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Query: UMLS:C0040586 (
tracheobronchitis
)
449
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Smoke inhalation injury is a complex of disease processes best understood and treated when defined in terms of the time period after injury. The early phase (0 to 36 hrs) is characterized by diagnosis and treatment of carbon monoxide and cyanide toxicity and by management of early airways edema, bronchorrhea, and bronchoconstriction with aggressive pulmonary toilet. Between 1 and 5 days, the major characteristic is airways mucosal slough,
tracheobronchitis
, and increasing lung water and impaired gas exchange. Pulmonary toilet and infection control, as well as close management of fluid shifts, is the major treatment. With onset of the inflammation-infection phase, the risk of nosocomial
pneumonia
increases markedly, as does the impairment in lung function as a result of marked increase in oxygen consumption and CO2 production. Nutrition, stress modification, avoidance of muscle fatigue, and control of infection are the key treatment modalities.
...
PMID:Smoke inhalation injury. 792 21
We evaluated antibody-coated bacteria (ACB) in expectorated sputum to discriminate contaminating or colonizing organisms from true pathogens. We examined 60 expectorated sputum samples from 51 patients with lower respiratory infections (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease 25,
pneumonia
20, purulent
tracheobronchitis
6). All samples were examined with quantitative culture and immunofluorescent demonstration of ACB. From the results of quantitative culture, we divided specimens into pathogen-isolated and pathogen-free samples. Among pathogen-isolated samples, in which we isolated accepted pathogenic organisms at > or = 10(7) colony-forming units per ml, 16 of 23 samples were ACB-positive (69.5%). In contrast, among pathogen-free samples, in which we isolated accepted pathogens at < 10(7) colony forming units per ml or only upper respiratory flora, only 3 of 37 samples were ACB-positive (8.1%). The ACB-positive rate was significantly higher in pathogen-isolated than in pathogen-free samples (P < 0.001). Consequently, detecting ACB in expectorated sputum shows good potential as another criterion for distinguishing contaminating or colonizing organisms from true pathogens.
...
PMID:Detection of antibody-coated bacteria in expectorated sputum for diagnosis of lower respiratory infections. 793 47
Selective decontamination of the digestive tract (SDD) involves the administration of non-absorbable antibiotics (+/- a systemic antibiotic) to prevent colonization and infection in intensive care unit patients. The regimen is targeted at nosocomial gram-negative bacilli, some gram-positive bacteria and yeast. Although all studies of SDD have demonstrated reduced rates of bacterial colonization and most yielded lower respiratory tract infection, it is unclear if the major impact of SDD is on
pneumonia
or
tracheobronchitis
. SDD regimens utilizing a broad spectrum, systemic antibiotic appear to be more effective, suggesting that this constitutes early treatment rather than prophylaxis. To date, there is conflicting evidence that SDD significantly reduces length of stay, mortality, or hospital costs. Currently, there are concerns that SDD may result in increased colonization and infection with gram-positive organisms and multi-drug resistant pathogens, particularly in medical ICU patients or when used for extended periods of time.
...
PMID:Selective decontamination of the digestive tract: risks outweigh benefits for intensive care unit patients. 793 28
Despite advances in mechanical ventilatory support for patients with smoke inhalation injury, including the use of high-frequency flow-interruption ventilators such as the VDR, inhalation injury alone may increase mortality by as much as 20% in patients with thermal injury, and up to 60% when
pneumonia
occurs. Inhalation injury causes a primary large and small airway epithelial insult that results in ventilation abnormalities, rather than a primary alveolar lesion that results in oxygenation abnormalities as occur in multiple-system organ failure. Patients with inhalation injury requiring high ventilatory pressures experience complications of barotrauma and frequently succumb to necrotizing
tracheobronchitis
and oxygenation abnormalities after 2 to 4 weeks of mechanical ventilation. Ventilatory indexes obtained early in the postburn period allow the development of accurate predictive formulae that identify patients who will not be adequately supported by mechanical ventilation after smoke inhalation injury. Early identification of such patients will allow rapid conversion to other methods of ventilatory support that effect gas exchange, with minimal risk of further barotrauma, while inhalation injury healing occurs. Such predictors may be developed for other disease processes that are characterized by severe pulmonary ventilatory dysfunction.
