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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (
paresis
)
5,831
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The occurrence of unilateral phrenic nerve injury with the resultant hemidiaphragm paralysis or
paresis
can cause significant
respiratory distress
or respiratory failure in infants and children. An early bedside diagnosis of this problem will allow appropriate therapy and prevent needless diagnostic procedures. With the patient in the lateral decubitus position and the paralyzed side up, accentuated paradoxical inspiratory inward epigastric motion ipsilateral to the paralyzed hemidiaphragm can be seen. With the paralyzed hemidiaphragm down, abdominal motion appears to be normal as if the paralyzed hemidiaphragm were plicated. Thus, ventilation may be improved by changing body position as well as instituting ventilatory support while the potential for phrenic nerve recovery is evaluated.
...
PMID:A physiological approach to hemidiaphragm paralysis. 50 71
A single dose of 5 x 10(8) bacilli of Pseudomonas pseudomallei by intratracheal injection resulted in acute (21 cases) or chronic (19 cases) melioidosis in 40 of 48 pigs. Fifteen (10 acute and 5 chronic) had been immunosuppressed by cyclophosphamide before inoculation. The major clinical signs were initial fever, marked neutrophilia and, in the acute cases,
respiratory distress
. There were no signs of the nasal and ocular discharge,
paresis
or diarrhoea seen in acute cases in south-east Asia. The cyclophosphamide treatment caused a significant decrease in the neutrophil count by 7 d after inoculation in all 15 immunosuppressed pigs, and all were culture positive at necropsy. Eight of the 33 non-treated pigs were culture negative at necropsy. Pigs overcoming the initial phase of infection had more abscess-like nodules that were bacteriologically sterile at necropsy than the pigs with acute cases of melioidosis. P. pseudomallei was isolated predominantly from the spleen, lungs and the injection site. Although only one strain was used in this study, it is likely that Australian strains of P. pseudomallei are not as virulent as the south-east Asian isolates.
...
PMID:Experimental infection of normal and immunosuppressed pigs with Pseudomonas pseudomallei. 234 35
High mortality in two flocks of 1900 turkey breeder hens accidentally fed 280 g monensin/ton of complete feed is described. Mortality attributed to the poisoning was 76% in flock 1 and 18% in flock 2. Clinically, turkeys were found dead, exhibited
respiratory distress
with wings extended laterally, had fine tremors, or showed posterior
paresis
and inability to rise. The most striking finding at necropsy was the almost complete absence of gross lesions. Some turkeys had severely congested lungs; however, many did not. A few birds had pale streaks within the adductor muscles of the legs. Microscopic lesions included myofiber degeneration and necrosis of skeletal and myocardial muscle. Serum phosphorus, lactate dehydrogenase, and creatine phosphokinase were markedly elevated, whereas potassium, chloride, and calcium values were lowered.
...
PMID:Monensin toxicity in turkey breeder hens. 293 Apr
Laryngeal complications in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are rarely described. They range from hoarseness to life-threatening
respiratory distress
. To our knowledge, previous reports describe laryngeal involvement with SLE occurring only during periods of active disease. We saw a patient with inactive SLE in whom hoarseness and exertional dyspnea developed as a result of arytenoiditis and vocal cord
paresis
during steroid tapering. The condition responded dramatically to readjustment of her steroid dosage. Involvement of the larynx with SLE is a potentially life-threatening complication and may occur in patients with either active or inactive disease. It is an indication for close observation and steroid therapy in patients with SLE.
...
PMID:Laryngeal complications in a patient with inactive systemic lupus erythematosus. 647 11
347 patients with idiopathic
respiratory distress
syndrome, born 1971 to 1976, were included into a prospective follow-up study. 71 patients (20%) died in the neonatal period, 197 out of 276 survivors (71%) had a complete follow-up for the first year of life, 112 survivors have so far been investigated up to the age of four years. According to neurological findings the patients were classified as normal, doubtful (age 6-12 months) or minimal brain dysfunction (4 years), mild cerebral
paresis
(CP), or severe cerebral damage, respectively. At the age of one year 3 patients (1.5%) had severe cerebral damage, 14 (7%) showed mild CP and another 56 (28%) had doubtful findings. Very low birth weight of very short period of gestation increased the risk for abnormal neurological findings only slightly. The need for mechanical ventilation, especially for more than 14 days, increases the risk for CP. Serious complications during the neonatal period, particularly implicating cerebral stress, significantly reduces medium-term prognosis. Perinatal asphyxia, neonatal acidosis, hypoxia or hypercapnia did not correlate with impaired cerebral prognosis. Preliminary findings at the age of four years demonstrate good correlation with neurological findings obtained at the age of 12 months. One patient initially classified as normal (2%) and 5 doubtful babies (15%) had developed mild CP. Another initially doubtful baby had severe cerebral damage at the age of four years. 62 out of 78 children tested (79%) showed normal intelligence, 14 (18%) had an IQ of 70--90, and 2 (3%) less than 70.
...
PMID:Systematic follow-up of newborns with idiopathic respiratory distress syndrome. Results in 197 patients born 1971 to 1976. 703 Oct 20
We investigated the type of injury and neurological prognosis in 82 patients with an upper cervical spine injury with neurological deficits, from a total of 247 such patients that we treated, from which 11 patients who were dead on arrival had been excluded. The incidence of neurological deficits in upper cervical spine injury was 33%. They were classified into three signs; cord, upper cervical nerve root, and cranial nerve signs. The types of injury accompanied by neurological deficits were burst fracture of the atlas, type II dens fracture, body fracture of the axis, type II traumatic spondylolisthesis of the axis, atlanto-occipital dislocation, and atlanto-axial dislocation. Most were unstable vertebral injuries. The four patients who died after arrival at hospital had complete tetraplegia with
respiratory distress
. The neurological deficit was one of
paresis
in the 78 patients who survived; in many, the
paresis
was mild with a resulting good neurological prognosis.
