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

We report on successful treatment of an 46-year-old patient with ARDS (Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome), caused by legionella-pneumophilia-pneumonia. The treatment with conventional artifical mechanical ventilation had failed. The new method of extracorporeal CO2-Elimination and low frequency positive pressure ventilation (ECCO2-R-LFPPV), introduced by L. Gattinoni (2) was in that case of severest ARDS very helpful. Supported by antimicrobial therapy with Erythromycin and Rifampicin the lung function could be improved to "restitutio ad integrum". Changes in chest radiographs, clinical parameters of ventilation, gas exchange and haemodynamics as well as the results of sequential pulmonary studies are demonstrated and discussed.
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PMID:[Adult respiratory distress syndrome in legionella pneumonia--successful treatment with extracorporeal CO2 elimination procedures]. 250 73

Pulmonary function tests, including spirometry, transfer factor of the lungs for carbon monoxide (TlCO), and the two components of TlCO, the diffusing capacity of the alveolocapillary membrane (Dm) and pulmonary capillary blood volume (Vc), were carried out in a group of patients with testicular carcinoma during and after treatment with the Einhorn regimen. The lung function parameters of patients who developed bleomycin-induced pneumonitis were compared with those recorded in a group of patients who did not develop this syndrome. We suggest that bleomycin-induced damage to the pulmonary capillary vasculature can be monitored by measuring Vc and that ensuing fibrosis can be measured by recording Dm. The decrease in Dm is probably compensated for by an increase in Vc, leading to a smaller change in TlCO.
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PMID:Changes in pulmonary function during and after bleomycin treatment in patients with testicular carcinoma. 257 98

Laser technology and the endoscope have been combined for the palliation of obstructive tracheobronchial malignant lesions. The neodymium-yttrium-aluminum-garnet (Nd-YAG) laser was used to treat 249 patients (447 operations), and the CO2 laser was used on 34 patients (59 operations). Hemorrhage, the major complication in both groups of patients, was more easily controlled with the Nd-YAG laser. One patient in the CO2 laser group died, and one patient in the group being treated with Nd-YAG laser bronchoscopy died. The Nd-YAG laser can be applied more efficiently through a fiber system, with better optic control and secure hemostasis. The commonest indications for treatment were dyspnea, obstructive pneumonia, and hemoptysis. Extrinsic compression was the most frequent reason for failure. The Nd-YAG laser, most often applied through open rigid bronchoscopes under general anesthesia, has become our treatment of choice for the palliation of tracheobronchial malignancy.
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PMID:Endoscopic treatment of tracheobronchial malignancy. Experience with Nd-YAG and CO2 lasers in 506 operations. 258 Dec 12

We report a case of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease associated with central alveolar hypoventilation diagnosed by exercise test. A 61-year-old man with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease was admitted to our hospital because of respiratory failure caused by bacterial pneumonia. After recovery from pneumonia, we examined his functional ventilatory response to incremental exercise. Exercise was discontinued because of his maximal target heart rate, and there was no complaint of dyspnea throughout the exercise test. Although the patient had enough ventilatory reserve during exercise (VEmax/MVV = 50%), there was a marked progressive retention of carbon dioxide disproportionate to the extent of his air flow obstruction. Moreover the patient was able to reduce the carbon dioxide tension to a subnormal level by voluntary hyperventilation, and his ventilatory response to carbon dioxide and mouth occlusion pressure at rest was significantly diminished as compared with normal subjects. These findings suggest that this patient has several features compatible with central alveolar hypoventilation. Exercise test was useful for the diagnosis as well as exercise prescription because the patient could develop dangerous hypoxemia without alarming symptoms like dyspnea.
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PMID:[A case of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease associated with central alveolar hypoventilation diagnosed by exercise test]. 274 76

Alveolar proteinosis (AP) and postobstructive or endogenous lipid pneumonia (ELP) are two distinct morphologic types of phospholipid accumulation in the lung. In ELP, ultrastructurally amorphous fat accumulates in the cytoplasm of alveolar macrophages. In AP, lamellar surfactant bodies with an electron microscopic complex structure are stored within alveolar lumina. In contrast to ELP, AP has not been associated with bronchial obstruction. One case of postobstructive AP occurred distal to a central carcinoid tumor, and two cases of combined AP and ELP occurred next to a squamous cell carcinoma that obstructed a lobar bronchus. Results of histologic and ultrastructural studies were determined with regard to new insights into the physiology and biochemistry of pulmonary lipids. It was concluded that the morphology of accumulated fat in obstructed lung tissue may depend on local oxygen and carbon dioxide tensions.
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PMID:Pulmonary phospholipid accumulation distal to an obstructed bronchus. A morphologic study. 275 90

