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

Malaria must be included in the differential diagnosis of all febrile patients. Malaria is classified 'complicated' or 'uncomplicated', according to clinical findings (cerebral malaria, generalized convulsions, pulmonary edema, severe anemia, hyperthermia, renal failure, haemoglobinuria, shock, spontaneous bleeding) and laboratory results (parasitemia greater than 5%, haemoglobin less than 5 g%, creatinine greater than 265 mumol/l, glucose less than 2.2 mmol/l, DIC, pH less than 7.2, bilirubin greater than 50 mumol/l). Plasmodium (P.) vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae cause uncomplicated disease as a rule, whereas P. falciparum may result in either of both. Complicated falciparum malaria is always at risk for a lethal outcome. Only microscopic evidence of malaria parasites proofs the diagnosis. The thick smear is good for screening, thin films are necessary to determine the species. Serology and cultures are not helpful in diagnosing acute malaria. Tests for drug resistance await to be applicable for emergency situations.
...
PMID:[Clinical aspects and diagnosis of malaria]. 199 79

Lung fluid balance was studied in 27 mongrel dogs by measuring changes in extravascular lung water content (EVLW). The expression delta EVLWi, which is the difference in EVLWi per kilo bodyweight per hour between two measurement occasions, was used as an estimate of the rate of change of EVLW. EVLW was measured by a double-indicator dilution technique (EVLWi) using iced glucose and indocyanine green. In addition, EVLW was determined at the end of each experiment with gravimetric technique (EVLWg), which enabled the calculation of a regression equation between EVLWi and EVLWg. Delta EVLWi was calculated repeatedly during an 8-h period of mechanical ventilation (MV) with no application of a positive end-expiratory pressure (n = 5), during an 8-h period with a positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) of 10 cmH2O (1.0 kPa) (n = 5), during the development of oleic acid (OA)-induced pulmonary oedema (n = 7), and hydrostatic pulmonary oedema (left atrial balloon inflation) (n = 9). An increase of EVLW was seen during PEEP 8 h (mean 35%) and after induction of OA and hydrostatic oedema (mean 300%), but no change was found during MV without PEEP. The regression equation was EVLWi = 5.5 + 0.97 x EVLWg (P = 0.001, r = 0.90). OA-induced oedema caused a mean maximum delta EVLWi of 5.1 ml/kg/h, indicating capillary leakage which, however, was self-limiting within 2 h after OA injection. In hydrostatic oedema there was a maximum delta EVLWi of 16.0 ml/kg/h. Delta EVLWi was negative after deflation of the left atrial balloon, indicating reabsorption of oedema.
...
PMID:Lung fluid balance evaluated by the rate of change of extravascular lung water content. 220 88

A randomized, single-blind controlled study intended to assess the potential benefits of intravenous amiodarone in anterior myocardial infarction is presented. Three hundred nineteen patients entered the study, 159 received amiodarone infusion, and 160 received glucose-insulin-potassium (GIK) infusion. Basal characteristics were similar in the two experimental groups, who were randomized on a consecutive basis. Exclusion criteria were shock or pulmonary edema, hypotension, inferoposterior infarction, bradycardia, antrioventricular block, severe diabetes, and other major diseases. Patients aged 27 to 70 years, with a Q-wave anterior infarction, initiated 12-40 hours earlier at the time of admission, entered the trial. Other entry criteria were heart rate higher than 80 beats/min and systolic blood pressure higher than 100 mmHg. Amiodarone was administered in saline infusion 10-20 mg/kg, within 4 to 10 hours, through a central vein. GIK infusion consisted of 150-300 g of glucose, 25-50 IU of insulin, and 80-120 mEq of KCl in 1000 cc of water at a rate of 1.5-2.0 ml/g/hour. Both groups received digitalis, nitrates, sedatives, and diuretics as needed. Although individually the major endpoints of death, reinfarction, and sustained supraventricular and ventricular arrhythmias did not differ significantly, each was less in the amiodarone group than in the control, and the sum of all adverse events was significantly lower for the amiodarone patients (p less than 001). Heart failure and conduction disturbances were not different in the two groups. This study shows that amiodarone, with its vasodilating and antiarrhythmic properties, may be beneficial in acute anterior infarction, but further studies on larger populations will be necessary in order to show a reduction of mortality rate.
...
PMID:Intravenous amiodarone in acute anterior myocardial infarction: a controlled study. 248 93

