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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (pulmonary edema)
10,665 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Afterload reduction with sodium nitroprusside was performed in a patient with idiopathic lactic acidosis in whom sodium bicarbonate therapy had precipitated pulmonary edema. The drug reduced mean pulmonary-artery wedge pressure from 28 to 12 mm Hg, accompanied by a modest rise in left ventricular stroke work index from 33 to 43 g-m per square meter. Concomitantly, there was dramatic resolution of the metabolic acidemia, the arterial pH rising from 7.19 to 7.61, arterial carbon dioxide tension from 13 to 26 mm Hg, and bicarbonate content from 6 to 28 mEq per liter, and the anion gap falling from 32 to 11 mEq per liter. Metabolic improvement occurred despite a fall in cardiac output from 5.5 to 4.8 liters per minute. These findings support the concept that regional vasoconstriction plays a part in idiopathic lactic acidosis, and suggests that vasodilators may be an effective form of therapy for this almost uniformly fatal disorder.
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PMID:Vasodilator therapy of idiopathic lactic acidosis. 23 36

After the acute onset of heart failure and in the absence of acute myocardial infarction, plasma volume may occasionally be depleted to the extent that the patient presents with clinical signs of circulatory shock. In five patients, the acute onset of clinical and radiographic signs of cardiogenic pulmonary edema were associated with reduction in arterial blood pressure and cardiac output. The pulmonary arterial wedge pressure was within normal limits but a reduction in plasma volume was demonstrated, which is best explained by the rapid translocation of plasma water that represented pulmonary (and most likely also peripheral) edema fluid. The infusion of 5 percent albumin solution significantly increased cardiac output, mean arterial pressure and cardiac work, reversed lactic acidosis, enhanced furosemide-induced diuresis and was followed by a decrease in both clinical and radiographic signs of pulmonary edema. These observations confirm that volume expansion may constitute appropriate treatment for some patients with cardiogenic pulmonary edema who may present with hypotension and who are unresponsive to conventional therapy.
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PMID:Hypovolemia and hypotension complicating management of acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema. 50 39

Twenty-four chronic alcohol abusers hospitalized during a twenty-seven-month period were suspected of having "alcoholic ketoacidosis" because they had ketonuria or ketonemia with little or no glucosuria. Twenty-one had moderate or severe ketosis, with plasma 3-hydroxybutyrate of 5.2 to 22.5 mmol/L. Fifteen of this group were not diabetic, while six were later found to have mild postprandial hyperglycemia without glycosuria. Three patients who had continued to drink until shortly before admission, though at first suspected of having alcoholic ketosis, were found to have predominant lactic acidosis, with minor elevations of plasma 3-hydroxybutyrate. In contrast to previously reported patients with "alcoholic ketoacidosis", severe acidemia was uncommon in this series. Indeed, seven patients were alkalemic, because of coexisting respiratory or metabolic alkalosis. Most patients had eaten poorly for several days (and usually longer) and had allegedly decreased their alcohol intake during that period. That history, and the usual rapid clearing of ketosis simply by treatment with solutions of glucose and NaCl, suggested that acute starvation was an important factor in the pathogenesis of this disorder. Four patients were treated with insulin and four with NaHCO3 solutions. In retrospect, the need for either of these treatments was not clear. Two of the twenty-four patients died, one from circulatory failure secondary to hemorrhage and the other from pulmonary edema, but no patient died because of ketoacidosis per se.
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PMID:Alcoholic detosis. 80 36

A 19-year old woman ingested an unknown amount of sodium azide (NaN3). The earliest symptoms were nausea and loss of vision. Within a few hours her clinical features were dominated by central nervous system signs, acute pulmonary edema, lactic acidosis, and hypothermia. The patient died within 12 hours, hypotension and shock occurring as preterminal events. This was the first recorded case in which antidotal methemoglobin production was attempted. Sodium nitrite administration resulted in methemoglobinemia but did not appreciably alter the clinical course and may not be of major benefit. Gross examination post-mortem showed marked pulmonary edema, visceral hemorrhage and congestion, and slight cerebral edema. Microscopically, the lungs showed alveolar and interstitial edema and a polymorphonuclear infiltrate. There were petechial hemorrhages and severe nonspecific changes in the brain.
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PMID:Fatal self-administration of sodium azide. 114 58

