Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149514 (bronchitis)
6,902 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Plastic bronchitis is an unusual clinical scenario of unknown cause and occurs in multiple clinical settings. The disease is characterized by the development of arborizing, thick, tenacious casts of the tracheobronchial tree that results in airway obstruction. Patients with congenital heart disease who have undergone a Fontan operation are at high risk for having this problem develop. Management of this distressing situation is difficult with only palliative options being available, such as repeated bronchoscopies, inhaled heparin, tissue plasminogen activator, inhaled bronchodilators, or azithromycin. The patients with Fontan circuits have a myriad of unique complications develop, such as atrial arrhythmias, recurrent pleural effusions, chylothoraces, protein-losing enteropathy, and plastic bronchitis. High intrathoracic lymphatic pressures with nondemonstrable lympho-bronchial fistulas were believed to be the cause for the development of these recurrent bronchial casts in plastic bronchitis. Faced with recurrent plastic bronchitis resistant to medical management in 2 Fontan patients with normal Fontan pressures on cardiac catheterization, we decided to explore a surgical solution by performing a thoracic duct ligation. This resulted in complete resolution of the formation of casts in both patients, who were discharged home and remain asymptomatic on continued follow-up. Thoracic duct ligation provides a surgical cure for plastic bronchitis by decreasing intrathoracic lymphatic pressure and flow.
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PMID:Plastic bronchitis: is thoracic duct ligation a real surgical option? 1673 Nov 70

Double inlet left ventricle is a common form of univentricular atrioventricular connection. The clinical presentation is varied depending on associated lesions and the arrangement of great arteries. Management generally involves staging toward the ultimate goal of Fontan palliation. With advances in noninvasive diagnosis, surgical and postoperative care outcomes have significantly improved in the past decade. Most patients with double inlet left ventricle can go to school, play recreationally, and are gainfully employed. Some patients continue to pose difficult and frustrating medical problems, including arrhythmias, ventricular failure, atrioventricular valve insufficiency, subaortic obstruction, protein-losing enteropathy, and plastic bronchitis.
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PMID:Double inlet left ventricle. 1789 68

The Fontan circulation results from routing of the systemic venous blood to the pulmonary circulation without a hydraulic source of a ventricle. Although a hypertrophied right atrium was thought to be essential for this circulation, the current form of the operation has neither the right atrium nor any valves in the venous circulation that is connected to the pulmonary arteries directly. Modifications in the operative model was one of the early steps in improving outcome. Use of fenestration, staging of Fontan completion and better perioperative management have led to a significant drop in mortality rates in the current era. Despite this, there is late attrition of patients with complications such as arrhythmias, ventricular dysfunction, and unusual clinical syndromes of protein-losing enteropathy (PLE) and plastic bronchitis. Management of failing Fontan includes a detailed hemodynamic and imaging assessment to treat any correctable lesions such as obstruction within the Fontan circuit, early control of arrhythmia and maintenance of sinus rhythm, symptomatic treatment for PLE and plastic bronchitis, manipulation of systemic and pulmonary vascular resistance, and Fontan conversion of less favorable atriopulmonary connection to extra-cardiac total cavopulmonary connection with arrythmia surgery. Cardiac transplantation remains the only successful definitive palliation in the failing Fontan patients.
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PMID:The Fontan pathway: What's down the road? 2030 Feb 48

We report an unusual case of association of plastic bronchitis (PB) to protein-losing enteropathy (PLE) in a girl of 4 years and 9 months of age with double inlet single left ventricle and ventriculoarterial concordance. submitted to total cavopulmonary surgery. with an intracardiac lateral tunnel at the age of three. The elimination of the 10 cm fibrin bronchial mold (PB) and the alpha-1-antitrypsin elevation of 52 mg/g in feces had both become outstanding. Using sildenafil. the thoracic duct ligature and the cardiac transplant were programmed in case of continuity of the process.
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PMID:[Association of plastic bronchitis to protein-losing enteropathy after fontan operation]. 2049 23

The Fontan operation, originally described for the surgical management of tricuspid atresia, is now the final surgery in the strategy of staged palliation for a number of different forms of congenital cardiac disease with a functionally univentricular heart. Despite the improved technical outcomes of the Fontan operation, staged palliation does not recreate a normal physiology. Without a pumping chamber delivering blood to the lungs, the cardiovascular system is less efficient; cardiac output is generally diminished, and the systemic venous pressure is increased. As a result, patients with "Fontan physiology" may face a number of rare but potentially life-threatening complications including hepatic dysfunction, abnormalities of coagulation, protein-losing enteropathy, and plastic bronchitis. Despite the staged palliation resulting in remarkable survival, the possible complications for this group of patients are complex, involve multiple organ systems, and can be life threatening. Identifying the mechanisms associated with each of the rare complications, and developing strategies to treat them, requires the work of many people at many institutions. Continued collaboration between sub-specialists and between institutions will be required to optimise the care for this group of survivors with functionally univentricular hearts.
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PMID:Rare problems associated with the Fontan circulation. 2108 67