"Environmental tobacco smoke" (ETS) is the term used to characterize tobacco combustion products inhaled by nonsmokers in the proximity of burning tobacco. Over 3800 compounds are in tobacco smoke, many of which are known carcinogens. Most ETS exposure is from sidestream smoke emitted from the burning tip of the cigarette. Sidestream smoke is hazardous because it contains high concentrations of ammonia, benzene, nicotine, carbon monoxide, and many carcinogens. Nonsmokers chronically exposed to ETS are believed to assume health risks similar to those of a light smoker. Children of parents who smoke have more respiratory infections, more hospitalizations for bronchitis and pneumonia, and a smaller rate of increase in lung function compared to children of parents who do not smoke, particularly during the first year of life. Among adults with preexisting health conditions such as allergies, chronic lung conditions, and angina, the symptoms of these conditions are exacerbated by exposure to ETS. The acute health effects among healthy adults include headaches, nausea, and irritation of the eyes and nasal mucous membranes. The evidence for a relationship between ETS and cancer at sites other than lung is insufficient to draw any positive conclusions. For lung cancer, studies have consistently shown an excess risk between 10% and 300%, with a summary relative risk of 1.3 (95% confidence interval = 1.1-1.5). A dose-response relation is suggested but difficult to assess completely. Histologic types of lung cancer are generally similar to those most closely associated with active smoking, although other histologic types have also been found. Both excess relative risks and the dose responses are underestimates of the true excess risk and of the range of dose-response effect. Although the temporal relationship between exposure and disease occurrence is established, many questions are unanswered. The findings are consistent with many known biologic effects of active smoking and are partially analogous to the biologic effects of direct smoke inhalation. As many as 5000 nonsmokers are estimated to die annually from lung cancer as a result of exposure to ETS. There is great potential for prevention of these premature deaths. The two major preventive actions are (a) eliminating the source by reducing the amount of direct smoking and (b) limiting the level of exposure by restricting where tobacco can be smoked. Specific preventive actions include smoking cessation, smoking prevention, restriction of advertising, increased taxation on tobacco, and adoption of stringent nonsmoking policies in the workplace, schools, and public places.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Health hazards of passive smoking. 328 40

A heterogeneous group of 45 neonates with severe pulmonary disease and inadequate gas exchange on conventional intermittent mandatory ventilation (IMV) was treated with a high-frequency oscillator combined with an IMV (HFO-IMV) system (Emerson Airway Vibrator connected to a BABYBird 1 ventilator). The mean gestational age was 33 weeks (25.5-43) and mean birth weight 2.02 kg (0.66-4.24). Primary diagnoses included respiratory distress syndrome (RDS; 23), pneumonia (12), persistent fetal circulation (PFC; 6), diaphragmatic hernia/hypoplastic lungs (4). The IMV rate was reduced from 78 to 29 BPM (P less than or equal to 0.0005), while maintaining lower partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PaCO2) (P less than 0.005) and higher partial pressure of oxygen (PaO2) (P less than or equal to 0.0025). Active air leaks were present in 20 infants and these infants responded most favourably to HFO-IMV. HFO-IMV failed to improve ventilation in neonates with diaphragmatic hernia/hypoplastic lungs. Complications during HFO-IMV were increased pulmonary secretions (11), worsening or recurrence of pre-existing air leaks (11), or occurrence of new air leaks (10). In 4 patients death was related to major air leak complications. Twenty-four infants died, 18 of them of a respiratory cause. Twenty-one infants finally survived. We assembled a well-tolerated system to provide HFO-IMV and to successfully ventilate neonates with severe respiratory disease, who failed to respond to conventional IMV. Initiation of HFO-IMV earlier in the course of the disease in this type of infant may improve survival.
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PMID:High-frequency oscillatory ventilation combined with intermittent mandatory ventilation in critically ill neonates: 3 years of experience. 329 14