Disturbance in acid-base balance is commonly observed in patients with heart failure. The most common disturbance is metabolic alkalosis combined with hypokalemia, as a result of the excessive use of loop diuretics. Occasionary, hypoxia due to pulmonary edema stimulates ventilation, resulting in respiratory alkalosis. When pulmonary edema develops, carbon dioxide retention occurs, resulting in respiratory acidosis. Decreased tissue oxygen delivery may also produce lethal lactic acidosis. Compensatory mechanisms, coexistence of independent acid-base disorders and changes in electrolytes complicate acid-base balance in the individual patients. As acid-base disturbances have harmful effects on the cardiovascular system, precise diagnosis and proper treatment are highly important.
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PMID:[Acid-base disturbances in heart failure]. 143 8

1. Endothelin, a novel vasoconstrictor 21-residue peptide isolated from the supernatant of cultured porcine endothelial cells, has been shown to be increased in plasma in a variety of cardiovascular disease states, including acute myocardial infarction, acute renal failure and essential hypertension. We determined the time course of plasma and pulmonary lymph endothelin-like immunoreactivity in relation to the progressive deterioration of cardiopulmonary function in an ovine septic shock model leading to multi-organ failure syndrome and death within 42 h of a continuous intravenous infusion of Escherichia coli endotoxin (40 ng min-1kg-1). 2. Plasma and pulmonary lymph endothelin-like immunoreactivity were measured by r.i.a. using a specific antiserum raised in rabbits against porcine endothelin-1. Endothelin-like immunoreactivity was further determined in lung tissue and the thoracic duct lymph of endotoxin-treated sheep by reversed-phase h.p.l.c. In control instrumented conscious sheep not infused with endotoxin, there were no significant changes in any of the measured cardiopulmonary and biochemical variables, with plasma and pulmonary lymph endothelin-like immunoreactivity remaining below the detection limit (less than 1 pg/tube) throughout the 72 h study period. 3. Conscious sheep receiving endotoxin showed a major hypotensive septic syndrome, including persistently decreased systemic blood pressure, systemic vascular resistance, stroke volume, left ventricular stroke work, associated with sustained pulmonary vasoconstriction and protein-rich pulmonary oedema (greater than five-fold increase in pulmonary lymph flow and protein clearance), and marked lactic acidosis, leading to the death of animals within 14-42 h despite institution of mechanical ventilation and adequate intravascular volume replacement.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Time course of plasma and pulmonary lymph endothelin-like immunoreactivity during sustained endotoxaemia in chronically instrumented sheep. 165 37

Total normothermic venoarterial bypass was established in 6 healthy pigs over a period of 18 hours. A heparin-coated closed extracorporeal system was used and no heparin was administered systemically. During the bypass period the main pulmonary artery was occluded and the heart was maintained in a beating state. All the animals maintained stable hemodynamics and normal blood gases during the entire period of bypass. In the postbypass period, the central hemodynamics continued to be stable while the arterial oxygen tension (inspired oxygen fraction = 0.21) decreased significantly (p less than or equal to 0.05). The total body oxygen uptake, on the other hand, remained unaltered. All the animals died within 4 hours after weaning off the venoarterial bypass circuit on account of pulmonary edema in 2 and cardiac arrest in 4. Death was preceded by progressive pulmonary hypertension and lactacidosis in all the animals. Histological examination of the lungs showed pulmonary parenchymal damage ranging from interstitial edema to intraalveolar hemorrhage and parenchymal necrosis involving more than 80% of the pulmonary parenchyma. A normothermic total venoarterial bypass of 18 hours duration or more produces pulmonary edema of varying severity, pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary parenchymal necrosis, and lactacidosis in healthy juvenile pigs, resulting uniformly in their death. Despite these sequelae the systemic arterial hypoxemia may only be mild to moderate.
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PMID:Pulmonary sequelae of prolonged total venoarterial bypass: evaluation with a new experimental model. 202 83

