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The literature dealing with the magnitude, mechanism and effects of reduced FRC in the perioperative period is reviewed. During general anaesthesia FRC is reduced by approximately 20%. The reduction is greater in the obese and in patients with COPD. The most likely mechanism is the loss of inspiratory muscle tone of the muscles acting on the rib cage. Gas trapping is an additional mechanism. Lung compliance decreases and airways resistance increases, in large part, due to decreased FRC. The larynx is displaced anteriorly and elongated, making laryngoscopy and intubation more difficult. The change in FRC creates or increases intrapulmonary shunt and areas of low ventilation to perfusion. This is due to the occurrence of compression atelectasis, and to regional changes in mechanics and airway closure which tend to reduce ventilation to dependent lung zones which are still well perfused. Abdominal and thoracic operations tend to increase shunting further. Large tidal volume but not PEEP will improve oxygenation, although both increase FRC. Both FRC and vital capacity are reduced following abdominal and thoracic surgery in a predictable pattern. The mechanism is the combined effect of incisional pain and reflex dysfunction of the diaphragm. Additional effects of thoracic surgery include pleural effusion, cooling of the phrenic nerve and mediastinal widening. Postoperative hypoxaemia is a function of reduced FRC and airway closure. There is no real difference among the various methods of active lung expansion in terms of the speed of restoration of lung function, or in preventing postoperative atelectasis/pneumonia. Epidural analgesia does not influence the rate of recovery of lung function, nor does it prevent atelectasis/pneumonia.
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PMID:Perioperative functional residual capacity. 180 4

Of the various agents which have been employed for sedation in patients undergoing electrocardioversion, diazepam has had the most extensive use. However, this agent possesses several disadvantages including pain and venous complications at the site of injection and a lower incidence of amnesia. Midazolam, a benzodiazepine derivative, is being increasingly used in general and local anesthesia as well as for procedures requiring conscious sedation, eg, endoscopy. We used intravenous midazolam for conscious sedation in 12 patients undergoing a total of 17 cardioversions. All of the patients experienced amnesia for the procedure and manifested no significant adverse effects. However, serious respiratory failure may occur when intravenous midazolam is used in patients with COPD, debilitated patients, or when the drug is injected rapidly. The use of midazolam should therefore be confined to areas that are able to deal with cardiorespiratory complications. Using guidelines and precautions described here, we encountered no major complications. We conclude that midazolam offers a safe and effective alternative to other agents for conscious sedation in patients undergoing electrocardioversion.
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PMID:Midazolam as intravenous sedative for electrocardioversion. 270 64

The chest and abdomen impedance respirographs (IRG), including the one dimensional IRG and the two dimensional IRG were designed and produced by applying the principle of bioelectrical impedance. Using IRG the non-synchronized chest and abdomen respiratory motions occurring in diaphragmatic fatigue were measured. The results showed that all 203 normal controls showed synchronized style of chest and abdomen respiratory motions. In 189 COPD patients 117 (61.9%) showed non-synchronized respiratory motions which could be further divided into three types: type I showed complete contra-directional respiratory movements of chest and abdomen respiration, with M > 24 % and alpha angel > 120 degrees; type II showed staggered peak of the chest and abdomen motion curves (13% < M < 24%), 50 degrees < alpha angle < 120 degrees; type III showed double peaks of abdomen trace in the one dimensional IRG and "8"-shaped double circles on the two dimensional IRG, (M < 13%, 50 degrees < alpha angle < 120 degrees. When compared with trans-diaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) and diaphragm myoelectricity frequency spectrum, the rates of conformity were 81.8% and 90%, respectively, suggesting that IRG could be reliably used for diagnosing diaphragmatic fatigue. This technique is simple, easy to use, cheap and pain-free.
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PMID:Application of electrical impedance principle in the diagnosis of diaphragm fatigue. 873 30

The Rainey Hospice House, South Carolina's first stand-alone inpatient facility opened in September 1998. During the year 2000, 220 inpatients were served in the house. Patients ranged in age from 23 to 107 years old (average age 73). Cancer was the most common hospice diagnosis, followed by congestive heart failure, cardiovascular disease and cerebrovascular disease, dementia, cirrhosis, renal failure, and COPD. Thirty-three percent of patients were in the program less than ten days. Over 98 percent of deaths under hospice care were described as peaceful. During 2000, our outpatients and our inpatients were similar in age, insurance coverage, diagnoses, and time in the program. Inpatient hospice is highly valued by families and patients alike. It is especially useful for the following patients: those with uncontrolled symptoms, those with exhausted care givers, those with no caregivers, those who require total care, and those very close to death. The symptoms most likely to precipitate inpatient admission include pain, nausea, confusion, and agitation. Given the graying of South Carolina's population and the increase in outpatient hospice care, more areas of the state will need inpatient facilities in the future.
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PMID:Comfort always. The Rainey Hospice House: South Carolina's first inpatient hospice. 1450 98

