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)

Severe respiratory distress appeared in a 14-year-old girl with acute lymphoblastic leukemia 2 months after receiving syngeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) with a conditioning regimen of a high-dose of busulfan, etoposide and nimustine. Rapid body-weight gain and edema, especially in eyelids and lower-limbs, were also observed. Without any findings of heart failure nor GVHD, pulmonary edema was recognized on the chest roentgenogram. As soon as the diagnosis of pulmonary edema due to 'capillary leak syndrome' was suspected, the patient was treated with intravenous administration of diuretics, albumin and bolus methylprednisolone in combination of mechanical ventilation. Although the clinical manifestations were improved by the treatment, the disease recurred 5 weeks later. The patient was successfully treated by the same medications, and there has been no recurrence as of the sixth month after discontinuance of the therapy. At present, the mechanism of capillary leak syndrome is still undefined. In this case, however, we speculate that the conditioning regimen for BMT intensified the capillary disturbance initially caused by intensive chemotherapy since remission induction. Furthermore hypoalbuminemia due to severe anorexia might have enhanced the occurrence of the disease.
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PMID:[Recurrent pulmonary edema in a patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia after syngeneic bone marrow transplantation]. 157 40

A 42-year-old white female developed severe respiratory distress 30 minutes following the ingestion of hydrochlorothiazide. On her arrival at the emergency room, pulmonary edema was evident by physical examination and chest radiograph. She presented without evidence of a gallop, jugular venous distention, or history suggesting cardiac disease. Normal electrocardiogram (ECG) and echocardiogram, and a radionuclide ventriculogram showing normal systolic and diastolic functions supported the noncardiac origin. The patient responded to supportive treatment within hours although the radiographic abnormalities persisted for several days. A review of the literature revealed that at least 12 other cases have been described of this unusual but life threatening idiosyncratic reaction to hydrochlorothiazide.
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PMID:Thiazide-induced pulmonary edema: a case report. 160 17

Pulmonary surfactant is an important chemical component of the lung. It decreases surface tension in the alveolar cells to help stabilize the alveoli, and it may help prevent pulmonary edema. Currently, naturally and synthetically derived surfactants are being used to treat neonatal respiratory distress syndrome, a leading cause of death in premature infants. Surfactant is recommended for prophylactic therapy in infants weighing less than 1,350 g (3 lb) and in infants weighing more than 1,350 g who show signs of pulmonary immaturity and for rescue therapy in infants with respiratory distress syndrome. Surfactant is administered by endotracheal tube, and the recommended dose is 5 mg per kg. Three doses, given 12 hours apart, is the recommended regimen for prophylactic therapy. Rescue therapy consists of one dose of surfactant given at the onset of respiratory distress and another dose given 12 hours later.
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PMID:Surfactant: clinical applications. 162 34

Gram-negative sepsis has dramatically increased in frequency throughout the twentieth century in the United States. Currently, approximately 200,000 patients develop gram-negative sepsis each year in this country. Of these, about one-quarter develop the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Among these critically ill patients, mortality is estimated at 60%-90%. In the complex series of events leading to acute lung injury in gram-negative sepsis, endotoxin is the proximal mediator. Although endotoxin may be capable of causing direct injury to the pulmonary endothelium, its primary role is as a trigger activating inflammatory agents, including complement, neutrophils, and platelets, and inducing the production of cytokines and arachidonic acid metabolites. The end results are impairment of the endothelial barrier, diffusely increased capillary permeability, and adherence of neutrophils to the endothelium with subsequent migration into the tissues. The consequent clinical syndrome is one of acute respiratory distress with pulmonary edema, poorly compliant lungs, and refractory hypoxemia. Endothelial injury often becomes widespread, leading to the failure of multiple organs, including the kidneys, brain, intestine, and liver. Conventional therapy consists of supplemental oxygen, positive end-expiratory pressure, inotropic agents, fluid management, and antibiotics aimed at the offending pathogen. Recent discoveries regarding the mediators of sepsis as well as the expansion of the biotechnological armamentarium have provided clinicians with a plethora of new tools with which to manipulate the host's inflammatory response. The challenge for the next decade will be to ensure the safety, efficacy, and cost-effective use of these expensive but potentially lifesaving immunomodulators, singly or in combination, as adjuvant therapy.
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PMID:Gram-negative sepsis and the adult respiratory distress syndrome. 162 78

1. Research into the pathogenesis of acute and chronic neonatal lung disease has been hampered by the lack of a suitable small-animal model of prematurity. We describe such a model that has been developed and validated in the guinea-pig. 2. Pre-term guinea-pigs delivered by Caesarian section at 65 days gestation (normal gestation 68 days) exhibited transient respiratory distress. The survival of pre-term animals was lower than that of term animals after exposure to 95% O2 (pre-term 42% versus term 79% at 96 h, P less than 0.05). 3. Pulmonary histology in pre-term animals exposed to both 21% O2 and 95% O2 revealed evidence of acute lung injury with atelectasis, pulmonary oedema, fibrin deposition and inflammatory cell infiltration. No evidence of lung injury was observed in term animals exposed to 21% O2, whereas those exposed to 95% O2 showed a similar, but less pronounced, injury to that seen in pre-term pups. 4. The protein concentration in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid was similar in pre-term and term animals exposed to 95% O2, but neutrophil numbers in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid tended to be greater in pre-term pups. 5. Elastase-like activity, measured against succinyl-1-trialanine p-nitroanilide, was higher in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from control pre-term animals compared with that from control term animals. Exposure to 95% O2 increased the elastase-like activity significantly in both groups. The majority of the elastase-like activity was EDTA-sensitive and thus is possibly due to metallo-elastase. Fractionation of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid indicated that the elastase-like activity was associated with a high-molecular-mass complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The pre-term guinea-pig: a model for the study of neonatal lung disease. 165 47

