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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (
pulmonary edema
)
10,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this study was to examine the in vivo effects of acute exposure to a cadmium chloride aerosol on the activity of pulmonary enzymes and selected physiologic parameters that are altered by exposure to oxidant agents. Male rats were exposed for 1 hour to 0.5 per cent aerosol of cadmium chloride. At 1,5, and 11 days after exposure to cadmium chloride, exposed rats compared to control rats (data expressed as per cent of control values) had lung-to-body weight ratios of 192, 174, and 140 per cent; lung glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activities of 90, 107, and 135 per cent; lung superoxide dismutase activities of 96, 101, and 132 per cent; tidal volumes of 62, 63, and 89 per cent; respiratory frequencies of 170, 145, and 108 per cent; and lung weight-specific static deflation volumes at 30 cm water of 30, 13, and 31 per cent. A zero-order clearance of cadmium from whole lung was observed, with a half-time of 27.4 days. Light microscopic examination of lung tissue revealed initial
pulmonary edema
on day 1 that progressed to
interstitial pneumonitis
on day 5, with some recovery by 11 days after exposure. The cadmium induced biochemical, physiologic, and pathologic alterations were similar to the responses observed in lungs of rats exposed to a wide variety of pulmonary irritants; thus, the changes observed may represent a nonspecific response to tissue injury.
...
PMID:Biochemical and physiologic changes in lungs of rats exposed to a cadmium chloride aerosol. 21 68
Observations of 20 consecutive bone marrow transplantation recipients disclosed two distinctive categories of pulmonary interstitial changes. Interstitial infiltrates occurring less than 14 days after transplantation were observed in 13 of 20 patients and are believed to represent
pulmonary edema
. A late pulmonary interstitial process, which appears more than 30 days following transplantation (median 57 days), was encountered in 10 of 14 patients with successful grafts; the late changes represent
interstitial pneumonia
, a common cause of morbidity and mortality following bone marrow transplantation. It is probably attributable to a combination of factors including the preparatory chemotherapy and radiotherapy, and delayed immunologic reconstitution following transplantation.
...
PMID:Pulmonary interstitial changes following bone marrow transplantation. 22 46
The effects of oxides of nitrogen inhalation are reported in a 21-year-old gardener exposed to silage gas. Initial nausea, cough and fever remitted, but respiratory failure developed 3 weeks later. Roentgenograms and lung function studies revealed
pulmonary edema
, volume restriction, and severely impaired gas exchange. Needle biopsy showed a nonspecific
interstitial pneumonia
. With steroid therapy all functional parameters except diffusing capacity returned to normal. Failure to inquire about non-occupational activities led to delayed diagnosis. A brief review of toxic effects of nitrogen oxides is presented.
...
PMID:Silo-Filler's disease. 111 73
mRNA from lungs of mice exposed to high-dose oxygen (greater than 95%) for 3 days demonstrated increased expression of the genes for tumor necrosis factor (TNF), interleukin-1, and interleukin-6 compared with mRNA from lungs of mice exposed to room air. Daily treatment of mice exposed to high-dose oxygen with an antibody to TNF improved survival compared with mice receiving a similar dose of control immunoglobulin G. Pretreatment of mice with repetitive sublethal intraperitoneal doses of recombinant human TNF for 3 days or a single intravenous dose followed by exposure to high-dose oxygen afforded a significant survival advantage compared with high-dose oxygen-exposed mice pretreated with vehicle or interleukin-1. The repetitive intraperitoneal TNF pretreatment reduced the development of
interstitial pneumonitis
,
pulmonary edema
, and lung weight gain associated with oxygen toxicity and enhanced expression of the gene for the free radical protective enzyme manganous superoxide dismutase in lung tissue, a gene that is augmented as mice are exposed to high-dose oxygen. Furthermore a single intravenous dose of TNF 24 h after oxygen exposure was still protective. The results suggest that the toxicity of oxygen therapy can be partially ameliorated by either treatment with anti-TNF antibody or pretreatment and early treatment with TNF. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that oxygen exposure induces TNF, which causes part of the toxicity of high-dose oxygen, and that pretreatment or early treatment with TNF induces the gene for an enzyme that recently has been shown to be very effective in protecting mice from the toxicity of oxygen.
...
PMID:Role of tumor necrosis factor in oxygen toxicity. 160 98
Several respiratory complications have been described in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC), and are the subject of this review. Involvement of the bronchial tree is the most frequent of them. Chronic bronchitis (16 patients) and bilateral bronchiectasis (16 patients) are responsible for chronic disabling bronchial suppuration. Symptoms related to the bronchial disease most often develop in patients in whom the diagnosis of ulcerative colitis is already established (88% of cases). Occurrence before the diagnosis of UC is possible, but unusual. Bronchial involvement can develop in patients whose UC is in complete remission, or who have undergone coloproctectomy up to several years earlier. Impressive improvement of cough and sputum production commonly occur following inhaled steroids. This is of great diagnostic and therapeutic significance. Other complications include subacute asphyxiating tracheal obstruction due to intralumenal inflammatory overgrowth (1 patient), small airways disease and panbronchiolitis (2 patients), BOOP (4 patients), pulmonary angiitis (6 patients), desquamative
interstitial pneumonitis
and granulomatosis (2 and 3 patients respectively), biapical pulmonary infiltrates (2 patients) and serositis. In addition, UC patients can develop less specific pulmonary problems such as
pulmonary edema
, pulmonary embolism and sulfasalazopyridine-induced pneumonitis and fibrosis.
...
