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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Respiratory failure (RF) developed in 43 (40.2 percent) of 107 patients with acute organophosphate or carbamate poisoning; 22 (51.2 percent) died. The 64 patients who did not develop RF survived. All cases of RF developed within 96 hours after poisoning: within 24 hours in 35 patients (acute onset) and between 24 and 96 hours in eight patients (subacute onset). Severity of poisoning was the primary determinating factor for RF. Cardiovascular
collapse
and
pneumonia
were also associated with RF. In 19 patients with cardiovascular
collapse
, 17 had acute onset of RF and two had subacute onset. In 28 patients with
pneumonia
, 17 developed acute onset of RF and eight developed subacute onset. No organophosphorus compound caused RF more frequently than another. The duration of ventilator support for subacute RF was significantly longer than for acute RF (287 +/- 186 vs 115 +/- 103 hours, p = 0.02). The use of pralidoxime did not reduce the incidence of RF. We found that severity of poisoning, cardiovascular
collapse
, and
pneumonia
were the predisposing factors to RF. The golden time for treatment of acute organophosphate or carbamate poisoning was the initial 96 hours. No RF occurred after this time. Aggressive treatment and prevention of the above three factors will reduce the incidence of RF, or in other words, reduce the mortality.
...
PMID:Respiratory failure of acute organophosphate and carbamate poisoning. 239 41
Twelve children with laboratory evidence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection underwent diagnostic flexible bronchoscopy with washings or bronchoalveolar lavage at Bellevue Hospital Center from October 1987 to April 1989. The patients included 7 boys and 5 girls ranging from age 3.5 months to 10 years 5 months. Indications for bronchoscopy included respiratory distress with or without focal changes on chest radiograph in 11 patients, and persistent but asymptomatic right middle lobe
collapse
in one child. The etiology of
pneumonia
was diagnosed in 7 children and included Pneumocystis carinii, (PCP) (17%), Streptococcus viridans (17%), mechanical obstruction (17%) and cytomegalovirus (CMV) (8%). Bronchoscopy was non-diagnostic in 5 cases. Techniques for maximal yield of information using flexible bronchoscopy in HIV-positive children are discussed.
...
PMID:Diagnostic flexible bronchoscopy in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive children. 262 88
An epidemy of fatal posterior weakness was observed in Norwegian dairy goats with a spontaneous character (high fever,
collapse
, death). Clinical, postmortem, and histopathological findings indicated gastroenteritis, liver damage (necrotic foci), soft kidneys,
pneumonia
, and depletion of liver glycogen in goats up to 4 months of age. In older animals there was a prevalence of muscle degeneration. Indigenous goats did not exhibit any mortality, whereas the mortality rate in male crosses Norwegian X Tanzanian was 100%, regardless of their age. In young goats, the existence of a high mortality infectious syndrome with enterotoxaemia and fever is suspected, whereas older goats were probably exposed to a non-infectious myodegeneration.
...
PMID:An epidemic of fatal posterior paralysis and sudden death in goats: a case report. 277 60
Magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography were compared in a prospective study of 137 lung cancer patients proved by surgery or autopsy for determining the staging, evaluation of therapeutic effect and diagnosis of recurrent tumor. 1. Lung cancer staging In peripheral lung cancer, T1 and T2 relaxation times of the tumors before operation have some correlation with those of operated specimens. These relaxation times, however, are of limited nodule characterization. Hilar mass and adjacent pulmonary consolidation (obstructive
pneumonia
or
collapse
) can be distinguished on T2-weighted image (77%) and Gd-DTPA enhanced image (80%). Therefore these images help in distinguishing tumor from peripheral lung disease. In the diagnosis of tumor invasion to the heart and great vessels, MRI is superior to CT because MRI can be helpful in distinguishing true mass from heart and great vessels. As for the chest wall, MRI is more useful than CT in detecting tumor invasion especially to the thoracic inlet and superior regions. In the diagnosis of mediastinal and hilar lymphadenopathy, MRI is equivalent or slightly inferior to CT, but MRI can easily demonstrate the lymphadenopathy at subcarinal region on coronal image. 2. Evaluation of therapeutic effect in lung cancer patients treated by radiation and chemotherapy MRI patterns of therapeutic effect was divided into 3 types. It is suggested that there is some correlation between these patterns and histologic types. MRI can easily demonstrate necrotic area on T2-weighted and Gd-DTPA enhanced images. 3. Diagnosis of recurrent tumor in treated lung cancer Concerning detecting recurrent tumor after surgery or irradiation, and delineating tumor from radiation
pneumonitis
, T2-weighted and Gd-DTPA enhanced images are of clinical value.
...
PMID:[MR imaging in the assessment of lung cancer patients: primary lung cancer staging, evaluation of therapeutic effect and diagnosis of recurrent tumor]. 279 69
65 patients suspected of having intrathoracic masses were studied using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT). The intensity difference between mass and adjacent normal tissue or mediastinal fat was greater on MRI than on CT images. MRI was superior to CT in differentiating bronchogenic carcinomatous tumours from postobstructive
pneumonia
and/or lobar
collapse
. MRI images most clearly depicted obstructed mediastinal vessels and were also able to indicate intravenous flow reductions. The latter could be demonstrated by an increase of signal intensity within venous structures proximal to the obstruction. In patients with lung cancer no significant differences were found between the two imaging methods for the evaluation of tumour extent or node involvement.
...
