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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (
pulmonary edema
)
10,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We postulated that because the first step in the management of critically ill patients with hypotension,
pulmonary edema
, or both is to determine whether the cause is cardiac or noncardiac, direct visualization of the heart with two-dimensional echocardiography would be useful for determining the basis of hemodynamic compromise in such patients. Accordingly, 49 consecutive patients (33 men and 16 women; mean age 61 +/- 15 years) underwent two-dimensional echocardiography within 2 hours of placement of a pulmonary artery flotation catheter for determining the reason for hypotension,
pulmonary edema
, or both. To discriminate between cardiac and noncardiac causes, hemodynamic and two-dimensional echocardiographic data were evaluated independently by two to three blinded interpreters based on predetermined criteria. There was complete agreement between pulmonary artery catheter and two-dimensional echocardiographic data in 36 (86%) of the 42 patients in whom interpretable data were available in terms of cardiac versus noncardiac causes. The two modalities agreed in all patients with hypotension alone and disagreed in 2 of the 20 patients with
pulmonary edema
alone and 4 of the 14 patients with combined hypotension and
pulmonary edema
. In cases of discordance, the two tests provided complimentary information, particularly in patients with sepsis in whom the
stroke
volume may be normal to high but left ventricular systolic function may be depressed. The time taken for pulmonary artery catheter placement was 63 +/- 45 minutes versus 19 +/- 7 minutes for two-dimensional echocardiography.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Value of two-dimensional echocardiography for determining the basis of hemodynamic compromise in critically ill patients: a prospective study. 784 Sep 87
In fatal human Lassa fever, severe hypotension, circulatory shock, and
pulmonary edema
develop as terminal events. We examined cardiovascular and respiratory functions in strain 13 guinea pigs infected with Pichinde virus, an animal model for studying human Lassa fever. Cardiovascular functions were studied in anesthetized and conscious guinea pigs, whereas pulmonary functions were measured only on animals under anesthesia. In anesthetized animals, cardiovascular disturbances were severe and progressive from postinoculation day (PID) 10. Cardiac output, measured by thermodilution, decreased 28 to 53% below baseline values from PID 10 to 12 and was accompanied by a gradual reduction of mean arterial blood pressure and heart rate. Although left ventricular systolic pressure decreased significantly, the left ventricular +dp/dtmax and -dp/dtmax decreased only slightly on PID 12. Similar depressed cardiovascular responses were observed in conscious animals infected with Pichinde virus. Changes included decreased cardiac output, heart rate, cardiac work, cardiac power, and
stroke
volume, as well as increased total peripheral resistance and prolonged mean transit time. We postulate that a global cardiovascular dysfunction with the involvement of right and left sides of the heart may be the main cause of irreversible circulatory deterioration and death during Pichinde virus infection in strain 13 guinea pigs.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular and pulmonary responses to Pichinde virus infection in strain 13 guinea pigs. 789 34
When possible, the management of acute cardiogenic
pulmonary edema
should be started before the patient reaches the hospital. Simple measures such as having the patient sit up with the legs dependent, administering oxygen by nasal prongs, giving sublingual nitroglycerin and small doses of morphine, and rotating tourniquets on the limbs may reduce the need for more intensive procedures. Digoxin and other inotropic agents, aminophylline, furosemide, and vasodilators are given as appropriate during hospitalization. A minority of patients need endotracheal intubation and pressure monitoring with a Swan-Ganz catheter. If the arterial PO2 cannot be maintained at 60 mm Hg or more during face mask ventilation, the PCO2 rises, and the arterial pH declines, the patient should be intubated. Pressure monitoring with a Swan-Ganz catheter is indicated if the patient does not immediately respond to treatment or in special situations such as cardiogenic shock with
pulmonary edema
.
Pulmonary edema
caused by diastolic dysfunction is managed differently than that caused by systolic dysfunction. The cause and precipitating factors of the acute pulmonary edema should be sought and treated as early as possible to prevent recurrences.
