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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (
pulmonary edema
)
10,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Our hypothesis is that systemic tocolysis of patients in premature labor is associated with a higher incidence of
pulmonary edema
in the presence of maternal infection. Over a 64-month period, medical records of all patients with a diagnosis at discharge of
pulmonary edema
or
congestive heart failure
were reviewed. There were 27 cases of
pulmonary edema
, 16 of which (59.3%) were associated with treatment of preterm labor. The incidence of
pulmonary edema
in patients receiving systemic tocolysis for treatment of preterm labor was significantly higher than that in our general obstetric population (3.04% versus 0.05%). Of the 527 patients receiving tocolysis, there was evidence of maternal infection in 52. The incidence of
pulmonary edema
was higher in the presence of maternal infection than in its absence (11/52 or 21% versus 5/475 or 1%, p = 0.0000). We conclude that there is a very strong association between the development of
pulmonary edema
and the presence of maternal infection in patients being treated for premature labor with systemic tocolysis.
...
PMID:Systemic tocolysis for premature labor is associated with an increased incidence of pulmonary edema in the presence of maternal infection. 342 Dec 69
A variant of compensated cardiogenic shock occurring in patients with chronic
congestive heart failure
following an episode of
pulmonary edema
, and in the absence of hypotension, is described. The clinical picture is characterized by combined renal and hepatic injury and a severe, often fatal, course and is distinct from other subsets of cardiogenic shock. When the splanchnic vasodilator dopamine was added to the patients' management, the outcome was uniformly favorable. This variant of compensated cardiogenic shock requires early diagnosis and treatment. The apparently beneficial effect of low-dose dopamine needs further evaluation.
...
PMID:Compensated cardiogenic shock: a subset with damage limited to liver and kidneys. The possible salutary effect of low-dose dopamine. 359 10
Pulmonary edema
is a rare but potentially lethal complication following the drainage of a pericardial effusion. Certain risk factors have been cited, including markedly increased RA pressure, chronic hypertension,
congestive heart failure
, angina and valvular disease. Patients with these concurrent problems should be monitored closely using pulmonary artery thermodilution catheters. Aggressive treatment, including diuretics, vasodilators, cardiotonic agents and early intubation with PEEP should be undertaken if the PCWP and PA pressures paradoxically increase after pericardial drainage.
...
PMID:Pulmonary edema as a complication of pericardial drainage. 360 44
Regional extravascular lung water (rELW) and blood volume (rBV) in five controls and 14 patients with
congestive heart failure
(
CHF
) were measured by constant infusion of H215O and inhalation of 11CO using positron emission tomography (PET). The analysis of 18 regions per patient revealed a relatively homogeneous level of rELW in the controls (mean = 0.11 +/- 0.02 g/cc; range, 0.08-0.21), whereas this increase in patients with
CHF
(0.17 +/- 0.02 g/cc; range, 0.10-0.51). The rBV was 0.21 +/- 0.02 g/cc in the controls and 0.17 +/- 0.02 g/cc in patients with
CHF
. A good correlation was found between the severity of chronic heart failure (according to the grading of the New York Heart Association) and mean extravascular lung water (ELW) (r = 0.69), as well as between
CHF
and the ratio rELW/rBV (r = 0.87); however, the correlation to hemodynamic data was less satisfactory (cardiac index, r = 0.45; pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, r = 0.47; ejection fraction, r = 0.60). In supine controls, a progressive decrease in regional blood volume from the basal to the apical regions was observed, whereas the differences in ELW were only small. In patients with chronic heart failure, ELW in the basal parts was markedly increased, whereas in the apical regions, only minor deviations from the controls were observed. In the basal regions of these patients, the blood volume was reduced by about 30%. Instead of the normal basoapical gradient of blood volume, these patients showed a rather flat distribution. Radiographic findings of
pulmonary edema
generally appeared together with an ELW level of greater than 0.14 g/cc.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Quantitative determination of regional extravascular lung water and regional blood volume in congestive heart failure. 387 12
Hyperthyroidism was diagnosed in 4 cats with
congestive heart failure
. Dyspnea and anorexia were observed in 3 of the 4 cats. In each cat, a holosystolic left and/or right apical heart murmur was auscultated. In 3 cats, a prominent extra heart sound (gallop rhythm) was auscultated. All cats had a palpably large thyroid lobe(s) and weight loss. The laboratory and ECG changes were similar to those reported for feline hyperthyroidism. Moderate-to-severe pleural effusion and cardiomegaly were detected via radiography in all cats. Some cats had radiographic signs of pulmonary venous engorgement and
pulmonary edema
. Echocardiography revealed cardiac dilatation and low left ventricular shortening fraction (wall motion) in all cats. Three cats responded initially to cardiac drugs and propylthiouracil or thyroidectomy. One of these died later, presumably from an adverse reaction to propylthiouracil, and the others died from recurrent
congestive heart failure
(1) or postoperative cardiac arrest (1). One cat did not respond to treatment, and died 2 days after diagnosis.
...
