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

Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) has been adopted as a means of strong respiratory support. In lung transplantation, reimplantation response is still a serious problem. It causes severe respiratory failure which is refractory to mechanical ventilation in some cases. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of veno-venous ECMO after lung transplantation using a canine autotransplantation model. The autotransplantation model was created by keeping the left lung in a warm ischemic state for 2 h. After reperfusion, the right pulmonary artery was ligated. The following two groups were studied: Group 1, Control group, (no ECMO group) (n = 6). After reperfusion, both lungs were ventilated without ECMO. Group 2, ECMO group (n = 7). After reperfusion, veno-venous ECMO support was introduced with reduction of mechanical ventilation. In the no ECMO group, four of the animals died within 210 min after reperfusion. In the ECMO group, two of the animals died of severe pulmonary edema. Data of blood gas analyses (PaO2, PaCO2, and SvO2) after reperfusion were significantly better in the ECMO group, whereas there were no significant differences in both shunt fraction and pulmonary vascular resistance index. In this model with severe pulmonary edema induced by warm ischemia, veno-venous ECMO contributed to the improvement of hypoxemia and hypercapnia, but did not improve pulmonary hemodynamics.
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PMID:Experimental study on veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for respiratory failure after lung transplantation. 150 26

The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognosis and functional outcome of mitral regurgitation caused by ischemic papillary muscle dysfunction with respect to treatment, and to determine the role of coronary angioplasty in this context. Thirty patients with severe ischemic mitral regurgitation were followed up for 33 +/- 3 months. Thirteen patients were treated medically (group I) and 17 patients underwent surgery or angioplasty (group II). The 3-year survival was 59.5% (45.6% in group I and 70.2% in group II). Angioplasty was only used in paroxysmal mitral regurgitation caused by papillary muscle ischemia. This technique resulted in spectacular immediate results in three patients with pulmonary edema caused by mitral regurgitation during myocardial ischemia. Surgical correction of mitral regurgitation should be considered without delay if angioplasty is not feasible or if the regurgitation is permanent or severe. Widening the indications of surgery or angioplasty should result in an improvement of the prognosis of these high-risk patients.
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PMID:Treatment of severe mitral regurgitation caused by ischemic papillary muscle dysfunction: indications for coronary angioplasty. 154 93

Upper respiratory and pulmonary complications of cocaine addiction have been increasingly reported in recent years, with most of the patients being intravenous addicts, users of freebase, or smokers of "crack." The toxicity of cocaine is complex and is exerted via multiple central and peripheral pathways. Recurrent snorting of cocaine may result in ischemia, necrosis, and infections of the nasal mucosa, sinuses, and adjacent structures. Pulmonary complications of cocaine toxicity include pulmonary edema, pulmonary hemorrhages, pulmonary barotrauma, foreign body granulomas, cocaine related pulmonary infection, obliterative bronchiolitis, asthma, and persistent gas-exchange abnormalities. Respiratory manifestations are nonspecific and include shortness of breath, cough, wheezing, hemoptysis, and chest pains. Severe respiratory difficulties have been reported in neonates of abusing mothers. In the absence of a cocaine-abuse history, it may be difficult to recognize the etiological role of cocaine, especially in the absence of needle tracks pointing to previous intravenous drug abuse and/or negative toxicology.
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PMID:Respiratory complications of cocaine abuse. 158 7

We report here two cases in which patients fell into pulmonary edema due to ischemic mitral regurgitation (ischemic MR) after cardiac catheterization and underwent emergency coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) using an intra-aortic balloon pumping. The patient were a 65-year-old man and a 80-year-old woman, and both had a chief complaint of angina after myocardiac infarction. In both cases, coronary angiography revealed triple vessel disease, and left ventriculography showed severe MR. However echocardiography, when they were hospitalized, did not show significant MR. Therefore we thought that they had gone into congestive heart failure because cardiac ischemia and volume load following cardiac catheterization provoked MR. In fact, postoperative left ventriculography and echocardiography showed decreased MR. We now think that it is important to keep in mind the cases of severe ischemic MR for which CABG alone is adequate treatment and to evaluate ischemic MR not only by left ventriculography but also by echocardiography.
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PMID:[Two cases of severe ischemic mitral regurgitation treated with CABG alone]. 159 15

