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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-six white male subjects, who worked with plutonium (239Pu) during World War II at Los Alamos, have been given medical examinations periodically over a period of 42 y to identify potential health effects. Inhalation was the primary mode of Pu exposures. The latest examinations, including urine bioassay and in-vivo measurements for radioactivity, were performed in late 1986 and 1987. The average age of the 22 living subjects in 1986 was 66 y. The diseases and physical changes noted in these persons are characteristic of a male population in their 60s. Estimates of individual Pu depositions, including lung burdens, as of 1987 or at time of death range from 52 to 3180 Bq (1.4 to 86 nCi) with a median value of 500 Bq (13.5 nCi). Four persons from the original group had died as of 1987. The causes of death were lung cancer, myocardial infarction, accidental injury, and respiratory failure due to pneumonia/congestive heart failure. Expected deaths based on U.S. death rates of white males, adjusted for age and calendar year, are 9.2 based on U.S. rates (standardized mortality ratio = 0.41). Subsequent to 1987, three additional deaths occurred from atherosclerotic heart disease, lung cancer, and osteogenic sarcoma. The bone sarcoma case is discussed in terms of Pu exposure, the natural incidence of this disease, anatomical location of the tumor, and bone tumors observed in Pu-exposed dogs. Plutonium deposition in this man is estimated to have been below current radiation protection guidelines.
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PMID:A 42-y medical follow-up of Manhattan Project plutonium workers. 185 80

A 69-year-old man was admitted with general fatigue, dyspnea, cough, fever and right pulmonary infiltrations on a chest X-ray films. He had suffered from myocardial infarction 8 years before. Since September 1987, he had been given Aprindine in addition to previous drugs. In early November 1987, he developed dyspnea. Antibiotics were not effective. He was hospitalized on Nov. 13, '87 when crepitations were audible on his right chest. Methylprednisolone pulse therapy was effective, however right pneumothorax developed. He underwent right thoracotomy and lung biopsy. Lung biopsy specimens showed pathological features of bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia (BOOP). Corticosteroid therapy yielded a remarkable clinical, physiological and roentgenographic recovery. However, approximately two years later during prednisolone maintenance therapy, BOOP recurred. He responded again to corticosteroid treatment, however he died of hepatic failure on Dec. 17, '89. "Idiopathic" rather than "drug induced" was suggested for the cause of BOOP in this case.
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PMID:[A case of bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia, which recurred during prednisolone maintenance therapy]. 186 2

Medical complications may account for 30% or more of the deaths resulting from acute ischemic stroke in the elderly. In descending order of frequency, the most deadly complications are bacterial pneumonia, pulmonary embolism, myocardial infarction, and sepsis without pneumonia (often in the setting of a urinary tract infection or a necrotic decubitus). Normal aging is associated with declining pulmonary and cardiovascular functions as well as declining immunocompetence and physical barriers to infection. The neurological effects of acute ischemic brain injury compound these susceptibilities. Accordingly, a high degree of vigilance is emphasized in the diagnostic and therapeutic guidelines provided for care of the lungs, the heart, the urinary tract, and the skin. Guidelines are also provided for management of blood pressure during the first hours and days following stroke onset. Treatment should be withheld unless specific medical indications are identified. When antihypertensive agents are administered, the appropriate dose may be lower than usually recommended (e.g. labetalol) in order to minimize abrupt drops in blood pressure that may result in further injury to potentially viable ischemic brain tissue.
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PMID:Prevention and management of medical complications of the hospitalized elderly stroke patient. 186 5

