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)

The harmful effect of iron excess was studied in an experiment using fifteen adult sheep. The animals were divided into three groups of 5 each. The sheep of the group I were kept as controls, those of the group II and III were supplemented with iron in doses of 80 and 40 mg/kg body weight (BW)/24 h respectively. The animals of group II died after a period of 3-7 weeks showing anorexia, loss of weight, diarrhoea, depression and symptoms of circulatory and respiratory failure. From the animals of group III one died after 13 weeks, with symptoms of pulmonary oedema, while the other 4 survived for 22 weeks, together with the animals of the control group. The iron-supplemented animals presented increased values of Serum Iron (SI), Total Iron Binding Capacity (TIBC), percent Transferring Saturation (% SAT), Alanino aminotransferase (ALT), serum Alkalin Phosphatase (SAP), Serum Urea Nitrogen (SUN) Creatinine, Phosphorus and decreased values of serum Copper concentration. These parameters were greater in group II. The iron concentration in the liver, spleen, myocardium and kidneys was also much higher than in the controls. The histological examination revealed degeneration of the liver, spleen, myocardium and kidneys in both groups, while cells overloaded with hemosiderin were seen in the third group only. In conclusion, it was shown that chronic intoxication may occur in sheep overdosed with iron. The toxic dose of iron ranged between 40 and 80 (mg/Kg body weight) per day and was close to 40 mg, when iron was administered in the soluble from FeCl3.6H2O.
...
PMID:Iron toxicity in sheep. 253 32

To identify lung units associated with liquid leakage into the air space in high-pressure pulmonary edema, we perfused air-inflated dog lung lobes with albumin solution to fill the loose peribronchovascular interstitium. Next, we perfused the lobes for 90 s with fluorescent albumin solution then froze the lobes in liquid nitrogen. This procedure confined the fluorescent perfusate to the liquid flux pathway between the circulation and the air space and eliminated the previously filled peribronchovascular cuffs as a source of the fluorescence that entered the air space. We divided each frozen lobe into three horizontal layers and prepared fluorescence-microscopic sections of each layer. In the most apical layers where alveolar flooding was minimal, 10.6 +/- 21.0% (SD) of alveolar ducts were either fluorescence filled or air filled and continuous with fluorescence-filled alveoli. In the same layers, 11.0 +/- 19.0% of respiratory bronchioles were similarly labeled. No terminal bronchioles in these layers were fluorescence labeled. This suggested that the fluorescent albumin entered the air space across the epithelium of respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts, or their associated alveoli. To simulate an alternative explanation, i.e., that fluorescence first entered central airways then flowed into peripheral air spaces, we prepared two additional lobes that we first partially inflated with fluorescent albumin then filled to capacity with air. This pushed the fluorescent solution along the airways into the lung periphery. In these lobes the ciliary lining of bronchi and terminal bronchioles was fluorescence coated. By comparison, cilia in fluorescence-perfused lobes were not coated. We conclude that alveolar flooding in hydrostatic pulmonary edema occurs across the epithelium of alveolar ducts, respiratory bronchioles, or their associated alveoli.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Airway level at which edema liquid enters the air space of isolated dog lungs. 260 28

A 52 year-old male farmer was admitted to our hospital because of cough, sputum and dyspnea on exertion. Chest X-ray showed pulmonary edema and arterial blood gas analysis showed hypoxemia. Silo-fillers' disease was diagnosed because he had allegedly inhaled yellowish gas in the silo. The day following steroid therapy, symptoms and pulmonary edema improved. Silo-fillers' disease is chemical pneumonitis due to exposure to the oxides of nitrogen which are produced in silos. Although reported cases of silo-fillers' disease in Japan are rare it should be kept in mind in areas involved with dairy farming.
...
PMID:[A case of silo-fillers' disease]. 261 1

27 cases of uremia with abnormal appearances on the chest films were analysed. The results showed that the clinical features were cough, expectoration dyspnea and hemoptysis. However, the degree of these symptoms was relatively mild as judged from the amount of pulmonary edema found on the chest films. The chest X-ray finding in these group of patients were characterized by pulmonary blood stasis, interstitial edema of the lung and edematous alveoli. The pathogenesis of uremic lung was said to be related to blood urea nitrogen and creatinine retention and the concurrent presence of left side heart failure may also play a role. Hemodialysis and other comprehensive treatments could help the patients with uremic lung for relief the symptoms. But the fundamental managements to improve the prognosis for this disease are early treatment of the primary renal diseases, in order to prevent the occurrence of renal failure. Kidney transplantation should be advised.
...
PMID:[The uremic lung]. 263 29