A ventilator-dependent patient who is malnourished can develop infections, pulmonary edema, hypophosphatemia, decreased ventilatory drive, respiratory weakness, and atelectasis (because of lowered surfactant production). It is important to assess each patient's caloric needs individually, whether by use of predictive equations or by indirect calorimetry. Weaning of a patient from the ventilator can be difficult or impossible if the patient is malnourished, receives too much carbohydrate, or develops hypophosphatemia. Providing continuous fat emulsions as a source of energy can decrease the need for large amounts of glucose and can increase the likelihood of successful weaning.
...
PMID:Nutritional support of the ventilator-dependent patient. 249 51

The paper presents the results from examinations of morphological changes in the lung of 51 persons who died from drug-induced anaphylactic shock at the age of 6 months to 67 years. The patients died several minutes to 7-10 days following drug administration. The causes of the shock were administrations of antibiotics, novocain (procaine hydrochloride), glucose, radiopaque agents, plasma-substituting solutions, protein hydrolysates, and other substances. Forty-nine persons died after parenteral drug administration. The most frequent concurrent conditions were gastrointestinal and respiratory diseases and pregnancy. A clinical and morphological analysis of the material enabled the authors to single out 6 types of drug-induced anaphylactic shock: asphyxial, bronchospasmic, hemodynamic, cerebral, abdominal and a variant with prevalent pulmonary edema. Typical characteristics of pulmonary alterations are described in each type of the shock.
...
PMID:[Morphology and pathogenesis of changes in the lungs during drug-induced anaphylactic shock in humans]. 259 82

The purpose of this study was to see if lung vascular protein permeability is greater in preterm lambs with respiratory distress than it is in lambs without lung disease. We measured pulmonary vascular pressures, lung lymph flow, and concentrations of protein in lymph and plasma of 10 chronically catheterized preterm lambs (gestation 133 +/- 1 d) for 2-4 h before and for 4-8 h after delivery by cesarean section. All lambs were treated with mechanical ventilation after birth and received a constant intravenous infusion of glucose-saline solution at an hourly rate of 10 ml/kg. Respiratory failure developed in six lambs, in which there was a sustained threefold postnatal increase in lung lymph flow and lymph protein flow, with an even greater increase in pleural liquid drainage. Concentrations of protein in lymph and pleural liquid were almost identical, averaging approximately 75% of the plasma protein concentration. In the four preterm lambs without lung disease, lymph flow and lymph protein flow were either near or below fetal values by 6-8 h after birth, and there was little or no pleural liquid drainage. Extravascular lung water averaged 7.3 +/- .8 g/g dry lung in lambs with respiratory failure compared to 4.8 +/- .5 g/g dry lung in lambs without lung disease. Thus, pulmonary edema with abnormal leakage of protein-rich liquid from the lung microcirculation into the interstitium is an important pathological feature of the respiratory disease that often occurs after premature birth.
...
PMID:Lung fluid balance in lambs before and after premature birth. 276 Feb 1

Plasma concentration of beta thromboglobulin was used as an index of in vivo platelet activation in 36 patients after acute myocardial infarction. Twelve patients had diabetes, seven had pulmonary oedema or cardiogenic shock (pump failure) or both, and 17 had uncomplicated infarcts. On the first day of admission, concentrations of beta thromboglobulin were higher in the patients with diabetes and those with pump failure than in those with uncomplicated infarcts. Concentrations of beta thromboglobulin in the non-diabetic patients were studied by multiple regression analysis and were significantly associated with plasma concentrations of adrenaline, pump failure, and glucose but not with noradrenaline or infarct size. When all subjects were considered together, glucose, adrenaline, and pump failure were associated with the beta thromboglobulin concentration but diabetes was without significant effect. Hyperglycaemia and raised plasma adrenaline concentration after myocardial infarction may activate platelets, and this could contribute to poor outcome in such patients.
...
PMID:Raised concentrations of glucose and adrenaline and increased in vivo platelet activation after myocardial infarction. 296 54

