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Query: UMLS:C0231835 (tachypnea)
2,543 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intestinal handling of water and electrolytes and motility were monitored in conscious dogs with chronic 25-cm Thiry-Vella loops of proximal jejunum. Absorption/secretion was quantitated using a neutral isosmotic perfusate containing [14C]polyethylene glycol as a recovery marker. Under basal conditions the animals absorbed water, Na+ and Cl-, while there was no net action on K+. Intravenous serotonin infusion (30 micrograms/kg/min) increased circulating levels of serotonin to a mean of 1556 +/- 191 ng/ml within 15 min of the commencement of the infusion. The infusion induced a significant secretion of water (mean -73 +/- 7 microliters/min) and electrolytes (sodium -10.4 +/- 0.7 muEq/min; potassium -0.8 +/- 0.05 muEq/min; chloride -12.4 +/- 1.0 muEq/min) in the dogs and all showed signs of hyperserotoninemia (salivation, loose bowel movements, tachypnea). After administration of ketanserin (33 micrograms/kg/min), a significant reduction in secretion was demonstrated (water +20.8 +/- 16.1 microliters/min; sodium 7.2 +/- 3.0 muEq/min; potassium -0.02 +/- 0.1 muEq/min; and chloride -1.9 +/- 2.8 muEq/min) as well as reduced motor activity. A similar antisecretory effect was demonstrated with atropine infusion (20 micrograms/kg/min), although this drug had a far more significant effect on the gastrointestinal motility recorded in the loop. Infusion of methysergide (33 micrograms/kg/min) did not significantly affect secretion (water -111.4 +/- 59.0 microliter/min; sodium -17.4 +/- 9 muEq/min; potassium -0.9 +/- 0.4 muEq/min; chloride -20.3 +/- 7.0 muEq/min). These results suggest possible actions which may make ketanserin useful in the treatment of symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome.
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PMID:Comparative effects of ketanserin, atropine and methysergide on the gastrointestinal effects of hyperserotoninemia in the awake dog. 294 78

Although recent interest in neonatal respiratory mechanics has led to the development of a plethora of techniques for measuring lung compliance and resistance, a critical appraisal of the limitations of these techniques in the newborn has not been performed to date. We evaluated three techniques of measuring respiratory mechanics in the newborn lamb, with the reference method (method 1) being the Mead-Whittenberger technique using flow, volume, and esophageal pressure (Pes) by water-filled catheter, and the other two methods entailing the measurement of mouth pressure (Pm) during airway occlusion (method 2 using end-expiratory occlusion; method 3 using end-inspiratory occlusion). Each technique was evaluated during eupnea and tachypnea in intubated and nonintubated newborn lambs. We found that the use of Pes for the measurement of resistance and compliance gave the most reliable results during both eupnea and tachypnea in both the intubated and nonintubated subjects. The airway occlusion techniques that use Pm to derive resistance and compliance (methods 2 and 3) gave more variable results under all conditions of testing. Method 2 was the least precise method of measurement with a variability of greater than 30% compared with a variation of less than 20% for method 1. For all three methods, it was found that the number of breaths needed for reproducible measurements of mechanics was four to six during eupnea and seven to nine during tachypnea.
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PMID:Measurement of pulmonary mechanics in the newborn lamb: a comparison of three techniques. 336 52

A 2-month-old, well developed, healthy boy, weighing 5.55 kg, was fed 200 ml of bottle-milk containing 65 ml of sake. So-called kanzamashi (sake boiled in the evening and remaining in a bottle overnight,) was mistaken for yuzamashi (water boiled and left to cool), and used to prepare a 15% formula milk. About 10 minutes later, the baby became flushed, began to breath hard, and lose consciousness, and an alcoholic odor was noticed. He was brought to our clinic, where gastric lavage and parenteral fluid therapy were started. On admission, his main physical signs were, whole body had become red, unconsciousness, alcoholic odor, tachycardia and tachypnea, without low body temperature, while his remarked laboratory findings were metabolic acidosis, hyperglycemia, and high A/G ratio. Moreover, a transient proteinuria, alternately followed by a transient glycosuria, appeared within the course. About 10 hours later, he showed an obvious improvement in both physical and laboratory findings. As an explanation of these changes in his condition due to alcohol ingestion, we speculated that a metabolic acidosis with hyperglycemia caused the disturbed reabsorption in his renal tubulus, which revealed alternating proteinuria and glycosuria.
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PMID:Acute alcohol intoxication in a two-month-old baby. 357 10