Acute colorectal ischemia is a rare though potentially lethal complication of aortic surgery. We reviewed our recent experience with 16 cases in order to analyze its causative and prognostic factors. The incidence was 2.8%, and the inferior mesenteric artery was occluded in all cases. All patients also had severe occlusive disease of at least two of the hypogastric or deep femoral arteries. Hypoperfusion due to arterial ligation, prosthetic occlusion or embolism was responsible in half the cases. Ischemia and perfusion due to aortic cross-clamping or perioperative hemorrhage were involved in the rest of the cases. Postoperative mortality was 31%. The mortality was lower for partial, nontransmural necrosis, and for elective operations. Recurrent intestinal ischemia, transmural necrosis, surgery for ruptured aneurysm, intestinal hemorrhage and pulmonary edema were associated with a higher mortality rate. All patients with anuria or extrarenal epuration and hepatic cytolysis died. Although reconstruction of the inferior mesenteric artery might lessen the incidence of postoperative colonic ischemia due to hypoperfusion, the role of oxygen free radicals should be investigated in humans, in order to afford colonic protection against the consequences of ischemia-reperfusion.
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PMID:Acute colorectal ischemia after aortic surgery: pathophysiology and prognostic criteria. 159 29

A 40 year old woman suffered from respiratory insufficiency (arterial PaO2 = 47 mmHg) because of a chronic beryllium intoxication. On 6th June 1990, she underwent double lung transplantation with cardio-pulmonary bypass. Each lung was separately implanted via an extra-pericardial approach, and both bronchi were anastomosed at the hilum. On the seventh post operative day, a severe bilateral bronchial ischemia was noticed (black mucosa). Few weeks later, a diffuse bronchomalacia was noticed in the proximal and distal parts of both bronchial trees. To our knowledge, such a bronchial post-ischemic complication has never been reported. The explantation could be several added causes: imperfect preservation of the lung during harvesting, post operative pulmonary oedema, and operative use of an antifibrinolytic agent (aprotinin).
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PMID:[Diffuse bronchomalacia after double lung transplantation. Thoughts apropos of a case]. 160 32

Considerable evidence has accumulated that oxygen free radicals play a major role in ischemic injury, particularly when followed by reperfusion. Few reports have demonstrated the occurrence of oxidative damage during the ischemic period, itself. Our laboratory has demonstrated that events occurring during an ischemic period with adequate oxygen supply can mimic the "oxygen paradox," using lipid peroxidation as an index of oxidative stress and lung edema as an index of tissue injury. The present study compares lipid peroxidation and oxidation of soluble (100,000g supernatant) protein during ischemia and reperfusion in isolated rat lung model perfused with artificial medium and ventilated with varying alveolar oxygen tension. Protein oxidation was determined by a modified dinitrophenylhydrazine (DNPH) method using Sephadex G-25 column chromatography to isolate the DNPH bound proteins. Global ischemia was produced by discontinuing perfusion while ventilation continued with gas mixtures containing 5% CO2 and a fixed oxygen concentration between 0 and 95%. After 1 h ischemia in the isolated rat lung ventilated with 20% oxygen, protein carbonyls and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) increased significantly compared with controls. These changes were more pronounced after 60 min of reperfusion with 95% oxygen in the ventilation gas. With 0% oxygen (95% nitrogen and 5% CO2) content of the ventilating gas during ischemia, TBARS and protein carbonyls remained at the control level. The wet/dry weight ratio showed changes parallel to the indices of tissue oxidation. The presence of 5,8,11,14-eicosatetraynoic, an inhibitor of cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase pathways, in the perfusate had no effect on the generation of protein carbonyls although inhibition of lipid peroxidation was demonstrated. This implies that the oxidation of soluble protein is not mediated by the eicosanoid metabolic cascade. These data indicate that oxidative processes occur during ischemia and are dependent on the alveolar oxygen concentration. Oxidation of soluble protein can be used as an index of oxidative damage during lung ischemia and reperfusion.
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PMID:Role of oxygen in oxidation of lipid and protein during ischemia/reperfusion in isolated perfused rat lung. 160 29