In oleic acid-induced pulmonary oedema (OAPO) sequential intrapulmonary fluid accumulation occurs leading to different expiratory flow pattern in dependent lung regions. The potential effects on efficacy of high-frequency jet ventilation (HFJV, f = 3 Hz, I: E = 0.43, FiO2 = 0.4) were studied and compared with continuous positive pressure ventilation (CPPV, f = 12-18/min, I:E = 0.5, TV = 12 ml/kg, PEEP = 0.5 kPa, FiO2 = 0.4) in a dog model of OAPO. In the control state (lung-healthy dogs), 15 min after oleic acid lung injury (interstitial oedema, period I) and 60 min after onset of OAPO (alveolar oedema, period II), gas exchange, lung volumes, compliance, resistance and haemodynamics were measured. The course of lung oedema was determined indirectly by means of washout curves of helium (foreign gas bolus-test, FGB) and nitrogen (single breath-test for oxygen, SBO2). During control, there were no significant differences between the HFJV-group (n = 7) and the CPPV-group (n = 6) by virtue of gas exchange, lung volumes and haemodynamics. During period I, PaO2 decreased significantly both with HFJV (p less than 0.01) and CPPV (p less than 0.05), being lower in the HFJV-group (p less than 0.05). PaCO2, pulmonary and haemodynamic parameters were unchanged. Onset of phase IV of the alveolar plateau (closing volume CV) occurred significantly earlier (p less than 0.05) in all animals. Impaired ventilation of dependent lung regions, increased maldistribution of intrapulmonary gas and VA/Q-mismatching may be the underlying mechanisms for lower efficacy of HFJV during interstitial lung oedema. In period II, pulmonary and cardiocirculatory parameters had changed significantly in both groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:High-frequency jet ventilation during oleic-acid induced pulmonary oedema. 260 49

This study investigated the possible contribution of neutrophils to development of reexpansion pulmonary edema (RPE) in rabbits. Rabbits' right lungs were collapsed for 7 days and then reexpanded with negative intrathoracic pressure for 2 h before study, a model that creates unilateral edema in the reexpanded lungs but not in contralateral left lungs. Two hours after lung reexpansion, significant increases in lavage albumin concentration (17-fold), percent neutrophils (14-fold), and total number of neutrophils (7-fold) recovered occurred in the reexpanded lung but not in the left. After 2 h of reexpansion increased leukotriene B4 was detected in lavage supernatant from right lungs (335 +/- 33 pg/ml) compared with the left (110 +/- 12 pg/mg, P less than 0.01), and right lung lavage acid phosphatase activity similarly increased (6.67 +/- 0.35 U/l) compared with left (4.73 +/- 0.60 U/l, P less than 0.05). Neutropenia induced by nitrogen mustard (17 +/- 14 greater than neutrophils/microliters) did not prevent RPE, because reexpanded lungs from six neutropenic rabbits were edematous (wet-to-dry lung weight ratio 6.34 +/- 0.43) compared with their contralateral lungs (4.97 +/- 0.04, P less than 0.01). An elevated albumin concentration in reexpanded lung lavage from neutropenic rabbits (8-fold) confirmed an increase in permeability. Neutrophil depletion before reexpansion did not prevent unilateral edema, although neutrophils were absent from lung sections and alveolar lavage fluid from neutropenic rabbits.
...
PMID:Neutrophils in reexpansion pulmonary edema. 284 Dec 77

Severe falciparum malaria complicated by acute renal failure resulted in very high mortality. Ten patients with acute renal failure from falciparum malaria (infected rbc up to 80%) were continuously dialysed using Tenckhoff peritoneal catheter. Five were oliguric and BUN was maintained between 60 to 80 mg/dl (21.4 to 28.6 mmol/l) by hourly 1 to 1.5 liter dialysate exchange during the acute phase. The peritoneal urea clearance (mean +/- SD) was 12.1 +/- 1.2 ml/min with urea nitrogen removal of 13.4 +/- 2.3 g/day. In nonoliguric cases dialysis was also needed for additional removal of waste products since the remaining renal function could not cope with the hypercatabolic state. Peritoneal glucose absorption (135 to 565 g/day) gave considerable caloric supply without volume load and also contributed to the prevention of hypoglycemia. Varying degree of acute respiratory failure developed in all patients with 5 cases (2 oliguric and 3 nonoliguric) progressing to pulmonary edema. Swan-Ganz catheterization and hemodynamic study suggested the role of increased capillary permeability and volume overload from endogenous water formation in the development of pulmonary complication. Continuous removal of fluid and waste products minimized these problems and may prevent the progression of respiratory failure. One patient died of severe sepsis and the other nine survived. This study showed the beneficial contribution of continuous peritoneal dialysis in the management of acute renal failure from severe falciparum malaria.
...
PMID:Continuous peritoneal dialysis in acute renal failure from severe falciparum malaria. 312 24