...
PMID:Prognosis of neurological deficits associated with upper cervical spine injuries. 760 75
A 42-year-old male presented with a rare extracranial meningioma manifesting as right facial swelling, facial nerve
paresis
, and hearing disturbance. Neurological imaging revealed a primarily extra-axial tumor extending from the temporal base to the subcutaneous space in the parietal region, and partially into the intra-axial region of the temporal lobe through the dura mater, with a small intracerebral hematoma and a small mass in the porus acusticus destroying the temporal bone, the floor of the middle fossa, zygomatic arch, and porus acusticus. Malignant meningioma was confirmed by histological examination after subtotal tumor removal via the transzygomatic approach. Subdural fluid accumulation like hematoma occurred 5 days after surgery and malignant cells were found in the fluid drained by skull trephination. Subsequently, radiation therapy with a total dose of 60 Gy was administered. One year later, he complained of head and neck pain with motor and sensory disturbances in the right upper extremity, and then developed tetraparesis. Cervical x-ray films demonstrated a compression fracture of the C3 vertebral bone and radiolucent areas at C2-4 levels, while computed tomography showed the tumor invading the subcutaneous space and compressing the spinal cord. He died of
respiratory distress
. Autopsy revealed that the tumor originated in the temporal region and had directly extended to the cervical region.
...
PMID:Extradural temporal meningioma directly extended to cervical bone--case report. 769 24
Acquired or congenital laryngotracheal stenosis is uncommon in children although premature infants with
respiratory distress
syndrome (SDR) requiring ventilatory support with prolonged intubation are at great risk. The different treatments used in the past show high rates of morbidity and mortality. Following the technique described by Cotton in 1980, anterior cricoid slit procedure in the upper two tracheal rings has been used as a primary treatment on five patients since 1991, four by intrinsic stenosis and one by extrinsic. Extubation failed in four of them, checking trough bronchoscopy different grades of laryngotracheal stenosis and in the fifth due to
respiratory distress
, secondary to subcricoid stenosis. Anterior cricoid split procedure with intubation with conventional endotracheal tube (SET) or Montgomery tube (TTM) was performed on infants whose ages ranged from 4 to 18 months old (averaged 8 months). They were extubated between the 5th and 340th days after surgery. Two of them underwent complications: a skin-tracheal fistula and a
paresis
of the left vocal cord, the two are asymptomatic after four and eighteen months of the procedure. All patients discharged without signs of upper airway obstruction, except one who developed a granuloma which diminished with cortisone. Anterior cricoid split with prolonged intubation is a safe and useful technique for the treatment of laryngotracheal stenosis.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of laryngotracheal stenosis in childhood]. 776 82
An outbreak of narasin poisoning in swine is described. Forty nine out of 108 lactating sows died over a period of one month after being fed a ration accidentally contaminated with narasin. Clinical signs included anorexia,
respiratory distress
, lethargy and posterior
paresis
, progressing to lateral recumbency and death. Necropsy examination in 3 pigs revealed extensive myocardial and skeletal muscle damage. Analysis of the feed confirmed the presence of high concentrations of narasin.
...
PMID:An outbreak of narasin poisoning in swine. 849 96
In order to evaluate complications due to cervical spine surgery using the anterior cervical approach a prospective study was conducted on 125 patients. ENT examination with the fibroscope was employed for all the patients before the procedure. The patients were operated on under general anesthesia and were intubated with an armoured tube, and then were placed in an intensive care unit for 24 hours. Assessment of deglutition and an ENT examination were performed the day after surgery. Before surgery, two cases of vocal cord paralysis were noted. 111 patients (88.8%) presented with subjective disorders: problems such as sore throat, odynophagia, dysphagia, dysphagia with overspill and hoarseness were respectively noted in 55 (44%), 34 (27.2%), 32 (25.6%), 11 (8.8%) and 13 (10.4%) cases. Dyspnoea was found in 2 cases (1.6%). 117 patients (93.6%) presented postoperative anomalies which were found on the posterolateral pharyngeal wall, on the arytenoids and on posterior third of the vocal cords. Inflammatory and/or swollen lesions were slight, moderate, significant or very significant in respectively 22.4%, 22.4%, 15.2% and 1.6% of cases. Very significant circumferential swelling of the pharyngeal wall and of the arytenoids was responsible for two cases of
respiratory distress
, and the patients required reintubation and return to theatre. Severe pharyngeal lesion correlated with duration of surgery (r = 0.20; p < 0.05), with the number levels of fusion (r = 0.02; p < 0.02) and with the age of the patient (p < 0.02). Six patients presented problems of mobility of the vocal cords: 3 had a right vocal cord
paresis
which was temporary and 3 had paralysis, also on the right but which persisted. There were no other complications. It is concluded that (i) ENT complications are frequently found in postoperative cervical spine surgery using the anterior cervical approach, some of them being severe. An ENT examination must be performed before the procedure for legal reasons. It is also recommended in the postoperative period in the case of discomfort; (ii) patients need to be placed in an intensive care unit during for the first 24 hours (iii). This study needs to be attended over more patients (iv) comparison with a control group of patients having non cervical surgery and intubated in the same way is needed to differentiate lesions related to surgery or intubation.
...
PMID:[A prospective study of ENT complication following surgery of the cervical spine by the anterior approach (preliminary results)]. 977 50
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