PMID:[Magnetic resonance tomography of intrathoracic tumors]. 282 81
A 1-year study of the etiology of acute diarrhea complicated by severe (10%) dehydration, active bleeding, shock and cardiovascular
collapse
,
pneumonia
, acute renal failure, or seizures in infants under 18 months of age was performed in Cairo, Egypt. Of 145 infants, 19 (13%) died or left the hospital moribund; the remaining 126 patients were classified as having potentially fatal illness. A variety of enteropathogens were identified with approximately equal frequency in the fatal and nonfatal complicated cases as well as in 135 controls with severe uncomplicated diarrhea. The agents most frequently detected in infants with severe diarrhea in this population which were felt to be etiologically important were rotavirus (33%), heat-stable enterotoxin-producing Escherichia coli (20%), heat-labile enterotoxin-producing E. coli (11%), enteropathogenic E. coli (8%), and Salmonella spp. (5%). The high rate of occurrence of Giardia lamblia (35%) probably represented the high carriage rate of the protozoan in this population. Complicated (fatal and potentially fatal) cases differed from control cases in a number of ways: the onset of diarrhea was more sudden, the course was progressive and of greater initial intensity, vomiting occurred more frequently, the patients more often had visited another physician before coming to the hospital, the patients more often had respiratory symptoms and pulmonary abnormalities on auscultation, hypoactive bowel sounds and abdominal distention were more common, as was oliguria, and the patients showed lower mean body weights.
...
PMID:Detection of enteropathogens in fatal and potentially fatal diarrhea in Cairo, Egypt. 302 41
Intratracheal administration of purified Pseudomonas aeruginosa exoenzyme S elicited extensive, grossly observable damage in the rat lung within 2 h. Light and electronmicroscopy revealed injury and necrosis of bronchial epithelium, type I pneumocytes and capillary endothelial cells after 1 h; associated haemorrhage, fibrinous exudation and released type II cell lamellar bodies in alveolar lumina after 1-12 h; progressively increasing accumulations of polymorphonuclear leucocytes in the bronchi and alveoli and in alveolar septae (interstitial pneumonia) after 1-12 h;
collapse
of alveolar septal connective tissue and damage to pulmonary arterioles and venules. Treatment of monolayer cultures of bronchial fibroblasts with purified exoenzyme S elicited vacuolation of the cells with apparent membrane damage as revealed by light and electronmicroscopy. In-vivo production and activity of P. aeruginosa exoenzyme S may be an important pathogenicity determinant in the necrotising lung injury characteristic of P. aeruginosa
pneumonia
.
...
PMID:Alteration of pulmonary structure by Pseudomonas aeruginosa exoenzyme S. 313 80
Phrenic nerve palsy (PNP) is seen in infants and young children usually resulting from operative trauma or birth injury. Spontaneous recovery usually occurs, but occasionally surgical plication is necessary. Twenty-three cases of PNP over a 10-year period were managed surgically. Patient ages ranged from 1 day to 30 months (median, 4 months), 18 were male and five female. Cause was operative trauma in 18 (17 cardiac surgery, one neuroblastoma), birth trauma in two, and idiopathic in three. The right side was involved in 14, the left in eight, and both in one. Indications for plication were inability to wean from the ventilator (group 1, 16 patients), recurrent pneumonia (group 2, four patients), and respiratory distress (group 3, three patients). The 16 patients in group 1 were intubated for a median of 18.5 days from onset of PNP to plication. Postoperatively, three had continuing congestive heart failure (one died at 16 days of age, one was still chronically ventilated at 22 months, one was extubated at nine days); the other 13 were extubated at a median of two days postoperatively. All the patients in groups 2 and 3 were extubated within two days of surgery. Twelve plications were transthoracic and 11 were transabdominal. Postoperative complications included
pneumonia
(2), wound infection (1), pneumothorax (2), and mucous plug with pulmonary
collapse
(1). One patient died of cardiac failure at 16 days. One patient in group 3 developed recurrent respiratory distress 4 months postoperatively; he had a recurrent elevated hemidiaphragm requiring a second plication.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Plication of the diaphragm for infants and young children with phrenic nerve palsy. 317 45
Four cases of plastic bowing of the ribs are presented. In three patients with Werdnig-Hoffman disease, plastic curvatures were associated with chronic
pneumonia
and atelectasis. We postulate that intrapulmonary retractive forces can deform ribs thinned by muscular atrophy. In turn, thoracic
collapse
can perpetuate lobar and segmental atelectasis. In one case of osteogenesis imperfecta without
pneumonia
, we believe normal muscle forces bent ribs weakened by deficiency of normal cortical architecture.
...
PMID:Plastic bowing of the ribs in children. 321 86
An intraluminal tracheal stent (ITS) was used experimentally in rabbits and piglets, as well as clinically in infants with tracheal stenosis, to facilitate airway reconstruction. The ITSs were constructed of stainless-steel springs covered with silicone rubber. They were implanted in seven piglets (6 to 8 kg), five rabbits (3 to 5 kg) and three infants. No animals developed severe respiratory distress and all appeared to tolerate the ITS. Postmortem examinations 1 to 8 weeks after surgery showed (1) loss of stent fixation (one pig), (2) increased tracheal secretions, (3)
pneumonia
(one pig, two rabbits), and (4) focal squamous metaplasia of tracheal mucosa. Stents used to treat three infants (2 to 5 months of age) with complex tracheobronchial stenosis were placed at the time of periosteal tracheoplasty in two. Recurrent stenosis necessitated a second tracheoplasty and stenting in one, and a long tracheostomy tube and balloon dilatations in the other. The third child had endoscopic stent insertion to alleviate severe airway
collapse
after esophageal tracheoplasty. The child died from progressive respiratory failure after stent dislodgment. Although the stents were well tolerated in animals and they enhanced critical ventilation of all pulmonary lobes in infants after tracheal reconstruction, certain modifications such as alternative methods of fixation, accommodation for tracheal growth, and reduction in tissue reactivity are necessary before further use of the ITS can be advocated.
...
PMID:A new intratracheal stent for tracheobronchial reconstruction: experimental and clinical studies. 323 82
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