Leukocytes and the production of oxygen radicals and proteolytic enzymes have been implicated in the pathogenesis of lung injury after smoke inhalation. We investigated the mechanism responsible for this form of pulmonary damage in chronically prepared sheep previously made leukopenic with intra-arterial infusions of nitrogen mustard (mechlorethamine hydrochloride). A control air insufflated group (sham: n = 6), a cotton smoke insufflated group (smoke: n = 12), and a leukopenic cotton smoke insufflation group (smoked + depleted: n = 6) were compared. Although both smoke insufflation groups had equivalent smoke exposure, which was indexed by carboxyhemoglobin, the smoked + depleted group had significant attenuation in the increases in pulmonary artery pressure, pulmonary vascular resistance, and pulmonary lymph flow. The PaO2 to FiO2 ratio (P:F) did not fall to the same extent, nor was there a fall in PaO2. The production of oxygen radicals, which was measured as plasma-conjugated dienes, and the consumption of antiprotease, as measured by alpha 2-macroglobulin levels in lung lymph, were not changed in the smoked + depleted group, whereas it was elevated in the smoked group. We conclude that circulating leukocytes and the release of oxygen radicals and proteolytic enzymes contribute to the lung injury, pulmonary microvascular permeability increase, and pulmonary edema seen after smoke inhalation.
...
PMID:The effect of leukocyte depletion on smoke inhalation injury in sheep. 340 56

We studied the effects of neutrophil activation on collateral ventilation and peripheral lung reactivity in anesthetized dogs. A fiberoptic bronchoscope was wedged into a segmental airway under direct vision. Ventilation beyond the obstruction thus occurred only through collateral channels. Through one lumen of a double-lumen catheter threaded through the suction port of a bronchoscope, 5% CO2 in air was infused at a known constant rate (V coll). Through the other lumen, pressure at the tip of the bronchoscope was monitored (Pb). For measurements of resistance to flow through the collateral system (Rcs), the ventilation was stopped at functional residual capacity (FRC). Histamine was delivered through the bronchoscope to the obstructed lung segment in the form of an aerosol mist generated by an ultrasonic nebulizer. Measurements of Rcs were used as a parameter of the peripheral lung reactivity to histamine challenge. Within one hour after intravenous infusion of phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), a neutrophil activator, the reactivity to histamine significantly increased. After this, Rcs increased even without histamine challenge. This increase may have been due to an edematous injury of lung caused by PMA. The nature of the injury was confirmed by wet to dry weight ratios. In the other group, the white cell count dropped below 1000 per cu. mm. after intravenous infusion of nitrogen mustard. The same experimental protocols were followed. The Rcs did not increase even with histamine challenge. Our results suggested that substances such as oxygen radicals and arachidonic acid metabolites, which can be released by activated neutrophils, may not not only increase peripheral lung reactivity, but may also induce pulmonary edema.
...
PMID:Effects of neutrophils on collateral ventilation and peripheral lung reactivity in dogs. 342 42

Neutropenia was produced in goats by injection of either nitrogen mustard, (1.5 mg/kg) or hydroxyurea (200 mg X kg-1 X day-1). A nitrogen mustard (M + E) group (n = 6), a hydroxyurea (H + E) group (n = 5), and a control (E) group (n = 7) were given 1-h infusions of endotoxin (5 micrograms/kg total dose), then monitored for up to 5 h. Postmortem extravascular lung water (EVLW) was significantly higher in the M + E group (14.2 +/- 4.4 ml/kg) and the E group (11.9 +/- 3.9 ml/kg) when compared with a normal control (6.6 +/- 1.3 ml/kg) group that did not receive endotoxin. EVLW in a group made neutropenic with nitrogen mustard (6.7 +/- 1.3 ml/kg) and the H + E (7.9 +/- 1.5 ml/kg) groups were not statistically different from each other or from normal controls. Circulating neutrophil counts averaged 32 +/- 42 cells/microliter in the M + E group and 180 +/- 210 cells/microliter in the H + E group. Only minimal histological changes were seen in the H + E group, but the E and M + E lungs had severe pulmonary edema. We conclude that neutrophils are not required for increased EVLW and decreased arterial O2 partial pressure after endotoxin infusion, and hydroxyurea prevents at least part of the pulmonary edema after endotoxin by a mechanism that is not neutrophil dependent.
...
PMID:Neutrophil depletion does not prevent lung edema after endotoxin infusion in goats. 354 69


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