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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (
pulmonary edema
)
10,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Open heart surgery was performed without perfusion under deep hypothermia in 343 patients with congenital heart defects aged from 1 year 3 months to 44 years. Cooling to a temperature of 26-25 degrees C in the oesophagus was achieved by covering the body with crushed ice. The patients were maintained under superficial ether narcosis and they were given morphine (0.5 mg/kg) and tubocurarine (0.5-1.0 mg/kg). The duration of circulatory arrest was 30 minutes in 190 and longer in 153 patients--60-77 minutes in 10 patients. It took an average of 7.6 minutes for resumption of normal cardiac activity after circulatory arrest prolonged beyond 60 minutes. Of the 343 patients operated on 32 (9.3%) died. Analysis of the mortality pattern showed that patients with acute cardiac insufficiency contributed most to the total number of deaths (19 patients, 5.5%); those with
pulmonary oedema
ranked second (4 patients, 1.2%) and those with brain oedema third (3 patients, 0.9%). Neurological complications were observed in 13 patients (3.8%). Their frequency was significantly related to the duration of circulatory arrest. Circulatory inadequacy in patients with poor myocardial function who had undergone extensive repair appeared to be a contributory factor. The results obtained without perfusion under deep (26-25 degrees C) hypothermic protection suggest that 75 minutes is a safe time, in terms of brain damage, for circulatory arrest. Under these conditions complex cardiac defects can be repaired.
Thorax
1988 Mar
PMID:Hypothermic protection (26-25 degrees C) without perfusion cooling for surgery of congenital cardiac defects using prolonged occlusion. 340 6
The occurrence of
pulmonary oedema
was studied retrospectively in 243 patients who underwent pneumonectomy in one hospital from 1975 to 1984.
Pulmonary oedema
developed in eight of 113 patients who had a right sided pneumonectomy and in three of 130 patients undergoing a left sided procedure. It occurred more commonly in patients requiring a second thoracotomy because of blood loss (in three out of seven patients). There were no significant differences preoperatively in pulmonary function, lung perfusion scans, or cardiovascular condition between patients who subsequently developed
pulmonary oedema
and those who did not. Postoperative fluid balance was significantly more positive in patients developing
pulmonary oedema
than in those not developing oedema. Thus
pulmonary oedema
was associated with right sided pneumonectomy, repeat thoracotomy, and more positive fluid balance.
Thorax
1988 Apr
PMID:Postpneumonectomy pulmonary oedema. 233 May 59
The thermal dye double indicator dilution technique for estimating lung water was compared with gravimetric analyses in nine human subjects who were organ donors. As observed in animal studies, the thermal dye measurement of extravascular thermal volume (EVTV) consistently overestimated gravimetric extravascular lung water (EVLW), the mean (SEM) difference being 3.43 (0.59) ml/kg. In eight of the nine subjects the EVTV -3.43 ml/kg would yield an estimate of EVLW that would be from 3.23 ml/kg under to 3.37 ml/kg over the actual value EVLW at the 95% confidence limits. Reproducibility, assessed with the standard error of the mean percentage, suggested that a 15% change in EVTV can be reliably detected with repeated measurements. One subject was excluded from analysis because the EVTV measurement grossly underestimated its actual EVLW. This error was associated with regional injury observed on gross examination of the lung. Experimental and clinical evidence suggest that the thermal dye measurement provides a reliable estimate of lung water in diffuse
pulmonary oedema
states.
Thorax
1987 Jan
PMID:Thermal dye double indicator dilution measurement of lung water in man: comparison with gravimetric measurements. 361 74
Thirteen patients with renal failure and
pulmonary oedema
were assessed for evidence of increased pulmonary vascular permeability to protein by a double isotope technique. Comparison was made with 10 patients with cardiogenic
pulmonary oedema
, 11 healthy volunteers, and 10 patients with the adult respiratory distress syndrome. There was no significant difference in the accumulation of a radiolabelled plasma protein (transferrin) in patients with renal or cardiogenic
pulmonary oedema
and normal volunteers. Patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome showed significantly greater protein permeability (p less than 0.001). In
pulmonary oedema
associated with renal failure managed by current regimens there was no evidence of increased permeability to transferrin.
