Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0034063 (
pulmonary edema
)
10,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clinical studies in an acute medical unit were aimed at the analysis of the onset and clinical appearance of masked acute pneumonia. Such acute pneumonia masks as
pulmonary edema
, paroxysmal tachycardia, infective
toxic shock
, acute surgical conditions, hepatitis, pneumothorax considerably complicate the diagnosis of the underlying disease. However, some manifestations typical for acute pneumonia are recognizable. These, in combination with the above misleading symptoms, can be managed properly only provided close comprehensive examination of the patients is carried out.
...
PMID:[Masks of acute pneumonia at an emergency care unit]. 262 13
Clinical, laboratory, and pathologic findings in nine of the 12 patients who died from
toxic shock syndrome
in Minnesota are reported. All patients met the
toxic shock syndrome
case definition except for desquamation, which occurred in only one patient. Eight were menstruating and at least four were wearing tampons at the time of the acute illness. One patient was using napkins only. Noncardiogenic
pulmonary edema
was the only clinical development that could be used to predict a fatal outcome. Specific pathologic findings included various degrees of fatty metamorphosis of the liver; pronounced hemophagocytosis by reticuloendothelial macrophages; and a characteristic vaginal lesion consisting of mucosal separation beneath the basal layer with ulceration, severe vasodilatation, inflammation and thrombosis, but with minimal bacterial invasion. This vaginal lesion was noted in two tampon users, but an identical lesion was found in a menstruating patient who used only napkins.
...
PMID:Toxic shock syndrome: clinical, laboratory, and pathologic findings in nine fatal cases. 709 57
The
toxic shock syndrome
, septic shock,
pulmonary oedema
, and the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) were recognised in four children with bacterial tracheitis. ARDS has not previously been reported in association with bacterial tracheitis. Prompt recognition of the severe systemic complications of bacterial tracheitis could lead to a decrease in the morbidity and mortality of this condition.
...
PMID:Systemic complications associated with bacterial tracheitis. 878 35
In 1996, at least 149 manatees (Trichechus manatus latirostris) died in an unprecedented epizootic along the southwest coast of Florida. At about the same time, a bloom of the brevetoxin-producing dinoflagellates, Gymnodinium breve, was present in the same area. Grossly, severe nasopharyngeal, pulmonary, hepatic, renal, and cerebral congestion was present in all cases. Nasopharyngeal and
pulmonary edema
and hemorrhage were also seen. Consistent microscopic lesions consisted of catarrhal rhinitis, pulmonary hemorrhage and edema, multiorgan hemosiderosis, and nonsuppurative leptomeningitis. Immunohistochemical staining using a polyclonal primary antibody to brevetoxin (GAB) showed intense positive staining of lymphocytes and macrophages in the lung, liver, and secondary lymphoid tissues. Additionally, lymphocytes and macrophages associated with the inflammatory lesions of the nasal mucosa and meninges were also positive for brevetoxin. These findings implicate brevetoxicosis as a component of and the likely primary etiology for the epizootic. The data suggest that mortality resulting from brevetoxicosis may not necessarily be acute but may occur after chronic inhalation and/or ingestion. Immunohistochemical staining with interleukin-1-beta-converting enzyme showed positive staining with a cellular tropism similar to GAB. This suggests that brevetoxicosis may initiate apoptosis and/or the release of inflammatory mediators that culminate in fatal
toxic shock
.
...
