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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (
pulmonary edema
)
10,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twelve cases of severe altitude illness are reported in which the neurological signs and symptoms dominated the clinical picture.
Pulmonary oedema
, retinal haemorrhage,
thrombophlebitis
and pulmonary embolism, bronchopneumonia, and coronary-artery disease were also present in several of the patients but the primary problem seems to have been cerebral oedema. Other published cases support this impression. Patients who were returned to low altitude early in the disease fared well; two patients died, and in both cases evacuation had been delayed. The most effective prevention lies in slow ascent, though in one case reported here the rate of climb was well within the recommended limit. Recommended management is rapid descent to low altitude at earliest indication of cerebral or
pulmonary oedema
, intravenous dexamethasone or betamethasone in large doses, hydration, diuresis (frusemide has been most used), and perhaps other intravenous therapy with hyperosmolar materials such as mannitol, urea, 50% saline, or 50% sucrose. Prognosis is good if descent and treatment are started early, but permanent damage may be anticipated if the patient is unconscious for any prolonged period before descent.
...
PMID:Cerebral form of high-altitude illness. 5 82
Cardiac diseases of cattle may involve valvular structures, myocardium, pericardium, or blood vessels and are manifested by the clinical signs of cardiac dysrhythmias, cardiac murmurs, generalized edema, muffled heart sounds, jugular venous distention, jugular venous pulsations,
pulmonary edema
, pleural effusion, or ascites. Digoxin, quinidine, and furosemide can be used effectively to control signs of CHF and cardiac arrhythmias. Combination antimicrobial therapy can be successful for cows with infective endocarditis and
thrombophlebitis
. Pericardial fluid drainage may temporarily improve cattle with traumatic pericarditis or lymphosarcoma so that short-term goals may be reached.
...
PMID:Treatment of cardiovascular disease in cattle. 176 Jul 59
A blood transfusion is a special kind of transplantation, with the transfer of living tissue from one person to another. Reactions can occur with as little as 10 to 15 ml of incompatible blood. The onset of a reaction may be misleading or delayed, and its detection requires astute assessment. Responsibility for recognition of a transfusion reaction lies with the transfusionist, who is often a nurse. The following types of response can occur: hemolytic reactions, transfusion-induced graft-versus-host disease, hemoglobinuria, purpura, fever, circulatory overload,
thrombophlebitis
, urticaria, hyperkalemia, asymptomatic hemoglobinuria,
pulmonary edema
, and allergic and anaphylactic reactions. Critical care nurses need to be aware of the dangers of blood and blood product transfusions and to be prepared to react quickly.
...
PMID:Common reactions to transfusions. 189 31
Victims of high-altitude
pulmonary edema
often have clots obstructing the pulmonary vessels. This, together with an apparent high incidence of
thrombophlebitis
and cerebral emboli at altitude suggests that mountain travel may predispose to hypercoagulability. A critical analysis of the available data suggests that, although thrombosis may be a late event complicating various forms of mountain sickness, the laboratory techniques of characterizing hypercoagulability are not sufficient to define and characterize the mechanism.
...
PMID:Thrombosis at mountain altitudes. 368 76
Altitude illness, caused by lack of oxygen, manifests itself in several forms, including acute mountain sickness, high-altitude
pulmonary edema
, and high-altitude cerebral edema. The first of these is usually minor, but the second and third can be fatal unless promptly diagnosed and treated (descent being the most effective management). Other, more specific, problems such as high-altitude retinal hemorrhage and
thrombophlebitis
can also occur in some individuals. Even so, there are only a few medical reasons to deprive an ambulatory, well-compensated patient of a visit to moderate altitude, and the conscientious physician will weigh carefully the risks against the benefits of a vacation in a beautiful and inspiring mountain setting.
...
PMID:Altitude illness. The dangers of the heights and how to avoid them. 686 64
Fifty-one patients underwent emergency cervical cerclage using Shirodkar or McDonald suture for incompetent cervix diagnosed during pregnancy. Fifteen patients had only sonographic evidence of cervical incompetence (group I). Eighteen patients had cervical dilation of less than 3 cm (group II), and 18 patients had cervical dilation of 3 cm or more (group III). Perinatal mortality was 0%, 50%, and 55.6%, respectively. The median length of time gained with the cerclage was 16 weeks in group I, 1.8 weeks in group II, and 1 week in group III. Twelve infants required prolonged stay in the neonatal intensive care nursery because of prematurity. Six of 30 surviving infants had some abnormal physical findings at the time of initial discharge from the nursery. Premature rupture of membranes was the most common perioperative and postoperative complication. Chorioamnionitis developed in 17 of the 51 cases. Maternal complications included cervicovaginal fistula, deep vein
thrombophlebitis
, and
pulmonary edema
.