Heart Dis
Stroke
PMID:Treatment of acute pulmonary edema. 792 65
Retrospective analysis of detailed patient and tumour factors associated with a complete response to combination inductive chemotherapy with CDDP-5FU (96 or 120 hour continuous infusion) was performed using data from 147 patients with a previously untreated squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity, oropharynx or pharyngo-larynx following completion of two (29 patients) or three (118 patients) cycles. Adverse reactions to chemotherapy were documented for all 164 patients included in the study. Eight drug-related deaths occurred due to: acute myocardial infarction (five patients), peptic ulcer disease (two patients) and severe neutropenia with sepsis (one patient). Severe non-lethal complications included marrow depletion (14 patients), peptic ulcer (two patients), thrombophlebitis (seven patients), angina pectoris (two patients),
stroke
(one patient),
pulmonary oedema
(one patient) and convulsions (one patient). Six patients refused further treatment because of untoward side effects and tumoral progression was observed in three cases. Separate response rates for the primary site and nodes were determined and analysis of respective predictive factors of response was performed. Complete response was obtained in 31 per cent at the primary site versus 18 per cent for the nodes (p < 0.05). The combined (primary site + nodes) overall complete response rate was 22 per cent. Among 11 factors studied (age, sex, performance status, primary site, tumour differentiation, initial resectability, 5FU dosage per cycle, number of cycles, T, N and TN stages), only performance status, N stage, resectability and number of cycles were associated with a combined complete response. Multivariate analysis showed performance status, N stage, TN stage and resectability to be significant predictive factors of a combined complete response.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Predictive factors of a complete response to and adverse effects of a CDDP-5FU combination as primary therapy for head and neck squamous carcinomas. 826 92
We measured pulmonary diffusing capacity (DL), diffusing capacity per unit lung volume, pulmonary capillary blood volume (Vc), membrane diffusing capacity (Dm), pulmonary capillary blood flow or cardiac output (Qc), and cardiac
stroke
volume (SV) in four subjects exposed to 9 days of microgravity (weightlessness, 0 G). The same subjects were studied standing and supine numerous times preflight and in the week immediately after return from space. DL in microgravity was elevated (28%) compared with preflight standing values and was higher than preflight supine because of the elevation of both Vc (28%) and Dm (27%). The elevation in Vc was comparable to that measured supine in 1 G, but the increase in Dm was in sharp contrast to the supine value (which was unchanged). We postulate that, in 0 G, pulmonary capillary blood is evenly distributed throughout the lung, providing for uniform capillary filling, leading to an increase in the surface area available for diffusion. By contrast, in the supine 1-G state, the capillaries are less evenly filled, and although a similar increase in blood volume is observed, the corresponding increase in surface area does not occur. DL and its subdivisions showed no adaptive changes from the first measurement 24 h after the start of 0 G to 8 days later. Similarly, there were no trends in the postflight data, suggesting that the principal mechanism of these changes was gravitational. The increase in Dm suggests that subclinical
pulmonary edema
did not result from exposure to 0 G. Qc was modestly increased (18%) inflight and decreased (9%) post-flight compared with preflight standing. Compared with preflight standing, SV was increased 46% inflight and decreased 14% in the 1st wk postflight. There were temporal changes in Qc and SV during 0 G, with the highest values recorded at the first measurement, 24 h into the flight. The lowest values of Qc and SV occurred on the day of return.
...
PMID:Pulmonary diffusing capacity, capillary blood volume, and cardiac output during sustained microgravity. 837 61
The central autonomic network (CAN) is an integral component of an internal regulation system through which the brain controls visceromotor, neuroendocrine, pain, and behavioral responses essential for survival. It includes the insular cortex, amygdala, hypothalamus, periaqueductal gray matter, parabrachial complex, nucleus of the tractus solitarius, and ventrolateral medulla. Inputs to the CAN are multiple, including viscerosensory inputs relayed on the nucleus of the tractus solitarius and humoral inputs relayed through the circumventricular organs. The CAN controls preganglionic sympathetic and parasympathetic, neuroendocrine, respiratory, and sphincter motoneurons. The CAN is characterized by reciprocal interconnections, parallel organization, state-dependent activity, and neurochemical complexity. The insular cortex and amygdala mediate high-order autonomic control, and their involvement in seizures or
stroke
may produce severe cardiac arrhythmias and other autonomic manifestations. The paraventricular and other hypothalamic nuclei contain mixed neuronal populations that control specific subsets of preganglionic sympathetic and parasympathetic neurons. Hypothalamic autonomic disorders commonly produce hypothermia or hyperthermia. Hyperthermia and autonomic hyperactivity occur in patients with head trauma, hydrocephalus, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, and fatal familial insomnia. In the medulla, the nucleus of the tractus solitarius and ventrolateral medulla contain a network of respiratory, cardiovagal, and vasomotor neurons. Medullary autonomic disorders may cause orthostatic hypotension, paroxysmal hypertension, and sleep apnea. Neurologic catastrophes, such as subarachnoid hemorrhage, may produce cardiac arrhythmias, myocardial injury, hypertension, and
pulmonary edema
. Multiple system atrophy affects preganglionic autonomic, respiratory, and neuroendocrine outputs. The CAN may be critically involved in panic disorders, essential hypertension, obesity, and other medical conditions.