PMID:Brevetoxicosis in manatees (Trichechus manatus latirostris) from the 1996 epizootic: gross, histologic, and immunohistochemical features. 954 68
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) can exert local damage by direct tumor cytotoxicity, by disruption of the microvasculature or by a combination of these effects. Although systemic effects after PDT of small tissue areas (< 1% total body surface area) are unlikely, treatment of larger areas may result in an accumulated effect leading to toxicity. Several investigators have described animal death after high dose PDT to tumors on the hind limb of animals and hypothesized that a
toxic shock syndrome
caused by vasoactive agents released after PDT is responsible. Because one of the most vulnerable organs to
toxic shock
injury is the lung, we studied the systemic effects of local PDT to this organ by intravital microscopy using a pulmonary window chamber. The PDT treatment conditions (25 mg/kg Photofrin, 24 h, 150 J/cm2 630 nm, maximum area 6.28 cm2) were chosen that produce systemic toxicity and lethality in rats. Adhesion of leukocytes in the lung was monitored in vivo using anti-CD-13-labeled microspheres. The progression of
pulmonary edema
was assessed by monitoring the leakage of rhodamine-labeled albumin and by wet-to-dry lung weight ratios. Although an increased leukocyte adherence was observed and a significant number of animals died after the extensive PDT treatment, no biologically significant
lung edema
could be demonstrated. These data indicate that
lung edema
and acute respiratory distress syndrome is not the cause of death in these animals and that the toxicity is related to other mechanisms including circulatory shock after extensive muscle damage.
...
PMID:Analysis of pulmonary microvasculature changes after photodynamic therapy delivered to distant sites. 1021 83
The incidence of ascites in chicks raised in a high-altitude chamber doubled from 6500 feet to 8000 feet. A similar condition developed in calves transported to pasture at high altitude. Chicks raised in a high-altitude chamber (compared to controls) produced more plasma cells in the germinal centres of the spleen about four days after an antigen challenge. Children usually suffering from a mild respiratory infection at sea level often developed
pulmonary edema
(HAPE) on transfer to high altitude. Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) victims produced more plasma cells in the germinal centers of the spleen. In one survey of SIDS, about half of the infants suffered an upper respiratory tract infection in the two weeks prior to death and the lungs were filled with fluid at autopsy. Elevated levels of hypoxanthine indicated hypoxemia before death, and a presumed response to hypoxemia in SIDS was the presence of extramedullary hematopoiesis in the liver. The effect of prolonged hypoxemia and infection are additive in increasing vascular permeability and the accumulation of edema fluid. The preferential uptake of zinc by edema fluid proteins at the expense of inflammatory cells increases the motility and metabolism of zinc-deprived activated macrophages. Activated macrophages release cytokines which in turn stimulate the release of pro-inflammatory peptides which increase vascular permeability and mortality. These inflammatory peptides are under proteolytic control. The neutral endopeptidase (NEP) is a cell-surface zinc metalloproteinase which modulates
toxic shock
.Zinc also modulates the inflammatory response of the activated macrophage. Interleukin-12 (IL-12), predominantly a product of macrophages, is involved in regulating both hematopoiesis and the adaptive immune response. IL-12 promotes interferon gamma (IFNgamma) production by T cells. IFNgamma acts on macrophages to release large amounts of nitric oxide (NO). An elevated immune response leads to NO overload, dilation of the cardiovascular system and
toxic shock
. A mechanism resulting in cardiovascular failure and a shock-like sequence is described in some cases of SIDS.Bradycardia, recorded on cardiorespiratory monitors in six SIDS infants, was considered a late event. Cytokines regulate all aspects of the immune response. Extramedullary hematopoiesis in the liver was one anatomical marker of hypoxemia in SIDS. This survey traces the function of the activated macrophage with the cytokines regulating extramedullary hematopoiesis and the precocious immune response in SIDS.
...
PMID:Sudden infant death syndrome Part 2: the response of the reticuloendothelial system to hypoxemia and infection. 1142 19
Currently available murine staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB) shock models require pretreatment with various agents to increase mouse sensitivity to SEB. This study was performed to show that C3H/HeJ mice are highly susceptible to intranasal SEB inoculation, which caused
toxic shock
without using pretreatment agents. For this purpose, mice were injected intranasally with different doses of SEB and observed for up to 1 month. The median lethal dose of SEB was determined using the probit procedure. Tissue samples were taken at different time points for histopathological examination. The LD(50) was found at 1.6 microg/g (95% fiducial limit (f.l.) 0.7 to 2.2), the LD(80) at 2.7 microg/g (95% f.l. 1.9 to 4.0) and the LD(90) at 3.6 microg/g (95% f.l. 2.7 to 6.4). Histopathologic examination revealed
pulmonary edema
and bronchopneumonia. Mucosal-associated lymphoid tissue first became activated, followed by increasing lymphocyte apoptosis and depletion. In the liver there were intralobular and portal inflammatory foci with increasing lymphocyte apoptosis and degenerative necrosis. The splenic white pulp was characterized by early activation and subsequent depletion of lymphoid follicle germinal centers. The thymus initially was activated, followed by increasing apoptosis and migration of lymphoid cells from the cortex to the medulla. The pathological features detected in the mice were similar to those of rhesus monkeys treated with SEB aerosol challenge.