The hospital records of 204 patients (mean age 80 years, range 54-96 years) with a displaced intracapsular femoral neck fracture treated by cemented bipolar hemiarthroplasty were examined to record all available data on factors suspected of influencing mortality. The data were analyzed statistically using survival analysis (Cox model). The six months mortality rate was 20% and the one year mortality rate was 28%. The following factors, in order to decreasing importance, had significant influence on mortality: cardiac factors other than previous myocardial infarction; status as a nursing home patient; chronic pulmonary disease; serum creatinine level greater than 1.7 mg/100 ml; pneumonia; previous myocardial infarction; duration of surgery; and gender. The following factors had no significant influence on mortality: age, time delay from admission to surgery, mode of anesthesia, and cerebrovascular diseases. In conclusion, medical conditions were the most important determinants of survival in the present study. The time delay between admission and surgery did not influence the chances of survival. This does not mean that surgical delay beyond that essential for stabilizing the patient is not problematic, but indicates that ample time should be spent on assessment and resuscitation before surgery.
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PMID:Risk factors influencing mortality after bipolar hemiarthroplasty in the treatment of fracture of the femoral neck. 188 53

Congestive heart failure and cardiogenic shock can alter the absorption process of some drugs. The absorption of ciprofloxacin has been studied in several disease states, but the effect of cardiogenic shock on its absorption is unknown. A 63-year-old man had a large myocardial infarction complicated by cardiogenic shock. When he began taking ciprofloxacin for pneumonia, he had renal and cardiac failure. Ciprofloxacin 500 mg was administered every 24 hours by nasogastric tube. Blood samples were collected 5 minutes prior to the second dose (20 hrs after the initial dose) and then regularly until 11 hours after the dose. Samples were analyzed using high-performance liquid chromatography. The trough concentration 20 hours after the initial dose was 3.7 micrograms/ml, and the serum concentrations after the second dose went from 5.6 to 4.94 micrograms/ml over the 11-hour sampling period. The peak concentration of 5.6 micrograms/ml occurred within 30 minutes after ciprofloxacin administration. It can be concluded from this case study that ciprofloxacin was adequately absorbed in this patient with multiple organ failure.
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PMID:Absorption of oral ciprofloxacin in a patient with cardiogenic shock. 192 16

Postoperative mortality and morbidity of diabetic versus nondiabetic patients undergoing primary coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) were analyzed. In 1988, 711 patients had CABG procedures, of which 565 were nondiabetic and 146 diabetic. The two groups of patients were statistically similar in regard to age, weight, tobacco and ethanol use, and preoperative levels of cholesterol, triglycerides, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), and creatinine. Preoperative serum glucose levels were significantly elevated in diabetic patients (182 vs. 106, P less than .001). Cardiac output, ejection fraction, and bypass, crossclamp time, and total operating room times were not different for the two groups. Emergent and urgent procedures had a significantly higher mortality rate than elective cases (11.3% and 6.6% vs. 1.7%, respectively; P less than 0.05), but this was independent of the patient's diabetic status. Women had a higher mortality rate than men (6.5% vs. 2.9%; P = 0.05) although within each gender group, there were no differences between diabetics and nondiabetics. There were 27 patients with complications in the diabetic group (18.5%) and 47 in the nondiabetic group (8.3%; P less than .001). The types of complications within the two groups differed in that wound infections (7.5%), postoperative arrhythmias (4.8%), respiratory failure (4.1%), and intra-aortic balloon pump use (4.1%) were significantly greater (P less than .05) in the diabetic patients compared to the nondiabetic (0.9%, 1.8%, 0.4%, and 1.4%, respectively). Occurrences of postoperative pneumothorax, reoperation, myocardial infarction, stroke, urinary tract infection, and pneumonia were similar in both groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Complications of coronary artery surgery in diabetic patients. 192 97

We report here the outcome of surgical treatment for gastric cancer in 54 patients over 80 years of age presenting from 1967 to 1989. The mean observation interval of the postoperative period was 24 days. In most cases, preoperative examinations revealed pulmonary, renal or cardiac disturbances. The postoperative morbidity rate was 40.7%, most commonly as a result of pulmonary complications. In the 2 patients with multiple organ disturbances, 1 died 1 day after operation following myocardial infarction and the other died of pneumonia 12 days postoperatively. Intensive care treatments were needed in the early postoperative period. The increased morbidity rate proved to be related to wide resectional procedures such as total gastrectomy, operative time in excess of 3 hours, and intraoperative blood loss greater than 300 ml (p less than 0.05). When adjustment for confounding variables was made in the multivariate discriminant analysis, the type of surgery proved to be a major independent risk factor related to postoperative complications. The majority of tumors (92.6%) could be removed by standard resectional procedures and curative operation was feasible for 36 (66.7%) patients. There were 24 deaths due to progression of the cancer. The crude overall 5-year actuarial survival rate was 23.8%, while the rate was 36.9% when correction was made for sex and age. The probability of long-term survival for patients in a relatively early stage of disease (T1-2, N0-1) was statistically better than for those with a more advanced disease (T3-4, N2, M1). Thus, even for patients in the 8th decade of life, gastric surgery can be considered, for carefully selected patients.
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PMID:Surgery for gastric carcinoma is feasible for patients over 80 years of age. 194 65