...
PMID:Predicting ventilation failure in children with inhalation injury. 796 18
By pediatricians the high frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) is used almost only in the neonatal period. We report on the administration of HFOV in infants with pulmonary insufficiency after failure of conventional ventilatory support. 6 infants (aged 2-7 months, all former preterm babies) were referred to our hospital due to severe
pneumonia
after unsuccessful conservative management. Indications for HFOV were hypoxia (mean paO2 41.8 mm Hg with FiO2 = 0.95 and mean airway pressure = 16.6 cm H2O) and/or air leak syndrome. In all cases a sufficient oxygenation could be achieved by HFOV, followed then by stepwise reduction of FiO2 and MAP. The air leaks receded. After 12-178 h on HFOV a successful switchback to conventional ventilatory support (at FiO2 = 0.48 and MAP < 12 cm H2O) was possible, all infants were extubated 6-15 days later. Possible risks of HFOV are air leaks, a necrotizing
tracheobronchitis
and hemodynamic changes due to compression of the heart and great vessels. With the at the moment in Germany available oscillatory ventilators HFOV as a rescue therapy must be limited for infants with a body weight below 5-6 kg.
...
PMID:[High frequency oscillatory ventilation of infants with severe respiratory disorders: possibilities, risks and limits]. 805 9
In the course of developing a model of inhalation injury, the relationship between the severity of pulmonary injury and specific techniques and doses of smoke exposure was examined in pairs of rabbits simultaneously exposed to smoke. In group I (5 pairs), one animal in each pair was exposed to smoke with a breath hold (BH) at the end of each exposure; the second animal received an exposure producing the same level of carboxyhemoglobin without BH. In group II (6 pairs), both animals were exposed to 25 units of smoke simultaneously, with BH. In group III (3 pairs), one animal received a 20-unit exposure and the other a 25-unit exposure, both with BH. In group IV, 9 animals received 25-unit exposures with BH and were observed for 4 days. Groups V and VI served as controls. Smoke exposure with BH regularly produced severe injury in terms of decreased PaO2 and histopathologic changes, while exposure without BH did not, despite high levels of carboxyhemoglobin after smoke inhalation. The mean differences in percent residual PaO2 (PaO2 at 48 hours x 100/pre-injury PaO2) and in extravascular lung water (EVLW) at 48 hours within pairs of animals receiving 25 units with BH were 12.3% +/- 5.33%, and 0.271 +/- 0.157 mL/g, respectively. Histologic findings such as necrotic
tracheobronchitis
with pseudomembrane were consistently present. No differences were observed between animals receiving exposure of 20 and 25 units. During the 4 days of observation, three animals in group IV died. PaO2 was lowest on the second day and rose thereafter in all surviving animals except in one that had massive
pneumonia
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:A rabbit model of inhalation injury. 848 84
All episodes of lower respiratory tract infection that developed among 96 patients surviving for > 24 hours after cardiac arrest were prospectively studied over an 18-month period.
Pneumonia
developed in 23 (24.0%) of patients after a mean of 7 days (SD, +/- 6.2 days). The development of four superinfections raised the cumulative incidence to 28.1%. Purulent
tracheobronchitis
was diagnosed in three instances. The causative agent of
pneumonia
was identified in 18 episodes, three of which were polymicrobial. Gram-positive cocci represented 57.1% of isolates, and Staphylococcus aureus--the most frequently isolated microorganism in this population--accounted for two-thirds of all gram-positive cocci. Pseudomonas aeruginosa was isolated in six episodes, five of which were associated with previous antibiotic use. Nine (39.1%) of the 23 patients in the group with
pneumonia
died, but only one of these deaths was considered to be directly related to
pneumonia
. In conclusion,
pneumonia
is a common complication of patients surviving cardiac arrest, but, with adequate treatment, its influence on outcome is marginal. Gram-positive cocci are the predominant pathogens, although infection with P. aeruginosa should be considered among patients receiving antibiotics.
...
