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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Urgent/emergent percutaneous transvenous mitral commissurotomy (PTMC) was performed in 10 patients (two men and eight women, aged 21 to 60 yr). All patients had arterial hypoxemia and four required mechanical respirators. PTMC was performed in the semi-recumbent position in four patients. The seven patients with pliable valves (group 1) achieved good hemodynamic and echocardiographic results after PTMC, but one died 2 wk later because of sepsis complicating preexisting
pneumonitis
. The two pregnant patients uneventfully delivered normal babies at term. There was continued clinical improvement in the six surviving patients at last follow-up at 11 to 39 mon (median 26). Of the three patients with calcified valves and severe subvalvular lesions (group 2), the premoribund patient in whom last-resort PTMC created severe mitral regurgitation died 3 days later of multiple organ failure. The other two patients underwent mitral valve replacement 1-6 days later because of lack of clinical improvement due to creation of severe mitral regurgitation and ineffective mitral valve dilation, respectively. In conclusion, urgent/emergent PTMC is feasible and safe. However, its outcomes are dictated by the status of diseased mitral valve and coexisting illness.
Cathet
Cardiovasc
Diagn 1994 Jan
PMID:Urgent/emergent percutaneous transvenous mitral commissurotomy. 811 53
This study was undertaken to determine whether a complete lung cancer operation can be done by video-assisted thoracic surgery and to evaluate the postoperative course. Forty-five patients (44 to 82 years of age) with clinical stage 1 lung cancer underwent video-assisted thoracic surgery for lobectomy or pneumonectomy with mediastinal lymph node sampling or dissection. There were no deaths or major complications. The median hospital length of stay was 4 days. Six patients stayed in the hospital for more than 7 days for
pneumonia
(n = 1), air leak (n = 3), or serous drainage (n = 2). Five of the seven patients who were 80 to 82 years of age were discharged by the fourth postoperative day.
J Thorac
Cardiovasc
Surg 1994 Mar
PMID:Lobectomy by video-assisted thoracic surgery with mediastinal node sampling for lung cancer. 777 94
Upper thoracic esophageal tumors adjacent to the trachea often require a preliminary thoracotomy to accomplish resection. Between January 1985 and July 1992, 49 consecutive patients (38 men and 11 women) underwent extended esophagectomy for esophageal cancer where the neoplasm was mobilized through an initial right thoracotomy and then resected and reconstructed through an abdomino-cervical approach. Ages ranged from 40 to 80 years (median 63.4 years). The tumor was located in the upper third of the thoracic esophagus in 44 patients and in the middle third in five. Thirty-three patients had squamous cell carcinoma, 14 had adenocarcinoma, and two had adenosquamous cell carcinoma. Complications occurred in 35 patients (71.4%) and included anastomotic leak in 15, vocal cord paralysis in 11, atrial arrhythmia in nine,
pneumonia
in six, wound infection in five, and postoperative bleeding in one. Three patients required tracheostomy. There was one postoperative death (2.0%). Median survival was 0.9 years (range 1 month to 5.1 years). Thirty-one patients were alive at the time this article was written, 28 without evidence of cancer. Cause of death was recurrent disease in 13 patients, unrelated to cancer in three, and unknown in one. Overall actuarial 3- and 5-year survivals were 48.6% and 18.2%, respectively. Four-year survival for stage II disease was 44.6% as compared to 24.9% for stage III (p < 0.02). The presence of lymph node metastases significantly affected survival. Three-year survival for patients with N0 disease was 77.9% compared with 20.9% for patients with N1 disease (p < 0.01). Age, sex, and cell type had no effect on survival. Ten patients had late dysphagia, four had gastroesophageal reflux, and one had dumping symptoms. Although associated with significant morbidity, we conclude that extended esophagectomy is an acceptable method of management for tumors of the upper thoracic esophagus. Mortality is low, and long-term results are reasonable.
