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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The frequency of complications following flexible fiber-optic bronchoscopic procedures was studied prospectively in 908 patients from 13 cooperating hospitals. Major complications (respiratory arrest,
pneumonia
, pneumothorax, and obstruction of airways) occurred in 1.7 per cent (15) of the procedures. There was one death, yielding a mortality of 0.1%. Minor complications, including vasovagal reactions, fever, cardiac arrhythmias, bleeding, obstruction of airways, nausea and vomiting, pneumothorax, psychotic reaction, and
aphonia
, occurred in 6.5% of the procedures. Pneumothorax occurred after 5% (four) of 85 transbronchial biopsies. Although serious complications occur more frequently than previously reported from retrospective studies, complications after fiberoptic bronchoscopic procedures are still quite infrequent. The relative risks and benefits must always be carefully weighed in patients being considered for a fiberoptic bronchoscopic procedure.
...
PMID:A prospective cooperative study of complications following flexible fiberoptic bronchoscopy. 65 53
Laryngeal abnormalities following definitive irradiation for carcinoma of the larynx are common. The objective of this study was to identify risk factors for persistent cancer in such patients who were found to have abnormal larynges following definitive irradiation. A retrospective evaluation of 185 consecutive patients undergoing primary irradiation for a glottic or supraglottic laryngeal squamous carcinoma treated between 1976 and 1990 at the Affiliated Hospitals of the Medical College of Wisconsin was performed. From chart review, data concerning site, stage, intent of treatment, smoking history, treatment dose, fraction size, failure patterns, and outcome were obtained. In addition, worrisome signs and symptoms including ulceration, dysphasia, odynophagia, airway distress,
aphonia
, blood, pain, oedema, aspiration, and
pneumonia
were recorded. Univariate association with failure and a persistently abnormal laryngeal examination was assessed using the Mantel-Haenszel test. The odds ratio was used to estimate relative risk associated with dichotomous risk factors. Disease-free and overall survival were estimated using Kaplan-Meier methodology. The log rank test was used to compare survival as defined by the levels of various risk factors. Two-year disease-free survival was 83% (T1 = 93%, T2 = 72%, T3/T4 = 66%). Primary failure was associated with the presence of an abnormal examination (P = 0.001), tracheotomy (P = 0.001), symptom index (P = 0.002),
aphonia
(P = 0.003), advanced T stage (P = 0.03), and lower total dose (P = 0.03). Of 151 patients who survived 6 months disease-free with an intact larynx, an abnormal examination was seen in those with advanced T stage (P = 0.002), supraglottic primary (P = 0.003), symptom index (P = 0.008), eventual failure at the primary site (P = 0.008), continued smoking (P = 0.01), and higher total dose (P = 0.01). The symptom index (total signs and symptoms of airway distress,
aphonia
, ulceration, pain, oedema, dysphagia, blood production, aspiration,
pneumonia
, and odynophagia) was correlated with primary failure and continued smoking. Of 37 patients with continually normal examinations, only 1 (3%) failed at the primary site. Of 102 who survived 6 months but with an abnormal examination, 22 (22%) eventually developed a primary failure. Persistently abnormal larynges are common after radiation therapy, yet not all harbour cancer. Risk factors for persistent cancer include stage, airway, total dose, and symptom index. Patients whose larynges return to normal after radiation rarely fail at the primary site.
...
PMID:Risk factors which predict persistent cancer in the abnormal larynx following definitive irradiation. 870 47
Total laryngectomy is performed in advanced laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer stages and results in reduced quality of life due to the
loss of voice
and smell, permanent tracheostoma and occasionally dysphagia. Therefore, successful voice rehabilitation is highly beneficial for the patients' quality of life after surgery. Over the past decades, voice prostheses have evolved to the gold standard in rehabilitation and allow faster and superior voicing results after laryngectomy compared to esophageal speech. Polyspecies biofilm formation has become the limiting factor for device lifetimes and causes prosthesis dysfunction, leakage and in consequence
pneumonia
, if not replaced immediately. Although major improvements in prosthesis design have been made and scientific insight in the complexity of biofilm evolution and material interaction progresses, the microbial colonization continues to restrict device lifetimes, causing patient discomfort and elevated health costs. However, present scientific findings and advances in technology yield promising future approaches to improve the situation for laryngectomized patients.
...
PMID:Voice prostheses, microbial colonization and biofilm formation. 2536 25