...
PMID:Murine lethal toxic shock caused by intranasal administration of staphylococcal enterotoxin B. 1285 Nov 2
A 10-yr-old male gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) with a history of conspecific bite wounds was evaluated for acute onset of depression, anorexia, and right hemiparesis. The animal was immobilized for diagnostic examination and treatment for suspected
toxic shock
from a necrotizing, emphysematous wound infection, but was euthanized due to complications during recovery. Gross and histopathologic examination revealed acute necrotizing myositis, fasciitis, cellulitis, and emphysema in the affected wound area, with large numbers of large Gram-positive rods among necrotic muscle fibers. Severe
pulmonary edema
with airways containing fibrin, acute hemorrhage in multiple body sites, thrombosis in blood vessels in the skeletal muscle, liver, and lung, and lymph node hyperplasia with lymphoid necrosis and hemorrhage. Immunohistochemical fluorescent antibody staining of muscle from the wound site was positive for
...
PMID:Clostridium septicum myositis in a western lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla). 1731 73
Fatal complications of Plasmodium falciparum malaria have been reported. However, complicated P. vivax malaria is rare. We observed two unusual cases of P. vivax malaria who presented with clinical pictures of
toxic shock
. Both showed disseminated intravascular coagulation with marked thrombocytopenia, oliguric renal failure, and
pulmonary edema
. Examination of initial blood smears showed a P. vivax parasitemia of 2,352/microL and 12,376/microL, respectively. The patients were treated with hydroxychloroquine and primaquine without an antibacterial agent. These cases emphasize the importance of considering the possibility of P. vivax malarial infection in patients with a clinical picture resembling
toxic shock
if they have a travel history to malaria-endemic areas.
...
PMID:Two cases of Plasmodium vivax Malaria with the clinical picture resembling toxic shock. 1797 57
The first of this two-part series on critical illness in pregnancy dealt with obstetric disorders. In Part II, medical conditions that commonly affect pregnant women or worsen during pregnancy are discussed. ARDS occurs more frequently in pregnancy. Strategies commonly used in nonpregnant patients, including permissive hypercapnia, limits for plateau pressure, and prone positioning, may not be acceptable, especially in late pregnancy. Genital tract infections unique to pregnancy include chorioamnionitis, group A streptococcal infection causing
toxic shock syndrome
, and polymicrobial infection with streptococci, staphylococci, and Clostridium perfringens causing necrotizing vulvitis or fasciitis. Pregnancy predisposes to VTE; D-dimer levels have low specificity in pregnancy. A ventilation-perfusion scan is preferred over CT pulmonary angiography in some situations to reduce radiation to the mother's breasts. Low-molecular-weight or unfractionated heparins form the mainstay of treatment; vitamin K antagonists, oral factor Xa inhibitors, and direct thrombin inhibitors are not recommended in pregnancy. The physiologic hyperdynamic circulation in pregnancy worsens many cardiovascular disorders. It increases risk of
pulmonary edema
or arrhythmias in mitral stenosis, heart failure in pulmonary hypertension or aortic stenosis, aortic dissection in Marfan syndrome, or valve thrombosis in mechanical heart valves. Common neurologic problems in pregnancy include seizures, altered mental status, visual symptoms, and strokes. Other common conditions discussed are aspiration of gastric contents, OSA, thyroid disorders, diabetic ketoacidosis, and cardiopulmonary arrest in pregnancy. Studies confined to pregnant women are available for only a few of these conditions. We have, therefore, reviewed pregnancy-specific adjustments in the management of these disorders.
...
PMID:Critical Illness in Pregnancy: Part II: Common Medical Conditions Complicating Pregnancy and Puerperium. 2602 Jul 27
1