Hypoplasia of the lungs is the cause of the high mortality of newborns with diaphragmatic hernia. Survival depends mainly on the development of the contralateral lung. Eighty percent of diaphragmatic hernias are postolateral hernias of the left side. The most serious postoperative complication is a relapse into fetal circulation with increased pulmonary vascular resistance and right-to-left shunting (Fig. 2). The clinical signs of diaphragmatic hernia are cyanosis and tachypnea. Intermittent suction via a nasogastric tube and early intubation without mask ventilation should be performed. The inspiratory pressure should not exceed 25 cm H2O to minimize the risk of pneumothorax. Survival of the baby is unlikely if the initial blood gas analysis shows pH less than 7.10, pO2 less than 50 mmHg, and pCO2 greater than 65 mmHg. Hypothermia should be strictly avoided because it leads to increased oxygen consumption. Intraoperative monitoring should include a precordial stethoscope, ECG, blood pressure, and rectal temperature. Anesthesia is maintained with fentanyl 0.02-0.03 mg/kg body wt. and pancuronium 0.08-0.1 mg/kg. One dose of atropine (0.02 mg/kg) is administered before fentanyl. Intraoperative ventilation is performed by hand or by use of a Siemens Servo ventilator. Thirty newborns were anesthetized for repair of a congenital diaphragmatic hernia with no intraoperative complication and an overall mortality of 27%.
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PMID:[Anesthesia for congenital diaphragmatic hernia]. 363 96

1 The characteristics of vanadate-induced bronchoconstriction and airways hyperreactivity were observed in spontaneously breathing anaesthetized guinea-pigs by measurement of airways resistance (Raw) and dynamic lung compliance (Cdyn). Vanadate (0.3-3 mg kg-1 i.v. over 25 min) increased Raw and decreased Cdyn in a reversible, dose-related manner. This action (1 mg kg-1 vanadate) was not inhibited by atropine (1 mg kg-1 i.v.), propranolol (1 mg kg-1 i.v.) or bilateral vagotomy, suggesting a direct effect on the airways smooth muscle. 2 An aerosol of vanadate (10% w/v in H2O) for 3 min decreased Cdyn by 19.5% (P less than 0.05, n = 6) but caused no change in Raw. 3 Histamine (3 micrograms kg-1 i.v.) caused a bronchoconstriction which was enhanced by vanadate in a dose-related manner. This hyperreactivity (after 1 mg kg-1 i.v. vanadate) was unchanged after propranolol or bilateral vagotomy, but was partly blocked by atropine (enhancement by vanadate of the Cdyn change to histamine was diminished, P less than 0.02, n = 3). 4 Bronchoconstrictor responses to acetylcholine (6 micrograms kg-1 i.v.) and 5-hydroxytryptamine (6 micrograms kg-1 i.v.) were also enhanced by vanadate (1 mg kg-1 i.v.) Hyperreactivity after vanadate to the three bronchoconstrictors tested continued during vanadate infusion and was reversed 45 min after cessation of infusion. 5 Histamine (3 ;Lgkg-' i.v.) caused a transient tachypnoea which was also enhanced by vanadate (0.3-3mgkg-'i.v.), in a dose-related manner, in association with the increased reactivity of the airways (r = 0.66, n = 11). 6 It is concluded that vanadate-induced airways hyperreactivity is non-vagal (efferent) and largely non-cholinergic in origin and appears to involve an action of vanadate within the lung itself.
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PMID:Airways hyperreactivity and bronchoconstriction induced by vanadate in the guinea-pig. 366 86

The objective of this study was to determine whether airway occlusion pressure (P0.1) is a useful predictor for successful weaning during discontinuation of assisted ventilation (AV) in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). We studied 12 patients with COPD receiving AV with maximal inspiratory pressure (MIP) less than or equal to -20 cm H2O and FVC greater than or equal to 10 ml/kg. The P0.1, VT, frequency, mean inspiratory flow rate (VT/TI), inspiratory time to total breath cycle duration (TI/Ttot), and arterial blood gases were determined just prior to weaning, within 5 min after discontinuing AV (Time 0), and at 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, and 240 min. Five of the 12 patients failed to wean, defined as requiring AV within 24 h after discontinuing AV. At Time 0, all patients who subsequently failed to wean had a P0.1 of greater than 6 cm H2O, and those who were successfully weaned had a P0.1 of less than 6 cm H2O (p less than 0.001), although the arterial blood gas determinations were comparable in both groups. Throughout the study period, P0.1 in the patients who failed to wean was persistently higher than in the successfully weaned patients. Despite the high P0.1, VT and VT/TI decreased significantly at the termination of the study compared with those at Time 0 in 3 of the patients who failed to wean. Tachypnea was not useful in predicting failure to wean. The TI/Ttot in the patients who failed to wean was persistently lower than in the successfully weaned patients. We conclude that P0.1 is an important indicator for successful weaning.
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PMID:Airway occlusion pressure. An important indicator for successful weaning in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. 380 Jan 39