A porcine model of cardiac arrest with irreversible electromechanical dissociation was associated with highly significant decreases in colloid osmotic pressure in the absence of increases in hematocrit during the initial half hour of CPR. Pulmonary edema was typically observed. These observations are best explained by increases in capillary permeability to plasma proteins. The progression of acidemia was remarkably slow; arterial blood pH remained normal for more than 16 min. Even though there was significant lactic acidosis, concurrent respiratory alkalosis during CPR accounted for the greatly delayed onset of acidemia. There was also an as-yet unexplained increase in plasma osmolality.
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PMID:Observations on colloid osmotic pressure, hematocrit, and plasma osmolality during cardiac arrest. 393 78

The ventilatory response in acute lactic acidosis was assessed in 39 patients. In 18 patients, the acidosis was associated with phenformin ingestion and in 21, with other causes such as shock and sepsis, but not pulmonary edema. Arterial blood CO2 tensions and plasma bicarbonate concentrations were compared to those previously found in patients with uncomplicated diabetic ketoacidosis. In most of the lactic acidosis patients, arterial blood CO2 fell within the 95% confidence band calculated from the data in the ketoacidotic patients. Only 1 lactic acidotic patient had a triflingly lower CO2 tension. Shock was present in 8 of the 9 lactic acidotic patients whose CO2 tensions were more than 2 torr above the 95% confidence band.
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PMID:Ventilatory response in patients with acute lactic acidosis. 680 Jul 2

Human status epilepticus (SE) is consistently associated with cognitive problems, and with widespread neuronal necrosis in hippocampus and other brain regions. In animal models, convulsive SE causes extensive neuronal necrosis. Nonconvulsive SE in adult animals also leads to widespread neuronal necrosis in vulnerable regions, although lesions develop more slowly than they would in the presence of convulsions or anoxia. In very young rats, nonconvulsive normoxic SE spares hippocampal pyramidal cells, but other types of neurons may not show the same resistance, and inhibition of brain growth, DNA and protein synthesis, and of myelin formation and of synaptogenesis may lead to altered brain development. Lesions induced by SE may be epileptogenic by leading to misdirected regeneration. In SE, glutamate, aspartate, and acetylcholine play major roles as excitatory neurotransmitters, and GABA is the dominant inhibitory neurotransmitter. GABA metabolism in substantia nigra (SN) plays a key role in seizure arrest. When seizures stop, a major increase in GABA synthesis is seen in SN postictally. GABA synthesis in SN may fail in SE. Extrasynaptic factors may also play an important role in seizure spread and in maintaining SE. Glial immaturity, increased electronic coupling, and SN immaturity facilitate SE development in the immature brain. Major increases in cerebral blood flow (CBF) protect the brain in early SE, but CBF falls in late SE as blood pressure falters. At the same time, large increases in cerebral metabolic rate for glucose and oxygen continue throughout SE. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) depletion and lactate accumulation are associated with hypermetabolic neuronal necrosis. Excitotoxic mechanisms mediated by both N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and non-NMDA glutamate receptors open ionic channels permeable to calcium and play a major role in neuronal injury from SE. Hypoxia, systemic lactic acidosis, CO2 narcosis, hyperkalemia, hypoglycemia, shock, cardiac arrhythmias, pulmonary edema, acute renal tubular necrosis, high output failure, aspiration pneumonia, hyperpyrexia, blood leukocytosis and CSF pleocytosis are common and potentially serious complications of SE. Our improved understanding of the pathophysiology of brain damage in SE should lead to further improvement in treatment and outcome.
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PMID:Pathophysiological mechanisms of brain damage from status epilepticus. 838 2


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