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Query: UMLS:C0040586 (
tracheobronchitis
)
449
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Progressive pulmonary insufficiency appears to be a universal response to the lung to a variety of injuries which damage the pulmonary-capillary emdothelium. Persistent hyperventilation, unresponsive to the administration of oxygen, is the earliest clinical sign of this complication of trauma and should prompt close monitoring of pulmonary function (measurement of arterial blood gas and pH levels, Vd/Vt A-aDo2, minute ventilation, vital capacity and inspiratory force) to assess the severity of the disease, the need for mechanical ventilatory support and the effectiveness of treatment. Other pulmonary complications of burn injury range from
carbon monoxide
poisoning and narcotics overdosage in the immediate postburn period through marked hyperventilation directly related to burn size occurring in the absence of significant parenchymal change to later occurring hematogenous and airborne pneumonia. Inhalation injury, a chemical
tracheobronchitis
which significantly increases the mortality of a given-sized burn, may be present immediately postburn but clinically inapparent for 48-72 hours. 133Xenon lung scans permit early diagnosis of this pulmonary injury and the timely institution of a graduated therapeutic response keyed to the severity of pulmonary disability. Knowledge of the pathogenesis of each of these complications is requisite for the physician caring for burn patients and permits the employment of rational preventive and therapeutic measures.
...
PMID:Progressive pulmonary insufficiency and other pulmonary complications of thermal injury. 109 77
Inhalation injury results from a type of chemical burn (
tracheobronchitis
) of the respiratory tract. When this injury occurs in patients with serious cutaneous burns the mortality is exceedingly high- 48% to 86%. The injury can be divided into three types according to the level at which the damage occurs; upper airway, major airway and terminal airway. The early signs and symptoms may be complicated by
carbon monoxide
poisoning. The patient's condition usually follows a staged progression that is proportional to the extent and severity of the
tracheobronchitis
. Indirect laryngoscopy, bronchoscopy, scintiscanning of the lung with xenon 133 and serial analysis of arterial blood gases are useful diagnostic techniques. Treatment must be expeditious, and it depends on the severity of the injury. The prophylactic use of antibiotics and steroids is contraindicated.
...
PMID:Inhalation injury caused by the products of combustion. 702 40
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
In order to address the role that the ambient air pollution mix, comprised of gaseous pollutants and various physical and chemical measures of particulate matter, plays in exacerbating cardiorespiratory disease, daily measures of fine and coarse particulate mass, aerosol chemistry (sulfates and acidity), and gaseous pollution (ozone, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and
carbon monoxide
) were collected in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, in the summers of 1992, 1993, and 1994. These time series were then compared with concurrent data on the number of daily admissions to hospitals for either cardiac diseases (ischemic heart disease, heart failure, and dysthymias) or respiratory diseases (
tracheobronchitis
, chronic obstructive long disease, asthma, and pneumonia). After adjusting the admission time series for long-term temporal trends, seasonal variations, the effects of short-term epidemics, day of the week effects, and ambient temperature and dew point temperature, positive associations were observed for all ambient air pollutants for both respiratory and cardiac diseases. Ozone was least sensitive to adjustment for the gaseous and particulate pollution measures. However, the association between the health outcomes and
carbon monoxide
, fine and coarse mass, sulfate levels and aerosol acidity could be explained by adjustment for exposure to gaseous pollutants. Increases in ozone, nitrogen dioxide, and sulfur dioxide equivalent to their interquartile ranges corresponded to an 11% and 13% increase in daily hospitalizations for respiratory and cardiac diseases, respectively. The inclusion of any one of the particulate air pollutants in multiple regression models did not increase these percentages. Particle mass and chemistry could not be identified as an independent risk factor for the exacerbation of cardiorespiratory diseases in this study beyond that attributable to climate and gaseous air pollution. We recommend that effects of particulate matter on health be assessed in conjunction with temporally covarying gaseous air pollutants.
...
PMID:The role of particulate size and chemistry in the association between summertime ambient air pollution and hospitalization for cardiorespiratory diseases. 928 96
A 4-month-old ex-premature infant with severe airway obstruction from subglottic cysts presented for surgical cyst removal. Laryngeal and tracheal surgical procedures in children may present difficulties for the anesthetist because the airway is shared with the surgeon. We report the use of high-frequency jet ventilation (HFJV) to maintain ventilation and provide adequate surgical access. Anesthesia was induced using sevoflurane in oxygen and was maintained with intravenous infusions of propofol 7.5 mg.kg(-1).h(-1) and remifentanil 0.4 microg.kg(-1).min(-1). The suction channel of the ENT laryngoscope was used to introduce an 8-FG ureteric drainage catheter into the larynx and this catheter was used to provide HFJV. Obstruction to expiratory flow was a major concern and was dependent on good positioning of the rigid laryngoscope. Complications such as barotrauma, pneumopericardium,
CO2
-retention, necrotizing
tracheobronchitis
, and gastric rupture dictate a fastidious technique.
...
PMID:Jet ventilation for laryngotracheal surgery in an ex-premature infant. 1610 12