High-frequency ventilation has been used successfully to manage life-threatening complications in premature infants with lung disease. Here we report a preliminary assessment of the efficacy and safety of high-frequency oscillatory ventilation-(HFO-A, A = active expiratory phase) when used as a primary ventilator in 11 infants of 24-34 weeks gestation who required ventilatory support. HFO-A was initiated after no more than 5.5 hr of conventional mechanical ventilation (CMV). HFO-A at 15 Hz was used for 12-203 hr following a protocol designed for rapid reduction of FI02 requirements. CO2 elimination was easily achieved in all infants. Oxygenation was satisfactory, except in one infant with congenital pneumonia. There were four deaths during HFO-A: two pulmonary (one congenital pneumonia; one pulmonary hemorrhage) and two nonpulmonary. The HFO-A protocol utilized lung volume recruitment maneuvers plus mean airway pressures (MAwP) greater than those generally used early in the course of CMV. Therefore, in a subset of infants less than or equal to 29 weeks' gestation with respiratory distress syndrome (RDS), ventilator pressures and gas exchange were compared in infants treated with either HFO-A or CMV. Maximum MAwP levels were reached earlier in six infants on HFO-A (5.2 +/- 2.5 hr; mean +/- SD) than in a comparable group of 9 CMV-treated infants (36 +/- 1 hr). This earlier use of high MAwP lowered the FI02 to less than 0.4 by 18.9 +/- 11 hr with HFO-A as compared with 64 +/- 6 hr using CMV, without any evidence of an increase in pulmonary complications. There were 17 complications in the nine CMV-treated infants; and four in the six HFO-A treated ones. We conclude that HFO-A, instituted early and used with a protocol designed for early reduction in FI02 requirements, demonstrates sufficient efficacy and safety to warrant further clinical trials in the routine management of infant RDS.
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PMID:High-frequency oscillatory ventilation in premature infants with respiratory failure: a preliminary report. 330 21

There is no consensus on what constitutes appropriate field airway management in the seriously injured semiconscious patient. The respiratory complications in a selected group of patients who were transported from the scene of an accident by a helicopter service whose policy was to perform endotracheal intubation on only deeply obtunded patients and manage others with bag mask ventilation are reported. Respiratory compromise was defined as follows: partial pressure of oxygen less than 65 torr on initial hospital arterial blood gases, partial pressure of carbon dioxide greater than 45 torr on initial hospital arterial blood gases, or radiographic and clinical evidence of aspiration pneumonitis within 5 days of admission to the hospital. From a total of 116 patients transported from the scene of an accident during the period of this investigation, there were 42 patients with Trauma Scores between 4 and 14 whose records were studied in detail. Ten of these patients ha adequate perfusion and abnormal arterial blood gases after arrival at the receiving hospital. Five patients might have benefited from endotracheal intubation in the field, but there were no preventable deaths. Neurologic status of the patient appeared to be more useful than respiratory status in predicting respiratory compromise.
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PMID:Field airway management of the trauma patient: the efficacy of bag mask ventilation. 339 Feb 49

Radiographic signs of radiation pneumonitis and fibrosis were assessed and pulmonary function monitored in lung cancer patients after two different split-course radiation therapy schedules, one with a rest interval of 3 weeks and the other with a rest interval of 5 weeks, the total radiation dose being the same in both treatments (55 Gy/20 fractions/7 or 9 weeks). Post-mortem findings were analysed when available. Spirometric measurement of vital capacity, determination of diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (DL) and alveolar volume with the single breath technique, and determination of regional distribution of lung perfusion by two different techniques, radiospirometry and gamma camera digital display following intravenous injection of 133Xe, were carried out before and at various times after the completion of irradiation. Of the physiologic parameters, only DL showed a significant decrease 6 as well as 9 months post-treatment (p less than 0.05). No difference between the two treatment schedules could be shown with regard to grade or time pattern of radiologic changes or decrease in DL. The findings suggest that measurement of DL may be of value in monitoring patients included in research protocols for radiation therapy of lung cancer as well as in selection of patients for this treatment.
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PMID:Radiation pneumonitis and fibrosis following split-course radiation therapy for lung cancer. A radiologic and physiologic study. 365 Dec 64


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