The authors studied hyperglycemia occurring in insulin-dependent diabetic patients on chronic dialysis to determine the types of associated acid-base disorders, their treatment, and any differences from hyperglycemia in diabetic patients with intact renal function. Eighty-eight episodes of serum glucose greater than 25 mmol/L were observed, 23 in hemodialysis patients and 65 in patients on continuous peritoneal dialysis. Treatment consisted of low-dose insulin in 77 episodes and low-dose insulin plus saline in 11; no base was administered. Seventeen episodes (19%) presented with ketoacidosis. Arterial blood gas determinations were carried out at presentation in 37 of the episodes without ketoacidosis. Of these, 12 had respiratory alkalosis, six had respiratory acidosis and severe pulmonary edema, 14 had other single or mixed acid-base disorders, and only five had normal acid-base status. Insulin corrected the ketoacidosis in all instances and both pulmonary edema and respiratory acidosis in five of six instances. In eight cases metabolic alkalosis developed during treatment, without external acid loss. At the completion of treatment respiratory alkalosis was present in half the cases. No difference was noted between patients treated with hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis. Insulin alone is sufficient for the management of hyperglycemia in dialysis patients. Certain acid-base disorders persist, but do not need further treatment. Hyperglycemia in patients on dialysis is characterized by infrequent development of metabolic acidosis and frequent presentation with respiratory alkalosis, by respiratory acidosis that is corrected by insulin, and by metabolic alkalosis developing during treatment without external cause.
...
PMID:Acid-base disorders in hyperglycemia of insulin-dependent diabetic patients on chronic dialysis. 297 Oct 75

Studies were conducted in isolated, buffer-perfused rat lungs to determine if prostaglandin (PG) E1 attenuated pulmonary edema provoked by hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). When lungs were challenged by 60 min of perfusion with H2O2 (generated by the reaction between glucose and glucose oxidase) the wet weight-to-dry weight ratio increased from control by 54%, indicating development of pulmonary edema. In contrast, lungs treated simultaneously with H2O2 plus PGE1 (1 microgram/min) failed to exhibit an elevated wet-to-dry weight ratio. H2O2-injured lungs demonstrated a modest 2 torr increase in pulmonary arterial perfusion pressure that was not influenced by simultaneous treatment with PGE1. Both radioimmunoassay (RIA) and high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) analysis detected increased amounts of (5S)-5-hydroxy-6,8,11,14 eicosatetraenoic acid in the perfusion medium of H2O2-injured lungs (RIA, 48.0 +/- 14.7; HPLC, 54.8 +/- 13.5) relative to controls (RIA, 6.6 +/- 1.6; HPLC, 6.8 +/- 1.9), and simultaneous treatment with PGE1 tended to blunt this increase (RIA, 29.2 +/- 8.3; HPLC, 29.8 +/- 7.6). PGE1 abolished the increase in wet weight-to-dry weight ratio induced by exogenous leukotriene C4. Production of H2O2 by the glucose-glucose oxidase reaction was not influenced by PGE1. Taken together, these observations indicate that PGE1 attenuates H2O2-induced pulmonary edema formation in buffer-perfused rat lungs by mechanisms that may relate to inhibition of lung 5'-lipoxygenase activation and/or to inhibition of the injurious effects of endogenously produced lipoxygenase products.
...
PMID:Salutary effects of prostaglandin E1 in perfused rat lungs injured with hydrogen peroxide. 303 98

Recently there has been a great deal of interest in exploring possible ways to protect the lung from oxidant damage. Since sulfhydryl compounds are among the most important endogenous antioxidants, their therapeutic use has been proposed. Glutathione (GSH), the main intracellular nonprotein sulfhydryl, plays an important role in the maintenance of cellular proteins and lipids in their functional state. With oxidant stress, GSH acts to protect cell constituents as evidenced by increased turnover to GSSG, formation of mixed disulfides with proteins, utilization of NADPH, and utilization of glucose in the pentose pathway. When GSH is experimentally lowered (e.g., by protein deficiency or with diethylmaleate) the toxic effects of oxidant stress are exacerbated as evidenced by increased membrane and cell damage, pulmonary edema, and mortality. Several recent investigations have shown that sulfhydryl reagents (particularly N-acetyl cysteine, a cell-permeable GSH precursor) can provide significant protection against certain pulmonary toxins. N-acetyl cysteine reduced the lethal effects of 100% O2 in rats by 65%. Therefore, the therapeutic potential of sulfhydryl reagents in the treatment and prevention of oxidant injury and the mechanisms involved are an important direction for lung research.
...
PMID:Protective role of sulfhydryl reagents in oxidant lung injury. 306 90


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>