J Thorac
Cardiovasc
Surg 1994 Mar
PMID:Extended esophagectomy in the management of carcinoma of the upper thoracic esophagus. 812 21
The initial experience with cardiac bypass in fetal lambs resulted in early fetal death from placental insufficiency. Subsequent work in our laboratory indicated that vasoactive cyclooxygenase products were released as mediators of this response. The placental dysfunction could be blocked by the administration of indomethacin, allowing longer fetal survival. This unmasked a more subacute (but fatal) problem: fetal surgical stress resulted in diminished fetal cardiac output and progressive metabolic acidosis and contributed to the placental vasoconstriction. In acute studies, when indomethacin was given and the stress response was inhibited by the use of total spinal anesthesia, the fetus maintained normal blood gas levels, cardiac output, placental blood flow, and acid-base status for several hours after bypass. We hypothesized that beyond this point, no further fetal or placental compromise would occur and that this management technique would thus allow long-term fetal survival. With the use of total spinal anesthesia and sterile technique for long-term study, 12 fetal lambs at 120 days (80%) gestation underwent exposure, line placement, and cannulation for fetal cardiac bypass. Indomethacin was given intravenously on obtaining venous access. After 20 minutes of normothermic cardiac bypass at flow rates of 250 to 300 ml/kg/min, the fetus was weaned from bypass, the cannulas and lines were removed, the uterus and abdomen were closed, and the ewe and fetus were allowed to recover. There was one maternal death (
pneumonia
) and one early abortion (of twins); the remaining 10 ewes progressed to term. At term, five healthy lambs that had undergone fetal cardiac bypass were delivered (including one twin), four ewes delivered a mummified study fetus and one or two healthy siblings, and one delivered a dead term fetus. With the use of techniques that inhibit fetal stress and block placental vasoconstriction, cardiac bypass can be performed in single-gestation fetal lambs with a high degree of recovery and survival (80% in this study). The cause of the elevated abortion rate associated with twin gestation is unclear.
J Thorac
Cardiovasc
Surg 1994 Jun
PMID:Long-term survivors of fetal cardiac bypass in lambs. 819 83
An 88 year old woman with streptococcal
pneumonia
developed purulent pericarditis and cardiac tamponade despite treatment with antibiotics. Percutaneous pericardial drainage was effected with a 6 French pigtail catheter inserted via the subxyphoid approach. Catheter drainage was continued for 7 days in conjunction with systemic antibiotics. Catheter patency was maintained with antibiotic lavage. Immediate hemodynamic improvement followed the initial pericardial drainage. Fever, leukocytosis, and sepsis resolved during the course of therapy. The patient recovered fully from the closed space bacterial infection without additional surgical drainage. There has been no recurrence of streptococcal infection and no echocardiographic evidence of recurrent pericardial effusion after 3 months of follow-up. Indwelling catheter drainage combined with antibiotics may be an effective substitute for surgical drainage in the treatment of streptococcal pericarditis.
Cathet
Cardiovasc
Diagn 1993 Aug
PMID:Catheter lavage and drainage of pneumococcal pericarditis. 822 57
Ninety patients with esophageal perforations were operated on at our institutions between 1970 and 1992. Thirty-four of them were seen after delayed diagnosis (> 24 hours) with mediastinal sepsis caused by perforation of the thoracic esophagus. There were 18 patients with spontaneous ruptures, 11 with instrumental perforations (including one caused during laparotomy), and 3 perforations caused by foreign bodies. One patient had perforation of an esophageal ulcer into the pericardium and another had perforation of an esophageal diverticulum into the mediastinum. Nineteen patients underwent primary repair of the perforation with cleansing and drainage of the mediastinum and the pleural cavity. The remaining 15 had primary extirpation of the thoracic esophagus, irrigation of the mediastinum with antibiotics, cervical esophagostomy, gastrostomy, and drainage of the mediastinum and pleural cavity. Nineteen of the 34 patients survived (hospital mortality 44%). Of patients with primary repair, only six survived (in-hospital mortality 68%), whereas only two patients treated with esophagectomy died (in-hospital mortality 13%). The difference was highly significant (p = 0.001). The most common cause of death was multiorgan failure resulting from sepsis. Postoperative complications developed in four patients treated with primary repair (two sepsis, one empyema, and one anuria) and in seven patients treated with esophagectomy (two empyema, two sepsis, one
pneumonia
, one mediastinal abscess, and one brain abscess). After healing of the mediastinitis, the esophagogastric continuity was reconstructed with colon in 11 patients and stomach in two patients. In the management of delayed esophageal perforation with mediastinal sepsis, esophagectomy is superior to primary repair alone, which often leads to mediastinal leakage, continued sepsis, and death.