Fournier's gangrene is a genital and perineal necrotizing fascitiis with a rapid evolution. It's an affection caused by aerobic and anaerobic micro-organisms, eventually associated with a superinfection by micetes. It has characterised by a deep oedema associated with lancinating pain and itching in external genitalia, rapidly evolves to perineal tissues necrosis and purulence. At this stadium patient's general conditions are still serious and patient may be comatose. When toxaemia is over, demarcation of necrotic areas can be remarkable and granulation start growing. Fournier's gangrene seems to be related to an ischemic necrosis caused by obliterative endoarteritis and thrombosis of internal pudendal and deep and superficial external pudendal artery. The infection gateway may be subcutaneous tissue lesion associated to trauma or surgical procedures in immunodeficient organism. Diagnosis is mainly clinical but a superficial ecography could be useful to demonstrate thickening in subcutaneous tissue with normal testicles. Both of them were middle aged males, heavy smokers, affected by hypertension and COPD. In both cases there was polymicrobial Gram positive bacterial infection. Antibiotic systemic therapy and topic therapy were administered. The patient also received hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Thirteen days after the admittance, the infection was defeated and we could start the surgical cover. To cover the scrotal wound we have used split-thickness skin grafts taken from the right thigh. These grafts took at 100% and the patient was discharged seven days after surgical operations. Follow-up at six months and at one year showed any functional limitation and a good aesthetic result.
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PMID:[Fournier's gangrene: remarks on two clinical cases]. 1501 33

Quality of life is an important indicator in assessing the burden of disease, especially for chronic conditions. The Health Utilities Index (HUI) is a recently developed system for measuring the overall health status and health-related quality of life (HRQL) of individuals, clinical groups, and general populations. Using the HUI (constructed based on eight attributes: vision, hearing, speech, mobility, dexterity, cognition, emotion, and pain/discomfort) to measure the HRQL for chronic disease patients and to detect possible associations between HUI system and various chronic conditions, this study provides information to improve the management of chronic diseases. This study is of interest to data analysts, policy makers, and public health practitioners involved in descriptive clinical studies, clinical trials, program evaluation, population health planning, and assessments. Based on the Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) for 2000-01, the HUI was used to measure the quality of life for individuals living with various chronic conditions (Alzheimer/other dementia, effects of stroke, urinary incontinence, arthritis/rheumatism, bowel disorder, cataracts, back problems, stomach/intestinal ulcers, emphysema/COPD, chronic bronchitis, epilepsy, heart disease, diabetes, migraine headaches, glaucoma, asthma, fibromyalgia, cancers, high blood pressure, multiple sclerosis, thyroid condition, and other remaining chronic diseases). Logistic Regression Model was employed to estimate the associations between the overall HUI scores and various chronic conditions. The HUI scores ranged from 0.00 (corresponding to a state close to death) to 1.00 (corresponding to perfect health); negative scores reflect health states considered worse than death. The mean HUI score by sex and age group indicated the typical quality of life for persons with various chronic conditions. Logistic Regression results showed a strong relationship between low HUI scores (< or = 0.5 and 0.06-1.0) and certain chronic conditions. Age- and sex-adjusted Odds Ratio (OR) and p values showed an effect among individuals diagnosed with each chronic disease on the overall HUI score. Results of this study showed that arthritis/rheumatism, heart disease, high blood pressure, cataracts, and diabetes had a severe impact on HRQL. Urinary incontinence, Alzheimer/other dementia, effects of stroke, cancers, thyroid condition, and back problems have a moderate impact. Food allergy, allergy other than food, asthma, migraine headaches, and other remaining chronic diseases have a relatively mild effect. It is concluded that major chronic diseases with significant health burden were associated with poor HRQL. The HUI scores facilitate the measurement and interpretation of results of health burden and the HRQL for individuals with chronic diseases and can be useful for development of strategies for the prevention and control of chronic diseases.
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PMID:Using Health Utility Index (HUI) for measuring the impact on health-related quality of Life (HRQL) among individuals with chronic diseases. 1534 14

This study evaluated the effects of body weight on both generic and disease-specific health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of patients with COPD. A total of 83 patients with stable COPD were enrolled (mean age: 74.6 yr, mean FEV1: 1.29 L). Patients were divided into two groups according to body mass index (BMI) (UW group: BMI < or = 20, NW group: 20 < BMI < or = 26). The degree of dyspnea and both disease-specific and generic HRQoL were compared between the two groups. An oxygen cost diagram (OCD) was used to assess the degree of dyspnea and St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) and Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 36-item Questionnaire (SF-36) were used for HRQoL evaluation. The OCD was significantly lower in the UW group. Compared with the NW group, the UW group showed significant deterioration in the total score and three subscales of SGRQ. SF-36 also showed significantly worse scores for the parameters of physical functioning, role emotional, bodily pain, and general health. The results of stepwise multiple regression analysis showed that OCD, FEV1, %pred. BMI were independent variables in the total score on SGRQ. The results of stepwise multiple regression analysis also showed that OCD was an independent variable for four of eight components of SF-36, while BMI was three of eight components of SF-36. In conclusion, low body weight in patients with COPD is related to a worsening of dyspnea and deterioration of both generic and disease-specific HRQoL. The present results also indicate that nutritional intervention may be important for improving dyspnea and HRQoL in patients with COPD.
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PMID:Both generic and disease specific health-related quality of life are deteriorated in patients with underweight COPD. 1582 61

