. 209

Transthoracic two-dimensional echocardiography (TTE) has been an accepted noninvasive procedure used to diagnose infective endocarditis by demonstrating the presence of vegetations and other complications such as ring abcess, mycotic lesions or sinus of valsalva aneurysm. Moreover, complementary Doppler and Color Flow imaging are very useful in detecting early valvular regurgitation and in evaluating the severity of such regurgitant lesions. Occasionally, TTE fails to provide an adequate quality of imaging because of the patient's obesity, chest deformity or emphysema. Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) on the other hand, a relatively new technique, allows ultrasonic imaging of the heart through the esophagus and provides a clear visualization of all cardiac structures without any interference from the lungs, chest wall or rib cage. We present a case of aortic valve endocarditis diagnosed by TEE.
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PMID:Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE): its diagnostic value in endocarditis. 227 24

This study explores the association between familial alcoholism and the presence of certain conditions in nonalcoholic family members. Depression, obesity, functional bowel syndrome, asthma/emphysema, trauma, and genitourinary problems are conditions suggested by prior studies to be more common in families of alcoholics than in those without an alcoholic family member. Cross-sectional data were collected from a convenience sample of adults in the waiting room of a midwestern, university based family practice clinic. The respondents were classified in two groups: those with little likelihood of familial alcoholism and those with probable familial alcoholism. The groups were matched for race and age, creating two demographically similar groups which were then analyzed as cohorts. The prevalence rates of the conditions of interest in the respondents were calculated in the two groups and compared using the chi-square test for statistical significance. Significant differences in prevalence rates of depression and obesity were found. Trends were found for differing rates of functional bowel syndrome and asthma/emphysema. No differences were found for trauma and genitourinary problems. If differences in disease prevalence truly exist between family members of alcoholic and nonalcoholic individuals, this awareness could enhance the diagnosis and treatment of the conditions of interest in the nonalcoholic relative as well as the alcoholic individual. Family members could be a powerful screening tool for alcoholism.
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PMID:Self-reported illnesses in family members of alcoholics. 232 89

Clinical and physiological data on long-term follow-up of 143 patients with respiratory-dependent pacemakers (RDP3) are reported; 121 patients received ventricular (VVI-RD) and 22 patients atrial (AAI-RD) respiratory-dependent stimulation. Functional evaluation was based on the exercise testing (130 pts) with oxygen uptake VO2, ventilation, ECG and arterial pressure monitoring and the dynamic Holter electrocardiogram (95 pts). In each patient, the stimulation rate curve selected was that which produced the best work tolerance and moved the anaerobic threshold to the right. Respiratory levels were assessed by telemetry verifying proper sensing of tidal volume variations and absence of interference and artefacts. In patients with VVIR or AAIR stimulation, exercise tolerance, oxygen uptake and anaerobic threshold increased significantly in comparison with VVI or AAI pacing respectively. The physiological sensitivity of the stimulation system (i.e., a linear relationship of the pacing rate with metabolic requirements) was excellent (up to exhaustion) in 70%, very good (up to anaerobic threshold) in 20% and erratic (no relationship between pacing rate and VE/VO2) in 10% of patients. In dynamic electrocardiographic monitoring, the automatic pacing rate was always predominant during the night and during rest periods; the pacing rate increased properly with daily activity; myopotential inhibition (none longer than 3,500 ms) was observed in 38 patients, but without subjective complaints. The incidence of the RDP3 malfunction was less than 8%; it may have stemmed from the pacing system itself, or from other clinical conditions. Oversensing of impedance system pulses has not been recorded in the last 3 years. Partial respiration undersensing results from incorrect accessory lead position, pulmonary emphysema, marked obesity or other causes. Respiratory sensing becomes erratic at the anaerobic threshold point in such patients, but functions well at submaximum exercise levels. In patients with left ventricular failure, exercise tolerance was improved by setting a lower ratio between the pacing rate and respiration, which prevented the occurrence of excessive pacing rates.
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PMID:Physiological sensitivity of respiratory-dependent cardiac pacing: four-year follow-up. 246 Aug 30