PMID:Lower respiratory tract infections following cardiac arrest and cardiopulmonary resuscitation. 856 36
Prophylaxis of alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS) in alcohol-dependent patients shortens the duration of stay in the intensive care unit (ICU). The objective of this study was to assess the effect of four different prophylactic regimens on the duration of ICU stay, prevention of AWS and rate of major intercurrent complications in alcohol-dependent patients admitted to the ICU after tumour resection. A total of 197 alcohol-dependent patients, diagnosed by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (third revised edition) with a daily ethanol intake of 60 g, were allocated randomly to one of the following regimens which were commenced on admission to the ICU: flunitrazepam-clonidine, chlormethiazole-haloperidol, flunitrazepam-haloperidol or ethanol. The duration of ICU stay, prevention of AWS, incidence of
tracheobronchitis
and major intercurrent complications such as
pneumonia
, sepsis, cardiac disorders, bleeding disorders and death were documented. On admission, patients did not differ significantly in age, APACHE II and multiple organ failure scores. ICU stay, incidence of AWS, severity of AWS (revised clinical institute withdrawal assessment for alcohol scale > 20) and major intercurrent complication rate did not differ significantly between groups. Although there was no advantage in any of the four regimens with respect to the primary outcome measures, pulmonary and cardiac patients were not included in the study. Patients in the chlormethiazole-haloperidol group had a significantly increased incidence of
tracheobronchitis
(P = 0.0023), probably because of an increased incidence of hypersecretion.
...
PMID:Prophylaxis of alcohol withdrawal syndrome in alcohol-dependent patients admitted to the intensive care unit after tumour resection. 867 22
Causes of hemoptysis in children have not been well documented in the paediatric otolaryngology literature. The aim of this retrospective review is to determine the commonest causes of hemoptysis in the paediatric age group presenting to an otolaryngologist. We reviewed the charts of patients presenting to an otolaryngologist at The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, over a 10-year period. A total of 37 inpatients beyond the neonatal period were referred for further assessment of hemoptysis. Thirty-two patients (86.5%) underwent bronchoscopy to determine the cause, the hemoptysis resolving spontaneously in the remaining five patients without a diagnosis. Four patients who had a bronchoscopy also had no identifiable pathology.
Tracheobronchitis
was the commonest diagnosis (19%), followed by tracheotomy-related problems (15.5%) Other causes included bronchiectasis, aspiration of blood, pulmonary hemorrhage, foreign-body aspiration, cystic fibrosis, A-V malformation, tracheobronchial hemangioma, hereditary telangiectasia, laceration of a vocal cord, and
pneumonia
. Otolaryngologists need to be aware of the etiology of hemoptysis in children. The commonest causes are infection and trauma, and not vascular anomalies or neoplasms as often perceived.
...
PMID:Hemoptysis in children: the hospital for sick children experience. 881 10
Mycoplasma pneumoniae is a major cause of
tracheobronchitis
and
pneumonia
in older children and young adults. The lack of adequate tools for genetic analysis has hindered the elucidation of function and regulation of mycoplasma virulence determinants. We describe here the use of a transposon vector to deliver the cloned gene for the cytadherence-associated protein HMW1 in M. pneumoniae. A 4.95 kbp BamHI fragment encoding all but the C-terminal end of HMW1 was cloned into a modified Tn4001 and transformed into wild-type M. pneumoniae and into a non-cytadhering mutant lacking HMW1-HMW5. Southern blot hybridizations confirmed insertion of the transposon and the presence of both the resident and recombinant hmw1 alleles. Analysis by Western immunoblotting revealed a truncated HMW1 (HMW1') in the transformants, the level of HMW1' being dependent upon the orientation of the hmw1 gene in the transposon and the site of insertion. Similar expression patterns were noted in wild-type and mutant backgrounds. However, expression of wild-type levels of HMW1' in the mutant did not restore adherence. Finally, HMW4 and HMW1 were shown to be products of the same gene, HMW4 being a heat-modified derivative of HMW1.
...
PMID:Expression in Mycoplasma pneumoniae of the recombinant gene encoding the cytadherence-associated protein HMW1 and identification of HMW4 as a product. 883 Feb 65
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