Gelatine capsules containing Escherichia coli and Bacteroides fragilis in a standardized mixture with rat colonic content and barium sulfate were implanted intraabdominally into rats. Capsules of 0.75 g gave approximately 50% mortality whereas 0.35 and 1.10 g caused no or 100% mortality, respectively. In subsequent experiments, using the 0.75 g capsule, all animals became ill with signs of tachypnea, piloerection, low physical activity and hypersecretion of saliva 6-8 h after the implantation. The animals reduced their water and food intake substantially and the body weight decreased. A significant reduction in blood pressure, glucose and leukocyte and platelet counts was found 12 h after challenge. Blood cultures obtained at 12, 24, 48 and 60 h all grew E. coli but none B. fragilis. Succumbed animals revealed diffuse peritonitis with growth of E. coli and B. fragilis at autopsy, whereas surviving animals showed abscess formation at investigation on day 8 after challenge. It was concluded that the model closely resembled intraabdominal abscess formation with sepsis in man.
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PMID:Standardized intraabdominal abscess formation with generalized sepsis: pathophysiology in the rat. 388 37

Respiratory muscle weakness is considered to be a factor in the inability to wean from mechanical ventilation. To assess this possibility, the present study examined the mechanical behavior of the diaphragm by measuring the change in transdiaphragmatic pressure (delta Pdi) during weaning. Nine "T-piece" weanings were carried out in seven patients with prior weaning failure and were terminated with the development of hypercapnia, hypoxemia, or severe tachypnea. Serial measurements of delta Pdi during these weans revealed that (1) in no case was there a decrease in delta Pdi at termination of weaning, and (2) in the subgroup of patients whose weaning failed because of hypercapnia, the increase in arterial carbon dioxide tension (mean increase of 12 mm Hg) was associated with a significant increase in delta Pdi, from the beginning (21.1 +/- 12.1 cm H2O) to the end (24.8 +/- 13.4 cm H2O) of the trial (p less than 0.05). We conclude that failure to wean in these patients, in particular the development of carbon dioxide retention, was not due to failure of the diaphragm as a pressure generator.
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PMID:Diaphragmatic strength during weaning from mechanical ventilation. 393 89

Normal brain and brain tumor temperatures were studied for their effects on intracranial pressure (ICP) in 13 patients who received 37 localized thermochemotherapy treatments for recurrent primary or metastatic brain tumors. Two transient neurologic complications occurred in patients with an elevated initial ICP value; thus, the authors concluded that an initial ICP value of 30 cm H2O or greater may contraindicate brain hyperthermia. It appears that noninvasive brain hyperthermia by magnetic-loop induction can cause an initial rise in ICP value, although a protective mechanism(s) that tends to lower ICP occurs over time, and also at a normal brain temperature of approximately 42.0 degrees C. Possible mechanisms of ICP reduction include direct heating of the hypothalamus with a reduction in pCO2 and the development of tachypnea and hyperpnea with a reduction in pCO2. Hyperthermia applied to the brain should be undertaken only with adequate monitoring of ICP; in addition, extreme caution should be taken in patients with an elevated initial ICP value and in those patients in whom adaptation to elevated pressure does not occur.
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PMID:Effect of localized magnetic-induction hyperthermia on the brain. Temperature versus intracranial pressure. 394 22

Cyclopiazonic acid (CPA) was found to have many pharmacological properties in common with the antipsychotic drugs chlorpromazine and reserpine. Thus, in mice CPA at ip doses of 5-14 mg/kg body weight produced hypokinesia, hypothermia, catalepsy, ptosis, sedation without loss of righting reflex, tremor, gait disturbance, dyspnoea, opisthotonus, atypical convulsion and prolonged barbiturate-induced sleep. The ip LD50 of CPA was found to be 13 +/- 0.05 mg/kg. The tremors induced by near-lethal doses of CPA were associated with voluntary or forced movements (action tremors); they worsened during the days following treatment, but they were weak compared with the exhausting and continuous tremors of the whole body caused by 20 mg tremorine/kg (used for comparison). When death occurred only 24-259 min after administration of CPA (11-14 mg/kg), it was preceded by dypsnoea, cyanosis, opisthotonus and clonic leg movements and tonic extension of hind legs (convulsions). When death was delayed (2-6 days after CPA administration), it was preceded by prostration, ptosis, hypothermia, tremor and cessation of food and water intake resulting in cachexia; convulsions were not seen in this group of mice. CPA did not affect the rate of convulsion or death caused by either maximal electroshock or metrazol administration but it did delay the onset of metrazol-induced seizures. In rabbits, 10 mg CPA/kg body weight initially produced tachycardia, tachypnoea and sedation with an activated electroencephalogram. Of three rabbits given 10 mg CPA/kg one died, and in this rabbit slow delta waves were seen just before and during a brief period with clonic leg movements. In this animal death was accompanied by tonic extension of the hind legs, respiratory arrest and cardiac fibrillation; and epileptiform EEG was not seen at any time. The unexpected EEG activation with sedation in rabbits treated with CPA was similar to the effect of reserpine on EEG.
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PMID:Toxicity and neuropharmacology of cyclopiazonic acid. 404 83


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