Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (pulmonary edema)
10,665 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The incidence of severe falciparum malaria is increasing in the developed countries and mortality remains high despite progress in intensive care management and schizonticide treatment. Many authors emphasize the importance of exchange transfusion (EXT) in the most severe cases. We studied 21 cases (34 +/- 12 years, 6 females; SAPS: 8.4 +/- 3.7) of severe malaria (according to WHO criteria) consecutively admitted to ICU between 1985 and 1990: 3 patients underwent EXT. Twenty were febrile above 39 degrees C, 10 had cerebral malaria, 14 hepatic impairment, 8 acute renal failure, 5 pulmonary oedema. Nine patients required mechanical ventilation, 1 haemodialysis, 1 intracranial pressure monitoring. Mean parasitemia was 13%, 16 patients had thrombocytopenia less than 50 x 10(9)/l, 3 anemia less than 7 g/dl and 3 leucopenia less than 2.8 x 10(9)/l. Nineteen received quinine i.v., 1 mefloquine, 1 chloroquine. Sixteen patients received blood products transfusion, 3 were treated by EXT in addition. Twenty were cured and discharged from hospital without sequelae (mean stay: 14 days); 4 had nosocomial infection, 1 a splenic infarction. One patient (17-years-old; SAPS: 17; parasitemia: 7.8%) died 12 h after admission from non-cardiogenic pulmonary oedema with multi-organ failure. The literature and this study lead us to propose EXT in patients with unfavourable evolution after conventional treatment rather than in all the patients with a parasitemia above 10% at admission. A randomized study to compare conventional treatment in ICU with or without EXT is necessary.
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PMID:Severe falciparum malaria (21 cases). 179 87

Severe and complicated malaria is a fatal from a human Plasmodium falciparum infection. In clinical practice cerebral malaria in children, with unrousable coma, hyperthermia, generalized convulsions, frequently hypoglycemia, is different of severe in non immunized adults resulting in multiple organ failure with degree of impaired consciousness less important. Specific treatment requires quinine with loading dose: 16.7 mg/kg then 8.3 mg/kg every 8 hours for 7 days. Symptomatic therapy, artificial ventilation in particular is indispensable. Recovery is usual in children although neurological sequelae are frequent. In adults evolution is often complicated with pulmonary edema, aggravation of coma, nosocomial infection, and sometimes late multiple organ failure.
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PMID:[Severe malaria in Black Africa]. 184 75

The main management's characteristics of the pulmonary contusion in the trauma patients are explained. From possible alveolocapillary membrane's injuries, with consideration of worsening evolution (ARDS, nosocomial infection, MOF), main points of discussion are circulation and mechanical ventilation. For the most severely injured, invasive monitoring is necessary, including the oxygenation parameters we now can dispose of. Quantification of extravascular lung water is an original and valuable tool to determine the time course and amount of pulmonary oedema. There is no ideal mode of ventilation but the basic ventilatory patterns must be adjusted; a target is the reduction of time requirement for ventilatory support.
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PMID:[Lung contusion in the multiple trauma patient]. 856 77

Cardiac involvement in legionella infection is rare but it is the most common extra-pulmonary complication. It usually takes the form of pericarditis, but a case of legionella myoparicarditis with global left ventricular hypokinesia on echocardiography has been described. The authors report a case of myopericarditis with massive pulmonary oedema and respiratory distress which regressed clinically and on echocardiography with reduction in chamber dilatation and complete recovery of left ventricular function. Legionellosis was confirmed on serology. The infection was probably contracted during a previous hospital admission, therefore, probably a nosocomial infection. Following the description of this case, a review of the literature is proposed.
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PMID:[Legionella myopericarditis]. 1100 78