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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (pulmonary edema)
10,665 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two characteristics, volatility and biotransformation, make mercury somewhat unique as environmental toxicant, and make mercury poisoning as one of occupational diseases in the industry. Acute mercury vapor poisoning is a rare event. It often occurs during industrial accident or ignorant experiment. We report a case, a 28-year-old male waterworks technician, who developed dyspnea, cough, chest pain, metallic taste and ache in the whole body three hours after heating approximately 30 ml of liquid mercury during an experiment. Diarrhea with tarry stool occurred the next day. Chest roentgenogram revealed diffuse pulmonary infiltrates similar to pulmonary edema in both lungs, and was complicated by pneumomediastinum and subcutaneous emphysema later. The concentration of mercury in the plasma was over the toxic level. The urinary excretion of mercury greatly exceeded normal value. During hospitalization, the patient's liver and renal function tests were both normal. He was treated with penicillamine, 300 mg every six hours orally for 10 days in addition to a support treatment and oxygen therapy. He was discharged on the 15th hospital day with partial resolution of pulmonary infiltrates and was free of symptom.
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PMID:[Acute pneumonitis caused by inhalation of mercury vapor--report of a case]. 276 70

Hypertensive emergencies usually present to the emergency department. Nifedipine was administered to 15 patients presenting to the emergency department with a diastolic blood pressure greater than 120 mm Hg with chest pain, shortness of breath, or focal neurological symptoms. Average blood pressure on entry was 215/134.9 mm Hg and decreased to 158/88 mm Hg over a two-hour period. No patient had any worsening of symptoms or suffered deleterious effects. All patients with pulmonary edema or chest pain noted prompt improvement in symptoms. One patient became hypotensive without clinical significance. Two patients failed to respond to nifedipine and were treated with nitroprusside. Nifedipine appears to be safe and effective in the management of hypertensive crises.
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PMID:Nifedipine in hypertensive emergencies: a prospective study. 332 99

In a consecutive series of 2312 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) admitted from 1973 till 1979, 188 were 80 years or older (group III). They were compared with 1167 patients younger than 65 years (group I) and 957 aged 65 to 79 years (group II). The sex ratio (males/females) fell from 5.46 in group I to 0.9 in group III. Group III patients had more frequently a history of previous heart failure and more often atypical or no chest pain before admission. Less group III patients were admitted within 4 hours after onset of symptoms, but the incidence of heart failure, pulmonary edema and cardiogenic shock on admission and during CCU stay was definitely higher than in younger patients. Atrial arrhythmias, 2nd and 3rd degree atrioventricular block, complete bundle branch block and intraventricular conduction disturbances occurred more frequently in group III. The electrocardiographic extent and location of the infarction and peak enzyme levels were similar in the three groups. Mortality in group III was 43.6% at the 28th day and 76.6% at one year after AMI. At different intervals after the onset of AMI mortality increased progressively from group I to III. Age by itself, probably on the basis of definite structural changes of the heart and of other organs occurring during aging, leads to higher early and late mortality in very elderly people.
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PMID:Acute myocardial infarction in the very elderly. A comparison with younger age groups. 349 69

The clinical and autopsy records of 65 patients with either polymyositis (24) or dermatomyositis (41) and pulmonary disease were reviewed. Pulmonary symptoms were recorded in 43 of the cases and included dyspnoea in 31, cough in 23, and chest pain in six. Interstitial lung disease was noted at autopsy in 27 patients; almost half of these had arthritis. Bronchopneumonia was found in 35 patients, 31 of these had received prednisone. Dysphagia was present in a similar proportion of patients with and without pneumonia. Pulmonary vasculitis was seen in five patients; pulmonary symptoms, arthritis, and raised erythrocyte sedimentation rate were present in four of these cases and all five had associated interstitial lung disease. Other pulmonary manifestations included pulmonary oedema, primary pulmonary malignancy, diffuse alveolar damage, fibrinous pleuritis, pulmonary emboli, and diaphragmatic atrophy. The mean survival after disease onset was 29 months but was much less for those with interstitial lung disease and pulmonary vasculitis.
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PMID:Pulmonary disease in polymyositis/dermatomyositis: a clinicopathological analysis of 65 autopsy cases. 381 71

Coronary care units (CCUs) have now been in use for 20 years, and it is generally acknowledged that they have helped to reduce hospital mortality for patients with acute myocardial infarction. In recent years the indications for admission to a CCU have been greatly expanded to include all patients with suspected myocardial infarction and a variety of other manifestations of cardiovascular disease including primary arrhythmias and heart failure. The focus of the CCU has also broadened to include the prevention of major complications and the use of a variety of invasive and noninvasive diagnostic and therapeutic interventions before, as well as in response to, complications. With the changing indications for CCU admissions and the changing use of the CCU, new problems have arisen. The number of patients who might benefit from CCU care is now much larger and may at any given time greatly exceed the number of beds available. Decisions regarding who should be admitted to the CCU, how long a patient should stay in the CCU and which of the large and growing armamentarium of diagnostic and therapeutic interventions should be used are now increasingly important. These decisions have not only medical but also economic implications. Based on a 5-year experience with an intensive care unit computer data bank, strategies for more cost-effective CCU use have been explored. This has involved identification of high- and low-risk subsets of patients and modifications of standard operating procedures. The common clinical problems of chest pain, arrhythmias, syncope, pulmonary edema and myocardial infarction will be used as examples.
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PMID:Making the coronary care unit cost-effective. 392 96