The ileal neobladder produces a completely detubularized, low pressure, high capacity reservoir constructed from ileum without any valves. Since April 1986, 161 patients underwent this type of surgery at our institution. Of these patients 141 underwent simultaneous radical cystectomy for bladder cancer, and 20 received a bladder augmentation. The mean postoperative follow-up is 23.8 months with a range of 3-52 months. Perioperative mortality was 0.5 percent, 9.5 percent of the patients died later than 2 months postoperatively, 7.5 percent due to tumor progression, 2 percent because of pneumonia, severe metabolic acidosis, myocardial infarction and apoplexy. Day and night continence was preserved in 78% of all patients; severe stress incontinence was found in 4.2 percent of the patients and night time incontinence needing some external device in 7.7%. 10 percent with mild stress incontinence do not require further treatment. Our experience with this relatively simple procedure is excellent: the need for reoperation is low and the high reservoir capacity results in early continence in most cases. This concept offers a genuine alternative to any form of cutaneous urinary diversion with an incidence of complications not higher than after standard supravesical urinary diversion.
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PMID:The ileal neobladder. 205 41

We developed explicit process criteria and scales for Medicare patients hospitalized with congestive heart failure, myocardial infarction, pneumonia, cerebrovascular accident, and hip fracture. We applied the process scales to a nationally representative sample of 14,012 patients hospitalized before and after the implementation of the diagnosis related group-based prospective payment system. For the four medical diseases, a better process of care resulted in lower mortality rates 30 days after admission. Patients in the upper quartile of process scores had a 30-day mortality rate 5% lower than that of patients in the lower quartile. The process of care improved after the introduction of the prospective payment system; eg, better nursing care after the introduction of the prospective payment system was associated with an expected decrease in 30-day mortality rates in pneumonia patients of 0.8 percentage points, and better physician cognitive performance was associated with an expected decrease in 30-day mortality rates of 0.4 percentage points. Overall, process improvements across all four medical conditions were associated with a 1 percentage point reduction in 30-day mortality rates after the introduction of the prospective payment system.
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PMID:Measuring quality of care with explicit process criteria before and after implementation of the DRG-based prospective payment system. 212 Apr 79

From April 1988 to April 1989, nine patients (seven men and two women) with coronary three-vessel disease and disabling angina underwent elective myocardial revascularization. None of the patients had available veins because of previous bypass procedures (three) or extensive varicosis (six). On standard cardiopulmonary bypass and cardioplegic arrest the right and the left mammary arteries (RIMA, LIMA) and the right gastroepiploic artery (RGEA) were anastomosed each to a major coronary branch (none of them as free graft) in each patient. All patients survived the operation but one, who died 2 weeks after the operation of a bilateral pneumonia. Autopsy revealed patent anastomoses. One patient had to be reexplored for bleeding. Two patients required temporary inotropic support. There was no perioperative myocardial infarction. All survivors were discharged home in an average of 18.7 days after the operation, are free from angina, and all have negative stress tests (mean follow-up 7.7 months) but one with severe coronary atherosclerosis who experiences slight exertional angina despite good patency of the grafts. Five patients were recatheterized after a mean interval of 5.4 months after operation revealing in all cases patent anastomoses. Total revascularization of the heart with arterial grafts is feasible, safe, and it could become the method of choice if patency persists in the long run.
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PMID:Total arterial revascularization of the heart using both mammary arteries and the right gastroepiploic artery. 213 62


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