To determine the normal morphologic evolution of the diaphragm with aging and to correlate age-related changes with other indicators of physical condition--such as skeletal muscle status, obesity, presence of pulmonary emphysema, and presence of esophageal hiatus hernia--a systematic morphometric and morphologic evaluation of computed tomographic studies of 120 patients from the 3d to 8th decades of life was undertaken. Diaphragm muscle thickness did not change significantly with increasing age. Diaphragmatic defects and pseudotumors, nonexistent in the 3d and 4th decades, increased in number and severity to affect 56% of the patients in the 7th and 8th decades. Neither the status of the skeletal muscle nor the presence of obesity correlated with age or with the presence of diaphragmatic defects. Eighty-four percent of the patients with emphysematous changes demonstrated diaphragmatic defects; thus, a strong association with emphysema was observed. If emphysematous patients are excluded, defects were more common in women. The esophageal hiatus width was found to increase with age.
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PMID:Aging of the diaphragm: a CT study. 270 2

Transesophageal echocardiography has been proven to be of particular value in all patients with transthoracic echocardiograms of low quality related to pulmonary emphysema, obesity and chest deformation as well as in intensive care unit patients. Similarly, transesophageal Doppler echocardiography is of particular value in all cases in which the transthoracic Doppler, due to methodological problems, is of limited value. Mitral regurgitation can be detected and quantified and flow direction described. Only in 12/25 patients with mild, 11/12 patients with moderate and 5/8 patients with severe insufficiency was regurgitation detected by transthoracic echocardiography as compared to transesophageal echocardiography with which the lesion was consistently detected. In two patients with severe and clinically-inapparent mitral regurgitation related to papillary muscle rupture, the diagnosis was established only by the transesophageal approach in an emergency situation. Atrial septal defects were detected in 8/15 patients and the size of the defect analyzed. With transesophageal Doppler echocardiography, the relation of left-to-right and right-to-left shunts could be described. In 7/16 patients with aortic dissection, true and false lumen were differentiated by analysing the flow pattern within both lumina. In 9/16 patients differentiation was enabled through delineation of the false lumen which was filled with thrombotic material. Detection of aortic regurgitation and tricuspidal regurgitation is possible but analysis of flow patterns is difficult because flow direction is nearly orthogonal to the ultrasound beam. First attempts to quantify cardiac output have been performed. For the future, transesophageal color flow Doppler mapping appears to be a most promising method.
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PMID:[Diagnostic value of the transesophageal Doppler echocardiography]. 330 69

Hypoxaemia during the rapid eye movement phase of sleep is common in older healthy normal subjects over 55 years of age; the sleep apnoea syndromes--such as obstructive sleep apnoea, where oro-nasal airflow ceases for more than 10 seconds on many separate occasions throughout the night, due to failure of contraction of the genio-glossus muscle; "blue and bloated" patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema, where profound nocturnal hypoxaemia is common in REM sleep, and is associated with further elevation of pulmonary arterial pressure; the overlap syndrome--where "blue and bloated" chronic bronchitis is associated with an obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome; and bronchial asthma, where hypoxaemia is associated with irregular breathing and possibly nocturnal bronchoconstriction. Although absolute recognition depends upon all night sleep studies, monitoring of ear oxygen saturation, breathing patterns, and EEG, the clinical features when awake can lead to suspicion of sleep hypoxaemia--as, for example, obesity and obstructive sleep apnoea with loud snoring and restlessness in sleep, hypoxaemia during wakefulness in the overlap syndrome, and nocturnal awakening with wheeze in bronchial asthma. Treatment depends on the cause, and may vary from weight loss and nasal continuous positive airway pressure in obstructive sleep apnoea, to nocturnal oxygen in "blue bloaters", a combination of these two in the overlap syndrome, and long acting bronchodilators such as slow release theophyllines in nocturnal asthma. Recognition and appropriate treatment of nocturnal hypoxaemia is an important new development in respiratory medicine.
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PMID:Breathing during sleep. 390 86


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