Clinical data on 10,451 high-dose (up to 0.84 mg/kg over 10 minutes) dipyridamole-echocardiography tests (DET) performed in 9,122 patients were prospectively collected from 33 echocardiographic laboratories, each contributing greater than 100 tests. All patients were studied for documented or suspected coronary artery disease (1,117 early [less than 18 days] after acute myocardial infarction and 293 had unstable angina). Significant side effects including major adverse reactions and minor but limiting side effects occurred in 113 patients (1.2%). Major adverse reactions occurred in 7 cases (0.07%). In 6 of these cases, adverse reactions were associated with echocardiographically assessed ischemia and included 1 prolonged cardiac asystole (complicated by acute myocardial infarction and coma, with death after 23 days), 1 short-lasting cardiac asystole, 2 myocardial infarctions, 1 pulmonary edema and 1 sustained ventricular tachycardia. In all 6 cases, the cardiologist-echocardiographer performing the study had a limited experience (less than 100 tests) with DET, and at off-line reading in 5 cases, the obvious echo-positivity preceded the onset of complications by 1 to 5 minutes. The only ischemia-independent major side effect was a short-lasting cardiac asystole that was reversed by aminophylline and atropine. Significant side effects associated with echocardiographically assessed ischemia occurred in 89 additional cases (21 with and 68 without concomitant echocardiographically assessed myocardial ischemia). The most frequent of these side effects was hypotension or bradycardia, or both, which occurred in 40 patients with negative and 6 with positive DET. In all cases, side effects promptly subsided after aminophylline. In 1,857 cases, the high dose was not given for echo-positivity before the eighth minute.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Safety of intravenous high-dose dipyridamole echocardiography. The Echo-Persantine International Cooperative Study Group. 162 16

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the role of arachidonic acid metabolites in the reimplantation response after lung transplantation in mongrel dogs. The left lung was used and two groups were studied. Group I underwent hilar stripping, while Group II underwent hilar stripping plus warm ischemia for 60 min., achieved by clamping the left pulmonary artery and veins. We measured the lung wet to dry weight ratio (W/D ratio), total pulmonary vascular resistance (TPVR), and blood and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) levels of leukotriene B4 and C4 (LTB4,C4) and thromboxane B2 (TXB2). These parameters were measured periodically for 7 days after reperfusion. In group II, the W/D ratio and TPVR were significantly increased in comparison with Group I. The blood LTC4 level was elevated immediately after reperfusion, and BALF level of LTC4 also rose subsequently. These levels changed concomitantly with the W/D ratio. The above results suggest that arachidonic acid metabolism plays an important role in the reimplantation response, especially in pulmonary edema.
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PMID:Changes in levels of arachidonic acid metabolites in blood and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid after warm ischemia-reperfusion of lung. 166 71

A review of the factors that oppose pulmonary edema formation (alveolar flooding) when capillary pressure is elevated are presented for a normal capillary endothelial barrier and for damaged endothelium associated with ischemia/reperfusion in rabbit, rat, and dog lungs. Normally, tissue pressure, the plasma protein osmotic pressure gradient acting across the capillary wall and lymph flow (Edema Safety Factors) increase to prevent the build-up of fluid in the lung's interstitium when capillary pressure increases. No measureable alveolar edema fluid accumulates until capillary pressure exceeds 30 mmHg. When the capillary wall has been damaged, interstitial edema develops at lower capillary pressures because the plasma protein osmotic pressure will not change greatly to oppose capillary filtration, but lymph flow increases to very high levels to remove the increased filtrate and the result is that capillary pressures can increase to 20-25 mmHg before alveolar flooding results. In addition, the mechanisms responsible for producing pulmonary endothelial damage with ischemia/reperfusion are reviewed and the effects of O2 radical scavengers, neutrophil depletion or altering their adherence to the endothelium, and increasing cAMP on reversing the damage to the pulmonary endothelium is presented.
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PMID:Pulmonary edema: ischemia reperfusion endothelial injury and its reversal by c-AMP. 166 19


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