The Fontan procedure refers to any operation that results in the flow of systemic venous blood to the lungs without passing through a ventricle. It is performed to treat several complex congenital heart abnormalities including tricuspid atresia, pulmonary atresia with intact ventricular septum, hypoplastic left heart syndrome, and double-inlet ventricle. The original Fontan procedure included direct anastomosis of the right atrium to the main pulmonary artery; however, multiple modifications have been employed. Creation of Fontan circulation is palliative in nature, with good results in patients with ideal hemodynamics and substantial morbidity and mortality in those with poor hemodynamics. Complications of Fontan circulation include exercise intolerance, ventricular failure, right atrium dilatation and arrhythmia, systemic and hepatic venous hypertension, portal hypertension, coagulopathy, pulmonary arteriovenous malformation, venovenous shunts, and lymphatic dysfunction (eg, ascites, edema, effusion, protein-losing enteropathy, and plastic bronchitis). Magnetic resonance imaging is best for postoperative evaluation of patients who underwent the Fontan procedure, and cardiac transplantation remains the only definitive treatment for those with failing Fontan circulation.
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PMID:The Fontan procedure: anatomy, complications, and manifestations of failure. 2141 90

While the Fontan operation has facilitated the survival of a generation of children born with congenital heart disease resulting in a functional single ventricle, it does not recreate a normal circulation. Over time, survivors of the Fontan operation are at risk for ventricular dysfunction, plastic bronchitis, protein-losing enteropathy and chronic Fontan failure. New techniques and therapies are emerging to address the long-term risks associated with Fontan physiology, but as the number of survivors continues to grow, the recognition of the limitations of this circulation is increasing. Novel investigations of possible mechanical devices designed to function as a subpulmonary ventricle are underway, but are still many years away from clinical use. In the meantime, continued development of medical therapeutics targeted at the specific problems of the Fontan circulation will be beneficial and might reduce the need for cardiac transplantation.
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PMID:The failing Fontan: etiology, diagnosis and management. 2171 9

The extracardiac total cavopulmonary connection is the final stage of palliation of hearts with single-ventricle physiology. Protein-losing enteropathy (PLE) and plastic bronchitis are catastrophic sequale that may occur in patients with the total cavopulmonary connection and may complicate the early and long-term follow-up. Here we report on the successful treatment of a 16-year boy affected by PLE by percutaneous closure of a persistent anterograde pulmonary blood flow by using an 8-mm Amplatzer VSD Occluder.
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PMID:Protein-losing enteropathy resolved by percutaneous intervention. 2195 55

Children with functionally univentricular hearts are now surviving into their third and fourth decades of life. Although survival alone is a remarkable achievement, a lot must still be done to improve the quality and duration of life after the Fontan operation. Challenges that may be faced by these patients include the impact of the Fontan operation on the liver and the density of bone, protein-losing enteropathy, and plastic bronchitis. Paediatric cardiologists are familiar with the haemodynamic issues inherent in Fontan physiology; however, training in cardiology is often not sufficient to give us a complete understanding of the pathophysiology of the complications or of the options for treatment. Collaboration with other subspecialists including gastroenterologists, endocrinologists, and pulmonologists is essential in order to provide the rigorous and nuanced care that our patients need and deserve. A clinic in which a patient can see multiple subspecialists, and in which the subspecialists, as a group, can discuss each patient, can provide a unique and valuable service for patients with a functionally univentricular heart.
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PMID:New concepts: development of a survivorship programme for patients with a functionally univentricular heart. 2215 32

Plastic bronchitis is a rare, life-threatening condition characterized by the formation of mucofibrinous casts within the pulmonary bronchi. In patients with congenital heart disease, it is most frequently observed in single ventricular anatomies after Fontan palliation. The pathophysiology of plastic bronchitis remains unknown, and a consistently effective treatment strategy has yet to be identified. We report two cases of plastic bronchitis in patients with Fontan physiology. The first was treated with Fontan conversion and, despite encouraging short-term results, experienced recurrence of cast formation seven months postoperatively. The second underwent cardiac transplantation and has been free of bronchial casts for over one year. In addition, we explore the similarities between plastic bronchitis and protein-losing enteropathy, considering theories of their pathophysiologic mechanisms and reports of mutually effective treatment strategies. We propose that bronchial cast formation may result from the confluence of genetic makeup, inflammation, and the Fontan physiology and conclude that further investigation into therapies directed at these factors is merited.
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PMID:Plastic bronchitis in patients with fontan physiology: review of the literature and preliminary experience with fontan conversion and cardiac transplantation. 2380 71


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