...
PMID:The central autonomic network: functional organization, dysfunction, and perspective. 841 66
The perioperative care, morbidity, and mortality in 30 patients with mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) are presented. They underwent a detailed preoperative assessment and were anesthetized 141 times. An intravenous induction technique was used in most patients. It was easier to see the vocal cords, during laryngoscopy, in children with Hurler syndrome (HS) when they were younger (23 v 41 months, P < or = .01) and smaller (12 v 15 kg, P < or = .05). Preoperative obstructive breathing was associated with a significantly higher incidence of postextubation obstruction (P < or = .05). A total of 28 children underwent bone marrow transplantation (BMT); this reversed upper airway obstruction and also reversed intracranial hypertension. In children with HS, the incidence of odontoid dysplasia was 94%; 38% demonstrated anterior C1-C2 subluxation. Head and neck manipulation was limited in children with cervical spine defects. None of the 30 patients experienced spinal cord morbidity. One child suffered an intraoperative
stroke
; another,
pulmonary edema
. Severe and extensive coronary obstruction was responsible for 2 intraoperative deaths. Coronary angiography underestimated coronary artery disease.
...
PMID:Children with mucopolysaccharidosis: perioperative care, morbidity, mortality, and new findings. 846 55
A trauma victim with locked-in syndrome demonstrated severely decreased bowel sounds, intact response to suppository, and elevated, but unchanging pulse. Absent cardiac response to tracheal suctioning, high gastric residual volumes, and
pulmonary edema
in response to a urecholine challenge demonstrated dysfunction in the automatic system. Symptoms persisted for 2 1/2 years until death. At autopsy, asymmetric bilateral involvement of the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus and of the nerve tract in the medulla were demonstrated. In contrast, a control subject with locked-in syndrome caused by a
stroke
did not demonstrate these phenomena. In trauma patients with delayed gastric emptying, measurement of the heart rate response to deep suctioning may lead to the diagnosis of this vagus dysfunction syndrome.
...
PMID:Clinical, physiologic, and pathologic evidence for vagus dysfunction in a case of traumatic brain injury. 860 64
Chest radiographs are frequently requested on admission of patients with a clinical diagnosis of acute
stroke
. This study assesses their value in subsequent management of these patients. A retrospective analysis of 435 patients with a clinical diagnosis of acute
stroke
was made. All admission chest radiographs were reviewed to document both radiographic quality and any radiological abnormality. In those patients with an abnormal radiograph, clinical records were reviewed to assess their impact on clinical management. Eighty-six percent of patients had a chest radiograph performed on admission. 77.5% of these films were deemed to be technically unsatisfactory, the commonest problems being positioning and suboptimal inspiration. Radiological abnormality was demonstrated in 61 patients (16.4% of radiographs obtained). Clinical management was altered in 14 of the 61 patients (3.8% of the total number of patients radiographed). Radiological abnormality was missed by the admitting clinicians in four radiographs (1 hilar mass, 2 cases of consolidation, one of
pulmonary oedema
). One abnormality not clinically suspected was recorded (multiple metastases). We conclude that admission chest radiographs in patients with an acute
stroke
are not indicated in the absence of appropriate clinical indications.
...
PMID:Is admission chest radiography of any clinical value in acute stroke patients? 868 26
To develop criteria for determining predisposition to
pulmonary edema
in patients with glomerulonephritis, clinical, laboratory and X-ray examinations were made in 697 patients with glomerulonephritis at different stages of its development. X-ray examination included chest tele X-ray and its densitometric analysis. Twenty two patients underwent computerized tomography with histographic analysis. In 106 patients, X-ray findings were compared with the volume of circulating blood, cardiac and
stroke
indices. Changes in the lungs and pleural cavities were found in 22.7%,
pulmonary edema
was revealed in 15.7% of the patients. The prognostically unfavourable criteria for the development of
pulmonary edema
were found to be Stage II pulmonary venous hypertension with hypervolemia and peripheral edemas. The densitometrically detected increase in the density of the lower lungs in patients with Stage II venous hypertension suggests early manifestations of interstitial edema of the lung and the narrowing of the histogram angle limited by its ascending and descending lines is indicative of the fact that interstitial edema progresses to alveolar one.
...
PMID:[The x-ray diagnosis of a predisposition to nephrogenic pulmonary edema in glomerulonephritis patients]. 875 10
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