Thorax
1987 Aug
PMID:Pulmonary vascular permeability to transferrin in the pulmonary oedema of renal failure. 366 Mar 15
In three cases of pulmonary tuberculosis associated with the adult respiratory distress syndrome the clinical features, which were similar to those of patients with miliary tuberculosis and adult respiratory distress syndrome, included a history of cough, fever, and dyspnoea on effort, and the physical signs of fever, tachypnoea, pulmonary adventitious sounds, tachycardia, and hepatomegaly. In these cases the radiological features, though suggestive of diffuse
pulmonary oedema
, were more prominent on the side in which the cavitatory lesion appeared. The diagnosis of tuberculosis was made easily from direct examination of sputum. Despite early ventilatory support and antituberculous therapy, two of the three patients died. Postmortem examination of the lungs in these cases showed evidence of acute alveolar damage (loss of type 1 pneumocytes and the presence of hyaline membranes within alveolar ducts) and of chronic alveolar damage (interstitial and alveolar fibrosis).
Thorax
1984 May
PMID:The adult respiratory distress syndrome bronchogenic pulmonary tuberculosis. 674 May 41
The thickness of the media of pulmonary veins and arteries was morphometrically assessed in 12 normal adults resident at altitudes over 3000 m and 12 resident at sea level. The pulmonary veins in the latter group were very thin walled. The average thickness of the pulmonary venous media in the group of highlanders was significantly thicker but this appeared to be due to prominent medial hypertrophy in seven individuals, five others having normal or near-normal pulmonary veins. In six of the 12 highlanders bundles of longitudinal smooth muscle cells occurred in the venous intima. There was close correlation between the thickness of the venous and that of the arterial media, suggesting an individual reactivity with a simultaneous response of all pulmonary vascular smooth muscle to high-altitude hypoxia. Hypertrophy of the media of pulmonary veins is likely to be an expression of venoconstriction and narrowing of the venous lumen may be enhanced by the development of longitudinal smooth muscle cells in the intima. Possibly venoconstriction is one of the factors responsible for high-altitude
pulmonary oedema
.
Thorax
1982 Dec
PMID:Pulmonary veins in high-altitude residents: a morphometric study. 717 Jun 83
Pulmonary oedema
lasting six days occurred in a 68 year old man after sniffing cocaine. He also had evidence of parenteral self-administration of heroin. Pulmonary microvascular filtration pressure and permeability were normal. Delayed resolution of the
pulmonary oedema
may have been caused by a cocaine-induced impairment of sodium and thus fluid transport across alveolar epithelium. Recognition may be important, since lowering filtration pressure with diuretics may not hasten resolution of oedema.
Thorax
1994 Oct
PMID:Delayed resolution of pulmonary oedema after cocaine/heroin abuse. 797 2
A case of high altitude
pulmonary oedema
(HAPE) in a climber who made a rapid ascent on Mt McKinley (Denali), Alaska is described. The bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid contained increased numbers of red blood cells and an abundance of haemosiderin laden macrophages consistent with alveolar haemorrhage. The timing of this finding indicates that alveolar haemorrhage began early during the ascent, well before the onset of symptoms. Although evidence of alveolar haemorrhage has been reported at necropsy in individuals dying of HAPE, previous reports have not shown the same abundance of haemosiderin laden macrophages in the BAL fluid. These findings suggest that alveolar haemorrhage is an early event in HAPE.
Thorax
2000 Feb
PMID:Alveolar haemorrhage in a case of high altitude pulmonary oedema. 1063 37
Pulmonary veno-occlusive disease (PVOD) is a disorder which causes progressive pulmonary hypertension, usually presenting with worsening dyspnoea and right heart failure.
Pulmonary oedema
induced by pulmonary vasodilator therapy to reduce pulmonary arterial pressure has been well described in PVOD, but here we describe a case of PVOD presenting with recurrent episodes of acute non-cardiogenic
pulmonary oedema
, in the absence of significant pulmonary hypertension. Concern over the risk of precipitating
pulmonary oedema
led us to use inhaled nitric oxide to predict the safety and efficacy of sildenafil.
Thorax
2008 Oct
PMID:Pulmonary veno-occlusive disease presenting with recurrent pulmonary oedema and the use of nitric oxide to predict response to sildenafil. 1882 Jan 20
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