PMID:[Respiratory manifestations of hemorrhagic rectocolitis]. 176 14
Infectious and malignant disease processes are responsible for most pulmonary abnormalities seen in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). There are, however, a number of noninfectious and nonmalignant disorders that can involve the lungs of these individuals. Nonspecific
interstitial pneumonitis
and lymphocytic
interstitial pneumonitis
may mimic opportunistic infections both clinically and radiographically. Congestive cardiomyopathy may develop and result in
pulmonary edema
. Other disorders such as alveolar proteinosis and desquamative
interstitial pneumonitis
are also reported. Bronchoalveolar lavage, a diagnostic technique frequently employed in AIDS patients, may itself produce pulmonary opacities. Knowledge of these disorders may aid in the evaluation of AIDS patients for whom an infectious etiology for pulmonary abnormalities cannot be found.
...
PMID:Noninfectious and nonmalignant pulmonary disease in AIDS. 194 99
This report describes a 28-yr-old patient with pulmonary veno-occlusive disease (PVOD). She presented with pulmonary hypertension, hypoxemia, and
interstitial pneumonitis
. We report the discordance between the response of her hypoxemia and
interstitial pneumonitis
, which resolved with corticosteroid therapy, and her progressive pulmonary hypertension, which caused fatal right heart failure. This report emphasizes that the radiographic interstitial shadowing of PVOD may be caused by either (1) an inflammatory
interstitial pneumonitis
(which may be responsive to anti-inflammatory therapy) or (2) interstitial
pulmonary edema
, or both.
...
PMID:Pulmonary veno-occlusive disease. Fatal progression of pulmonary hypertension despite steroid-induced remission of interstitial pneumonitis. 202 25
The type of lung disease caused by metal compounds depends on the nature of the offending agent, its physicochemical form, the dose, exposure conditions and host factors. The fumes or gaseous forms of several metals, e.g. cadmium (Cd), manganese (Mn), mercury (Hg), nickel carbonyl (Nl(CO)4, zinc chloride (ZnCl2), vanadium pentoxide (V2O5), may lead to acute chemical pneumonitis and
pulmonary oedema
or to acute tracheobronchitis. Metal fume fever, which may follow the inhalation of metal fumes e.g. zinc (Zn), copper (Cu) and many others, is a poorly understood influenza-like reaction, accompanied by an acute self-limiting neutrophil alveolitis. Chronic obstructive lung disease may result from occupational exposure to mineral dusts, including probably some metallic dusts, or from jobs involving the working of metal compounds, such as welding. Exposure to cadmium may lead to emphysema. Bronchial asthma may be caused by complex platinum salts, nickel, chromium or cobalt, presumably on the basis of allergic sensitization. The cause of asthma in aluminium workers is unknown. It is remarkable that asthma induced by nickel (Ni) or chromium (Cr) is apparently infrequent, considering their potency and frequent involvement as dermal sensitizers. Metallic dusts deposited in the lung may give rise to pulmonary fibrosis and functional impairment, depending on the fibrogenic potential of the agent and on poorly understood host factors. Inhalation of iron compounds causes siderosis, a pneumoconiosis with little or no fibrosis. Hard metal lung disease is a fibrosis characterized by desquamative and giant cell
interstitial pneumonitis
and is probably caused by cobalt, since a similar disease has been observed in workers exposed to cobalt in the absence of tungsten carbide. Chronic beryllium disease is a fibrosis with sarcoid-like epitheloid granulomas and is presumably due to a cell-mediated immune response to beryllium. Such a mechanism may be responsible for the pulmonary fibrosis occasionally found in subjects exposed to other metals e.g. aluminium (Al), titanium (Ti), rare earths. The proportion of lung cancer attributable to occupation is around 15%, with exposure to metals being frequently incriminated. Underground mining of e.g. uranium or iron is associated with a high incidence of lung cancer, as a result of exposure to radon. At least some forms of arsenic, chromium and nickel are well established lung carcinogens in humans. There is also evidence for increased lung cancer mortality in cadmium workers and in iron or steel workers.
...
PMID:Metal toxicity and the respiratory tract. 217 66
An 81-year-old woman had chills, fever, nausea, vomiting, and epigastric pain. On day 3 she had hematuria and was treated with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. On day 5 she had a cough, hypotension, anemia, azotemia, and elevated hepatic enzyme levels. Her condition deteriorated with thrombocytopenia, anuria requiring dialysis, edema, and hypoalbuminemia. Treatment with chloramphenicol and doxycycline was started on day 10. By day 11, she was in hypotensive shock; on day 12 she had seizures and died. Murine typhus was diagnosed by demonstration of antibodies to Rickettsia typhi by indirect immunofluorescence. Necropsy revealed
interstitial pneumonia
,
pulmonary edema
, hyaline membranes, alveolar hemorrhages, petechiae and vasculitis in the central nervous system, interstitial myocarditis, multifocal interstitial nephritis and hemorrhages, splenomegaly, portal triaditis, and mucosal hemorrhages in urinary tract. Immunofluorescent R. typhi were demonstrated in the lungs, brain, kidneys, liver, and heart. This unusual death occurred in an elderly patient without rash who was treated too late with antirickettsial drugs.
...
PMID:Histopathology and immunohistologic demonstration of the distribution of Rickettsia typhi in fatal murine typhus. 249 81
113 lung specimens from rats and mice were observed under both LM and TEM, after inhalation of gonidiospores of Beauveria bassiana for 18 months 78.8% of the 113 cases developed chronic
interstitial pneumonia
(IP). There were desquamative pneumonitis mainly with macrophage; granuloma with multinucleate giant cells or fibrosis, and localized
pulmonary edema
. These lesions were firstly described to be caused by the spores here. It was considered that IF lesions might be related to types III, IV hypersensitivity reaction. The authors emphasized that these lesions might be similar to those observed in farmer's lung or extrinsic allergic alveolitis (EAA).
...
PMID:[Experimental study on farmer's lung-like lesions caused by Beauveria bassiana]. 258 46
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