J Thorac
Cardiovasc
Surg 1993 Dec
PMID:Management of delayed esophageal perforation with mediastinal sepsis. Esophagectomy or primary repair? 804 Nov 95
For a long time, primary tumors arising less than 2 cm distal to the carina have presented a contraindication to surgical excision. Tracheal sleeve pneumonectomy technique allows carinal resection and reconstruction but still carries considerable postoperative complications. From 1983 to 1992 we performed 27 right tracheal sleeve pneumonectomies and one left. Fourteen patients had N0 nodes, nine had N1, and five had N2. No anastomotic complications, either fistula or stenosis, were observed. Successful outcome depends on meticulous attention to surgical details and careful anaesthetic management with a new ventilation tube. One patient died on the twenty-second postoperative day from myocardial infarction. Complications included
pneumonia
(one), vocal cord paresis (two), and pleural empyema without bronchial fistula (one). Conservative treatment allowed complete recovery from all complications. There are seven patients alive at 4 years after operation and one at 5 years. Six patients have been disease-free for between 1 and 32 months. Two patients died free of disease at 13 and 42 months. Two patients died of mediastinal recurrence and 10 of distant metastases within 6 and 54 months.
J Thorac
Cardiovasc
Surg 1994 Jan
PMID:Tracheal sleeve pneumonectomy for bronchogenic carcinoma. 763 86
Phrenic nerve injury and diaphragmatic dysfunction can be induced by cardiac operation. The clinical consequences are not well-established. We evaluated 13 consecutive patients over a 2-year period with unexplained and prolonged difficulties in weaning from mechanical ventilation. The mean time of measurement from the operation day was 31 +/- 19 days (range 8 to 78). With the same technique we also evaluated 12 control patients: four patients at day 1 after cardiac operation while they were still intubated; four normally convalescing patients at day 7 or 8 after cardiac operation; and four patients who required prolonged mechanical ventilation because of another identified cause after cardiac operation. Diaphragmatic function was evaluated at the bedside from esophageal and gastric pressure measurements. A low or negative ratio of gastric pressure swing to transdiaphragmatic pressure swing, indicative of diaphragm dysfunction, was found in all 13 patients (mean -0.39 +/- 0.64). The difference between the 13 patients and all control groups was found to be highly significant. Transdiaphragmatic pressure measured during a maximal voluntary inspiratory effort and transdiaphragmatic pressure measured during a short, sharp sniff were markedly diminished (28 +/- 18 cm H2O and 13 +/- 15 cm H2O, respectively) in the 13 patients, significantly different from values in the four control patients studied at day 7 or 8. Transdiaphragmatic pressure measured after magnetic stimulation in four patients was also markedly reduced (7 +/- 5 cm H2O) as compared with normal theoretic values. Aminophylline infusion had no effect on any of these parameters. In one of two patients evaluated a second time, about 5 weeks later, a marked improvement was observed. Estimating the prevalence of clinically relevant diaphragmatic dysfunction, we found it to be 0.5% when no topical cooling was used and 2.1% when iced slush with no insulation pad was added for myocardial protection (p < 0.005). The most striking finding was that the clinical course of the 13 patients was marked by severe intercurrent events, including cardiorespiratory arrest after early tracheal extubation in 5 patients, nosocomial
pneumonia
in 11, prolonged mechanical ventilation in all (58 +/- 41 days), and a fatal outcome in 3. We conclude that prolonged postoperative diaphragmatic dysfunction may cause severe life-threatening complications after cardiac operation and can be limited to some extent by avoiding the use of iced slush topical cooling of the heart.