A hypertensive urgency should be distinguished from a hypertensive emergency. Although the distinction may not always be obvious, certain guidelines may help the clinician determine which therapeutic approaches are most appropriate for each patient. Hypertensive emergencies include those conditions in which new or progressive severe end-organ damage is present and a delay in appropriate therapy might result in permanent damage, progression of complications, and a poor prognosis. Hypertensive urgencies include those conditions with minimal to no obvious end-organ damage in which blood pressure should be lowered expeditiously. The risk of immediate complications or organ damage is less likely to occur, and thus the immediate prognosis is better, although the ultimate prognosis, if untreated, is poor. There is a marked individual, racial, sexual, and age difference in the ability to tolerate high intraarterial pressure, as evidenced by patients' symptoms and signs of end-organ damage. Patients may have no symptoms of elevated blood pressure until significant intraarterial levels are reached. If symptoms are present, they may include headache, dizziness, blurred vision, shortness of breath (especially with exertion), chest pain, rapid pulse, palpitations, malaise and fatigue, nocturia, or pedal edema. Signs of hypertensive disease vary and depend not only on the level of blood pressure but also include funduscopic changes with arteriolar narrowing, atrioventricular nicking, hemorrhages, exudates or papilledema, central nervous system changes and neurologic abnormalities, cardiac changes with gallop rhythm, cardiomegaly, tachycardia, ectopic ventricular beats, left ventricular hypertrophy or signs of congestive heart failure, pulmonary edema, and signs of renal insufficiency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hypertensive emergencies and urgencies: pathophysiology and clinical aspects. 394 53

A case of maternal pulmonary edema occurring in a patient in the 32nd week of gestation is presented. This was our first case of pulmonary edema seen during a period of five years' usage of isoxsuprine in the treatment of premature labor. The patient presented was 28 years old, gravida 2, para 1, admitted to the maternity ward with premature uterine contractions. Her past history eliminate cardiac or pulmonary disease. Isoxsuprine therapy was begun with initial dose of 0.04 mg/min. and increased to 0.32 mg/min., the total dose administered was 560 mg during 48 hours. During this period she was given in dexamethasone 24 mg. Fluid balance on the first day of the treatment was +1.7 liters and on the second day +5.2 liters. Forty-eight hours from the commencement of the treatment, the patient experienced shortness of breath and chest pain. Physical examination disclosed wet rales over both lungs, sinus tachycardia and tachypnea. Laboratory examination disclosed hypopotassemia of 3 mEq/liter, hypoxemia (PO2 of 80 torr on 0.5 FiO2 face mask) with mild hyperventilation 28 torr PCO2 with normal ph 7.43. Recognition of the early signs of pulmonary edema enable swift clinical diagnosis and steps to be taken to prevent disasterous condition due to progressive hypoxemia. The prompt treatment in this complication includes discontinuation of isoxsuprine and fluid administration, placement of the patient in an erect position, intravenous furosemid 40 mg, oxygen supplement by face mask and 25 mg of meperidine. The patient's condition dramatically improved though the lung fields became completely clear from wet rales only eight hours from the start of dyspneic attack.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pulmonary edema occurring after isoxsuprine and dexamethasone treatment for preterm labor: Case report. 666 29

A 34-year-old man with severe aortic incompetence caused by Streptococcus viridans developed severe central chest pain followed by complete heart block, multifocal ventricular extrasystoles, lengthening of the QTc and signs of cerebral emboli and pulmonary oedema. Early antibiotic therapy along with pacing, non-invasive investigations coupled with early surgery contributed significantly to the patient's survival.
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PMID:Aortic valve endocarditis complicated by complete heart block. 669 17

One hundred eighty-eight patients with acute myocardial infarction were studied prospectively from August 1980 to September 1982. One hundred thirty-six of these patients were entered into a intracoronary streptokinase study after informed consent was obtained. The remaining 52 patients, who either met exclusion criteria for the study or refused to participate, served as a control group and were treated as those in the study group except that they did not undergo emergency cardiac catheterization. Left ventricular function was determined in both groups by gated radionuclide ejection fraction (EF) on admission to the hospital, at discharge, and 6 months after discharge. With successful reperfusion up to 18 hr after onset of chest pain, mean left ventricular function in the study group improved (EF 39 +/- 13% on admission and 46 +/- 12% at discharge; p less than .001). Mean EF in control patients and those not achieving reperfusion did not change from admission to discharge. Mean EF at 6 month follow-up was not significantly different than at discharge in the study group or the control group. Total cardiac mortality in the control group was 19% compared with 10% in the study group (p = .06, NS). When patients admitted in pulmonary edema or shock (Killip class III or IV) were excluded from both groups, total cardiac mortality in the study group was significantly lower (4%) compared with in the control group (12.5%, p less than .05. The administration of intracoronary streptokinase during evolving myocardial infarction up to 18 hr after onset of chest pain may result in decreased mortality and sustained improvement in left ventricular function.
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PMID:Sustained improvement in left ventricular function and mortality by intracoronary streptokinase administration during evolving myocardial infarction. 685 Oct 40

A case of aortic ball valve prosthesis malfunction is described in which the poppet became alternately stuck in the open and closed position. The patient experienced chest pain followed by pulmonary edema and cardiac arrest. Malfunction of prosthetic valve was diagnosed on echocardiogram and cardiopulmonary resuscitation was carried out until a Bjork-Shiley valve could be inserted in place of the faulty prosthesis. At the time of the operation, poppet migration had occurred and the poppet could not be found. Subsequent Bjork-Shiley aortic valve prosthesis dysfunction was suggested by variation in the intensity of the aortic opening sound and in the duration of the systolic ejection period. Fluoroscopy revealed the missing poppet in the left ventricle. Following surgical removal of the poppet, "normal" Bjork-Shiley valve function was restored.
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PMID:Echocardiographic features of aortic ball valve prosthesis malfunction. 717 20


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