PMID:Congestive heart failure associated with hyperthyroidism in cats. 394 9
A hypertensive urgency should be distinguished from a hypertensive emergency. Although the distinction may not always be obvious, certain guidelines may help the clinician determine which therapeutic approaches are most appropriate for each patient. Hypertensive emergencies include those conditions in which new or progressive severe end-organ damage is present and a delay in appropriate therapy might result in permanent damage, progression of complications, and a poor prognosis. Hypertensive urgencies include those conditions with minimal to no obvious end-organ damage in which blood pressure should be lowered expeditiously. The risk of immediate complications or organ damage is less likely to occur, and thus the immediate prognosis is better, although the ultimate prognosis, if untreated, is poor. There is a marked individual, racial, sexual, and age difference in the ability to tolerate high intraarterial pressure, as evidenced by patients' symptoms and signs of end-organ damage. Patients may have no symptoms of elevated blood pressure until significant intraarterial levels are reached. If symptoms are present, they may include headache, dizziness, blurred vision, shortness of breath (especially with exertion), chest pain, rapid pulse, palpitations, malaise and fatigue, nocturia, or pedal edema. Signs of hypertensive disease vary and depend not only on the level of blood pressure but also include funduscopic changes with arteriolar narrowing, atrioventricular nicking, hemorrhages, exudates or papilledema, central nervous system changes and neurologic abnormalities, cardiac changes with gallop rhythm, cardiomegaly, tachycardia, ectopic ventricular beats, left ventricular hypertrophy or signs of
congestive heart failure
,
pulmonary edema
, and signs of renal insufficiency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hypertensive emergencies and urgencies: pathophysiology and clinical aspects. 394 53
In summary, we have presented two cases to illustrate the problem of postoperative
pulmonary edema
following tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy. Furthermore, we have discussed the difficulty in predicting those patients who will develop this complication. Because of the potential seriousness and unpredictability of acute pulmonary edema following tonsillectomy for chronic obstruction, it is important that medical personnel, including pediatricians caring for patients after tonsillectomy, be able to readily recognize this phenomenon of acute onset of
congestive heart failure
and treat it rapidly with diuretics, continuous positive airway pressure, and respiratory support as needed.
...
PMID:Acute pulmonary edema complicating tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy. 396 33
Although it has been suggested that calcium channel blocking agents may be utilized as vasodilators in patients with
congestive heart failure
, these agents also have the potential to cause a deterioration in cardiac function because of their negative inotropic actions. There is considerable variation among the available agents with regard to their relative effects on the vasculature, myocardial inotropy, and myocardial chronotropy. Thus, at clinically relevant dosages, nifedipine is a potent systemic and coronary vasodilator, but it has little or no direct effect on inotropy and chronotropy. In contrast, verapamil exerts significant negative inotropic and chronotropic effects at vasodilatory dosages, whereas diltiazem is a potent vasodilator with a negative chronotropic action at dosages that do not affect inotropy. In patients with heart failure, the largest experience so far has been with nifedipine. Data derived from over 100 patients with moderate to severe
congestive heart failure
indicate a generally beneficial net hemodynamic response to nifedipine, with substantial improvements in cardiac index (+24 percent) and left ventricular filling pressure (-15 percent). The major effect seems to be on arteriolar resistance vessels, resulting in a reduction in afterload, with relatively little effect on venous pressures. Limited data suggest that the initial effect is sustained during long-term therapy. The clinical experience with verapamil and diltiazem in patients with heart failure is at present limited. In patients with normal or mildly impaired left ventricular function, verapamil's vasodilator and negative inotropic effects are counterbalanced. With severe left ventricular dysfunction, however, treatment with verapamil can result in abrupt decompensation and development of overt
pulmonary edema
and hypotension. Diltiazem's relative lack of negative inotropic effects may allow it to be used safely in patients with
congestive heart failure
, particularly when control of supraventricular tachyarrhythmia is required.
...
PMID:Calcium channel blockers in congestive heart failure: theoretic considerations and clinical experience. 397 95
To test the hypothesis that regulation of tissue oxygen (O2) extraction is disturbed in adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), the relationship between O2 availability and O2 extraction ratio (O2ER) was studied in 36 patients with
pulmonary edema
who met the criteria for either ARDS (n = 21) or acute
congestive heart failure
(
CHF
) (n = 15). We found that in response to changes in the levels of O2 availability there was a significantly (p = 0.01) greater negative correlation of change in O2ER for the
CHF
(r = -0.67) than for the ARDS group (r = -0.41). Whereas patients with
CHF
eventually died of pump failure and low O2 delivery, the ARDS group developed multiorgan failure, especially renal failure, despite significantly higher ratios of O2 availability to O2 consumption. These findings suggest that patients with ARDS have lost their ability to regulate their tissue O2 extraction to compensate for changes in the availability of O2 in order to meet demand. Pulmonary capillary endothelial injury, through its role on whole-body metabolism, may be responsible for this observation.
...
PMID:Regulation of tissue oxygen extraction is disturbed in adult respiratory distress syndrome. 401 54
Amiodarone is a cardiac antiarrhythmic agent now undergoing clinical trials in the United States. Its most important side effect is pulmonary toxicity, which may present radiographically in two forms. One is similar to eosinophilic pneumonia with peripheral alveolar opacities but without any of the laboratory or pathologic findings. A second presentation is as a bilateral interstitial pattern resembling interstitial
pulmonary edema
. This is often mistaken for heart failure in the clinical and radiographic setting. Amiodarone also causes a phospholipidosis of the liver, which is usually asymptomatic but on occasion may present as hepatitis. On abdominal CT the liver will have an abnormally high attenuation (80-140 HU), which appears to be due to accumulation of an amiodarone metabolite in hepatocytes. This appearance is usually distinguishable from the other causes of increased hepatic attenuation by virtue of other CT criteria and clinical history. However, from a radiographic standpoint alone, the combination of acute
congestive heart failure
and an abnormally dense liver may result in at least an initial misdiagnosis of advanced primary hemochromatosis.
...
PMID:Dense liver in a 72-year-old woman with congestive heart failure. 407 46
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