The changing paradigm in cardiovascular disease in which atherosclerotic lesions exist in a spectrum of stable to unstable, the lack of a perfect prediction tool, and the paucity of randomized controlled data on appropriate intervention make protection of cardiac patients undergoing thoracic surgery challenging. Nociception-related sympathetic drive combines with inflammatory stimuli and the cardiodepressant effects of anesthesia to create a window of maximum risk in the early postoperative period (8-24 hours), and although multivariate models have shown that a combination of surgery-specific risk, patient-specific cardiovascular history, and estimated functional capacity best determine the need for further investigation, the optimal choice of investigation is unclear. Exercise or dobutamine stress echocardiography provide the best validated investigations, and in the case of poor images, dobutamine MR imaging is increasingly used. When disease is found, medical and interventional options are available. PCI is often used, but the risk of converting a stable flow-limiting lesion into a less stable non-flow-limiting lesion must be considered, along with a delay for anti-platelet therapy and endothelialization of the stent. Alternatively, medical protection with acute beta-blockade or alpha2-agonists reduces risk (although beta-blockade often is avoided in chronic lung disease, even nonselective agents are safe in patients with non-airways reactive COPD). In addition, it is likely that statin use reduces risk, probably by stabilizing plaques, but patients with cardiac risk are increasingly likely to be taking this medication already. The assessment and management of cardiac risk in the perioperative thoracic surgery patient is challenging. With focused, rational, and individually tailored management; tight monitoring of postoperative pain; and a close working relationship between the surgeon, anesthesiologist, and cardiologist, patient care can be optimized, and risk can be effectively controlled.
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PMID:Preoperative cardiac evaluation: mechanisms, assessment, and reduction of risk. 1599 24

Cough is an important defensive pulmonary reflex that removes irritants, fluids, or foreign materials from the airways. However, when cough is exceptionally intense or when it is chronic and/or nonproductive it may require pharmacologic suppression. For many patients, antitussive therapies consist of OTC products with inconsequential efficacies. On the other hand, the prescription antitussive market is dominated by older opioid drugs such as codeine. Unfortunately, "codeine-like" drugs suppress cough at equivalent doses that also often produce significant ancillary liabilities such as GI constipation, sedation, and respiratory depression. Thus, the discovery of a novel and effective antitussive drug with an improved side effect profile relative to codeine would fulfill an unmet clinical need in the treatment of cough. Afferent pulmonary nerves are endowed with a multitude of potential receptor targets, including TRPV1, that could act to attenuate cough. The evidence linking TRPV1 to cough is convincing. TRPV1 receptors are found on sensory respiratory nerves that are important in the generation of the cough reflex. Isolated pulmonary vagal afferent nerves are responsive to TRPV1 stimulation. In vivo, TRPV1 agonists such as capsaicin elicit cough when aerosolized and delivered to the lungs. Pertinent to the debate on the potential use of TRPV1 antagonist as antitussive agents are the observations that airway afferent nerves become hypersensitive in diseased and inflamed lungs. For example, the sensitivity of capsaicin-induced cough responses following upper respiratory tract infection and in airway inflammatory diseases such as asthma and COPD is increased relative to that of control responses. Indeed, we have demonstrated that TRPV1 antagonism can attenuate antigen-induced cough in the allergic guinea pig. However, it remains to be determined if the emerging pharmacologic profile of TRPV1 antagonists will translate into a novel human antitussive drug. Current efforts in clinical validation of TRPV1 antagonists revolve around various pain indications; therefore, clinical evaluation of TRPV1 antagonists as antitussive agents will have to await those outcomes.
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PMID:TRPV1 antagonists as potential antitussive agents. 1792 96

The XXth International Symposium on Medicinal Chemistry (EFMC-ISMC 2008) was organized by the Austrian Chemical Society on behalf of the European Federation for Medicinal Chemistry (EFMC). Approximately 1400 scientists from 58 nations congregated over the course of the event to discuss the latest advances in the fields of neurodegenerative diseases, antipsychotics, pain, diabetes, COPD and asthma, immunology, antivirals and oncology. The agenda included plenary and award lectures, oral sessions, and over 600 poster presentations.
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PMID:Medicinal Chemistry - XXth International Symposium. 1898 15


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