J Thorac
Cardiovasc
Surg 1994 Feb
PMID:Clinically relevant diaphragmatic dysfunction after cardiac operations. 830 68
In lung or heart-lung transplant recipients, complications as a result of pulmonary infections continue to be the most frequent causes of morbidity and mortality. This study was undertaken to identify the contributions of (1) thoracotomy, (2) interruption of lymphatic vessels and bronchial arteries, (3) transplant procedure, (4) drug-induced immunosuppression, and (5) graft allogenicity to the increased risk of
pneumonia
in lung transplantation. Lewis rats were inoculated with 10(5) colony-forming units of Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 by direct instillation into the trachea after one of the following: a general anesthetic with no operation; a left thoracotomy; a left thoracotomy with pulmonary hilar stripping; an isogeneic orthotopic left lung transplant with or without immunosuppression; or an allogeneic transplant with immunosuppression with Brown-Norway rats as donors. Immunosuppression was induced with an intramuscular injection of cyclosporine (25 mg/kg of body weight) from the inoculation day to day 3. All rats were killed on day 6, and severity of infection was determined by quantitative culture of Legionella organisms in the lungs and spleen, titer of Legionella urinary antigen, differential cell count in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, body weight loss, and gross inspection of the lung. Significant increases in lung Legionella concentration occurred as a result of the addition of pulmonary hilar stripping (from 10(5.13 +/- 0.34) in the thoracotomy group to 10(5.66 +/- 0.25) in the thoracotomy with hilar stripping group, p = 0.013) and the addition of immunosuppression (from 10(5.47 +/- 0.47) in the isogeneic transplant group to 10(6.94 +/- 0.52) in the isogeneic transplant with immunosuppression group, p = 0.00016). Thoracotomy, transplant procedures, and allogenicity itself resulted in no significant increases. The results for all other indicators paralleled those for lung culture. We conclude that the combination of drug-induced immunosuppression with lung denervation and interruption of lymphatic vessels and bronchial arteries results in the early development and increased severity of
pneumonia
in lung transplantation.
J Thorac
Cardiovasc
Surg 1993 Sep
PMID:Aspects of lung transplantation that contribute to increased severity of pneumonia. An experimental study. 836 Nov 86
Between 6/87 and 3/92 22 out of 24 patients were treated (22 by surgery) for pulmonary and pleural Aspergillus disease. The most frequent lung disorder was tuberculosis (9 x), followed by bronchiectasis (5 x), congenital lung cysts (2 x),
pneumonia
with abscess formation (2 x), sarcoidosis (2 x), and bronchial cancer (4 x). More than half the patients had further severe secondary diseases. 4 patients with "simple aspergilloma" and 5 patients with "complex aspergilloma" underwent lobectomy or segmentectomy without complications or recurrence. Special surgical problems occurred in 13 patients with inflammation involving pleura and chest wall (pleuro-pulmonary aspergillosis, pleural aspergillosis) and invasive lung changes (invasive pulmonary aspergillosis). 7 patients developed an empyema after lung resection, on 4 occasions with bronchopleural fistula. In 4 cases myoplasty, in 2 cases thoracomyoplasty, on 2 occasions completion pneumonectomy with omentoplasty, in one case omentoplasty alone, and on 2 occasions decortication with pleurectomy and lung resection lead to a complete cure. 2 open window thoracostomies were constructed. In 15 cases a single operation was adequate. In 7 patients up to 3 further operations were necessary. 17 patients had haemoptysis, in 10 of these cases it was recurrent. On 7 occasions life-threatening haemorrhage took place, causing death in 2 cases. These were the only deaths resulting from the lung disease. Our results show that aggressive surgical action can be successful. Myoplasty, thoracomyoplasty, and omentoplasty are, in our view, the most suitable measures for healing pleura empyemas and bronchopleural fistulae coincident with pleuro-pulmonary aspergillosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Thorac
Cardiovasc
Surg 1993 Feb
PMID:Surgical treatment of pulmonary and pleuro-pulmonary Aspergillus disease. 836 59
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