...
PMID:Emergency cervical cerclage: a retrospective review of 51 cases. 824 May 89
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
The study was conducted in 35 cases of acute tubular necrosis of varied aetiology. Cases were divided in 2 groups, Group A--17 cases treated conservatively and Group B--18 cases managed by early haemodialysis. Criteria for early haemodialysis were blood urea < 120 mg% and serum creatinine < 7 mg%. Before starting therapy both the groups had comparable biochemical and renal parameters (p > 0.05). Overall mortality was lower in Group B as compared to Group A (22.2% Vs 29.4). Complication events such as uraemic encephalopathy,
pulmonary oedema
, haematemesis and malena,
thrombophlebitis
and vomiting were significantly lower in Group B (p < 0.05). Hospital stay was also significantly lower (p < 0.05) in Group B (18 +/- 2.5 days Vs 28 +/- 3 days), this can reduce the cost of treatment also.
...
PMID:Early haemodialysis in acute tubular necrosis. 1122 83
We report an unusual case of delayed death due to sepsis following closed blunt injury to the neck. The victim was a 71-year-old male with a clinical history of hypertension, diabetes and gout. He was found dead about three weeks after being assaulted. He had not consulted a hospital after the assault. Forensic autopsy demonstrated a large liquefied subcutaneous hematoma on the right side of the neck, peri- and
thrombophlebitis
of the right internal jugular vein. Otherwise, there was no evidence of trauma. Histological examination showed dermal vesicles in the skin covering the hematoma, accompanied by marked inflammatory cell infiltration phagocytosing gram-positive streptococci, subcutaneous edema, panphlebitis with partially organized thrombi and bacterial colonies,
pulmonary edema
and multiple pulmonary microthrombi involving bacterial aggregates. Postmortem serum C-reactive protein and neopterin levels were markedly elevated. These findings suggest sepsis as the cause of death, induced by infected internal jugular vein
thrombophlebitis
following blunt neck injury involving impaired skin barrier.
...
PMID:An autopsy case of internal jugular vein thrombophlebitis involving sepsis following blunt neck injury. 1820 29
Pulmonary embolism in children is a rare condition, associated with high mortality. Clinical presentation is nonspecific. Pulmonary embolism may present initially similar to bacterial endocarditis of the right heart, septic
thrombophlebitis
, or osteomyelitis. We report the case of a 6-year-old girl who had dyspnea over the four months before consultation, complicated three months later by hemoptysis. She was diagnosed with subacute bacterial endocarditis secondary to group D Streptococcus, developed upon a ventricular septal defect. Two weeks later, the child had sudden chest pain and tachypnea. Lung scintigraphy showed multiple pulmonary embolisms. The therapeutic approach was to continue antibiotics without anticoagulant treatment. The outcome was favorable with apyrexia and stabilization on the respiratory level. Pulmonary embolism is a rare disease in children with an incidence of 3.7%. Classically, it presents with fever, hemoptysis, and nonspecific infiltrates on chest X-ray. These signs were noted in our patient, although the infiltrates on the chest X-ray were hidden by the
pulmonary edema
associated with heart failure. The persistence of these left basal opacities after antidiuretic treatment suggested an infectious origin. Subsequently, lung scintigraphy showed that it was a pulmonary infarct. The therapy of septic pulmonary embolism is the same as that for infective endocarditis. Antibiotic treatment alone was maintained without anticoagulants because of the high risk of bleeding at the seat of the pulmonary embolism and the insubstantial significant benefit of this therapy. Pulmonary embolism in children is a rare disease, but its incidence is underestimated. Better knowledge on its actual impact and etiologies in children is necessary. Multicenter studies are needed to establish recommendations.
...
PMID:[Multiple pulmonary emboli complicating infective endocarditis in a child with congenital heart disease]. 2572 70
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