Fifty-four children from the Jerusalem area were studied prospectively following scorpion envenoming. Their ages ranged from 11 months to 10 years. Severe symptoms (convulsions, brain oedema, shock, respiratory distress and myocarditis) were encountered in 19. Respiratory distress was the main feature in 17 of the children, in two cases owing to pulmonary oedema and in a third because of adult respiratory distress syndrome and myocarditis; mechanical ventilation was required in three cases. The severity of the symptoms and signs was not related to sex, age, weight, interval between scorpion sting and admission or to the type of offending scorpion; it was most likely dependent upon the susceptibility of the individual and/or the dose of venom injected by the scorpion. Intravenous antivenom quickly reversed the symptoms, and no side-effects were seen in the patients studied. The two patients who died had not received the antivenom intravenously. We recommend that specific antivenom should be given intravenously in all children who show significant symptoms. Furthermore, a longer period of observation is necessary following scorpion sting in this age group.
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PMID:Scorpion sting in children in the Jerusalem area: a review of 54 cases. 171 20

A patient with a von Willebrand factor deficiency received three units of fresh frozen plasma during a postoperative period. During the last unit transfusion she developed a severe respiratory distress and non cardiac pulmonary edema was diagnosed based upon the clinical, radiological and hemodynamic findings. Reintubation and mechanical ventilation with end-expiratory pressure were instituted leading to a complete and rapid recovery within 48 h. The serum from the last plasma donor contains an anti-HLA-B21 lymphocytotoxic antibody that did agglutinate neutrophils from HLA-B21 positive individuals. The patient's HLA type was B21. The concerned donor was a IVpar Igeste female. Two problems are evoked by this observation with regard to transfusion: first, fresh-frozen plasma was used as an inappropriate treatment for a coagulating factor deficiency, second, exclusion of this donor from a classical blood donation is needed.
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PMID:[Non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema after transfusion of plasma containing an anti-HLA-B21 antibody]. 177 27

There is a wide variability in the therapeutic responsiveness to exogenous surfactant, a drug that has become generally available for the treatment of lung immaturity and respiratory distress syndrome. Recent studies have demonstrated evidence that therapies decreasing lung edema improve the effectiveness of surfactant substitution. In addition, exogenous surfactant may acutely decrease pulmonary perfusion since the airway pressures are effectively transmitted to airspaces, compressing alveolar capillaries, especially in hypovolemia. Therapies aimed at decreasing lung edema, improving cardiac output, and stepwise weaning from oxygen and ventilatory pressures are cornerstones in the successful management of patients undergoing surfactant therapy.
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PMID:Factors affecting surfactant responsiveness. 177 26

Endotoxemia and sepsis are common causes of respiratory distress (ARDS), which is characterized by increased pulmonary vascular permeability to plasma proteins resulting in "noncardiac pulmonary edema." The aim of this series was to study the effects of the beta-2 receptor agonist, terbutaline, on plasma extravasation in multiple organs, in sheep exposed to endotoxin shock. A double isotope technique was used and the radioactivity was recorded in different organs (lungs, liver, spleen, kidneys, intestine) by a computerized gamma camera. Tc-99m-labeled erythrocytes were used as a marker for intravascular volume and In-111m-labeled transferrin for tracing extravascular plasma leakage. An organ-transferrin index (organ-TI) was calculated for each organ which corrects for changes in blood distribution. Fourteen sheep were anesthetized and ventilated. After stabilization (t = 0) all animals received E. coli endotoxin 10 micrograms/kg by IV infusion during 30 min. At t = 30, seven animals (group T) received IV infusion of terbutaline, 20 micrograms/kg/hr, during 4 h, while the other seven received normal saline and served as controls (group E). The endotoxin infusion caused an immediate and significant increase in the transferrin index in the lungs and in the liver in both groups. The transferrin index continued to rise in the control group towards the end of the experiment (t = 240), while in group T it reached a maximum 60 min after endotoxin. Four hours after endotoxin the transferrin index was significantly higher in the controls than in the terbutaline treated group, both in the lungs and in the liver (P less than 0.01). No significant changes were recorded in the kidneys or over the intestine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Use of indium-111-labeled transferrin to study plasma extravasation during endotoxin shock and the effects of the beta-2 agonist terbutaline. 186 67

Severe respiratory failure is always associated with a defect in the surfactant system. Surfactant substitution in newborn infants with respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) has gained worldwide acceptance. In the present study, we have evaluated whether surfactant diagnostics are of use in choosing recipients of exogenous surfactant. In addition, we studied whether factors apparently unrelated to surfactant influence the degree of respiratory failure and surfactant responsiveness. In small preterm infants, the surfactant indices in amniotic fluid (L/S ratio and phosphatidylglycerol), within 3 days of birth, predicted the risk of RDS with a sensitivity of 90-100%, and a specificity of 50-85%. The surfactant indices, measured in BAL, predicted the risk of ARDS (which became evident 1 to 7 days later) with a sensitivity of 50-60% and a specificity of 59-65%. In small preterm infants with RDS, the amount of fluids given during the first day correlated positively with the degree of respiratory failure and negatively with the degree of surfactant responsiveness. According to an experimental study, in hydrostatic lung edema, exogenous surfactant is diluted by edema fluid and becomes sensitive to inhibitors of surfactant function. Beside dosage, quality, and time of administration, the management of patients largely dictates the responsiveness to exogenous surfactant.
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PMID:Lung surfactant in respiratory distress syndrome. 192 23


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