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Query: UMLS:C0034067 (emphysema)
11,506 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The paper provides the results of treating 118 patients aged 16 to 78 years who had complicate bullous emphysema. The most frequent complication was spontaneous pneumothorax (n = 107). Chronic respiratory failure was observed in 8 patients with bullous formations occupying 1/3-2/3 of the hemithorax volume. Two patients had recurrent hemoptysis. Eighty patients with spontaneous pneumothorax underwent thoracic operations: endoscopic bullectomy, endoscopic pleurodesis with MK-7 and MK-8 medical glues, endoscopic electro- and laser coagulation of pulmonary bullae through infrared gallium arsenide and argon lasers. Thoracotomy with marginal resection of the lung, bullectomy, parietal pleurectomy was performed in 29 (25%) patients. The paper shows indications and contraindications for endoscopic and surgical operations, methods for applying IGA laser for marginal resection of the lung, bullectomy, pleurectomy, endoscopic coagulation of the bullae, complications of endoscopic and surgical treatments.
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PMID:[Surgical treatment of complicated bullous pulmonary emphysema]. 829 98

Chronic respiratory failure is defined on the basis of gas exchange in the lung. Recent studies have suggested serious clinical problems in patients with disabling dyspnea not necessarily related to gas exchange. Home oxygen therapy not only prolongs life expectancy but also improves the quality of daily life. In Japan, pulmonary emphysema, sequelae of pulmonary tuberculosis, and interstitial pneumonia/pulmonary fibrosis are the 3 major diseases currently treated by home oxygen therapy. Respiratory failure caused by interstitial pneumonia/pulmonary fibrosis and lung cancer is on the increase and is also treated by home oxygen therapy. Clinical problems on mechanisms and treatment of chronic respiratory failure are reviewed from recent data.
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PMID:Current status and research on chronic respiratory failure in Japan. 883 92

Chronic respiratory failure (CRF) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. It is estimated that in France at least 60,000 patients exhibit severe CRF and that about 15,000 patients die each year from CRF. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) (chronic obstructive bronchitis, emphysema and their association) is by far the first cause of CRF (90% of the cases). The clinical picture of CRF depends on the causal disease, but exertional dyspnea is observed in almost all patients. Pulmonary function testing allows to assess whether the ventilatory defect is obstructive (COPD), restrictive or mixed. Severe CRF is usually defined by a Pa02 < 55 mmHg, in a stable state of the disease, with or without hypercapnia (PaC02 > 45 mmHg). The two major complications of CRF are acute exacerbations of the disease, with clinical and gasometric worsening, and pulmonary hypertension which may lead with time to right heart failure. Prognosis is poor in CRF since the 5 year survival rate is of 50% in COPD patients. Under long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) the survival rate has been somewhat improved, being of 60-65% at 5 years. The best prognostic indices in CRF complicating COPD are the level of FEV1, Pa02, PaC02, the level of pulmonary artery mean pressure (PAP) and age. In COPD patients under LTOT the best prognostic indices are PAP and age.
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PMID:[Chronic respiratory insufficiency: evaluation, evolution, prognosis]. 981 2

We investigated the causes of death of late sequelae of pulmonary tuberculosis. Chronic respiratory failure is one of the most frequent cause of death in the patients of late sequelae of pulmonary tuberculosis. We compared the long term prognosis of chronic respiratory failure in case of emphysema and pulmonary tuberculosis. In the patients with chronic respiratory failure by pulmonary emphysema, the prognosis was poor in those with pulmonary hypertension. But in case of late sequelae of pulmonary tuberculosis, prognosis was not affected by presence or absence of pulmonary hypertension. The determinants of prognosis of late sequelae of pulmonary tuberculosis are the indication of home oxygen therapy, malnutrition, and hypoxemia. Fungal infection, especially aspergilloma, is a common secondary infection of late sequelae of pulmonary tuberculosis. We investigated forty-two cases of aspergilloma as late sequelae of pulmonary tuberculosis, and of those 15 patients died. The causes of death were pneumonia and respiratory failure. Measurement of galactomannan antigen of aspergillus in serum using ELISA or PCR, it was apparent that the outcome was poor in the patients positive for antigen. It suggested that the prognosis of the patients with aspergilloma related with some degree of invasion of Aspergillus in parenchyma. It was reported that neoplasm is closely related to chronic tuberculous empyema. Lymphoma is most frequently complicated with chronic tuberculous empyema, and squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, sarcoma and carcinoid were reported as complication of chronic empyema. We reported the case of angiosarcoma, originated from chronic empyema in left thoracic cavity formed after being treated for tuberculosis with artificial pneumothorax. Recently, the number of patients with late sequelae of pulmonary tuberculosis have been decreased, but some severe cases of patients of pulmonary tuberculosis will suffer from late sequelae of pulmonary tuberculosis, and that is still a great problem of the clinical course of pulmonary tuberculosis.
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PMID:[The causes of death of pulmonary tuberculosis: late sequelae of pulmonary tuberculosis]. 1002 11

In clinical practice there are two sorts of measurements, a) arterial oxygen and carbon dioxide partial pressure (PaO2, PaCO2) or arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2), and b) the transfer capacity for carbon monoxide (TLCO). The former measures the output or performance of the lung as a gas exchanger, and the latter estimates the available surface area or potential for gas exchange. As gas exchange deteriorates (PaO2 falls and PaCO2 rises), the body compensates by increasing ventilation and lowering PaCO2). Therefore, a high PaCO2 represents chronic respiratory or "compensation" failure, either chemo-insensitivity ("won't breathe") or neuromuscular weakness/increased work of breathing ("cannot breathe"). Chronic respiratory failure may progress to acute failure in which PaCO2 falls and PaCO2 rises progressively, assisted ventilation is usually required. The TLCO is a laboratory test which measures the integrity of the blood-gas barrier, it is particularly useful in the assessment of emphysema, interstitial disease and pulmonary vascular disease.
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PMID:Assessing gas exchange. 1802 33

The characteristics of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who develop obliterative bronchiolitis characterised by severe airflow obstruction have been hitherto poorly investigated. A retrospective study of 25 patients with RA and functional evidence of obliterative bronchiolitis (forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV(1))/forced vital capacity (FVC) <50% and/or residual volume (RV)/total lung capacity (TLC) >140% predicted) was conducted. Patients (mean+/-SD age 64+/-11 yrs) included 17 never-smokers and eight ex-smokers (10.5+/-5.4 pack-yrs). The diagnosis of RA preceded respiratory symptoms in 88% of cases. Dyspnoea on exertion was present in all patients and bronchorrhea in 44%. High-resolution computed tomography findings included: bronchial wall thickening (96%), bronchiectasis (40%), mosaic pattern (40%), centrilobular emphysema (56%), and reticular and/or ground-glass opacities (32%). Pulmonary function tests showed: FEV(1) 41+/-12% pred, FEV(1)/FVC 49+/-14%, FVC 70+/-20% pred, RV 148+/-68% pred and RV/TLC 142+/-34% pred. Lung biopsy, available in nine patients, demonstrated constrictive, follicular and mixed bronchiolitis. Patients were followed for 48.2+/-49 months. Treatment was poorly effective. Chronic respiratory failure occurred in 40% of patients, and four patients died. Obliterative bronchiolitis associated with rheumatoid arthritis is a severe and under-recognised condition leading to respiratory failure and death in a high proportion of patients.
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PMID:Characterisation of severe obliterative bronchiolitis in rheumatoid arthritis. 1912 82