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Query: UMLS:C0231835 (
tachypnea
)
2,543
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ventilation was measured by barometric plethysmography in conscious, 10-14 day-old guinea-pigs with superior laryngeal nerves (SLN) intact or sectioned. In SLN-intact animals, hypercapnia caused concentration-dependent increases in respiratory frequency, tidal volume and minute ventilation but hypoxia had no effects. SLN section reduced respiratory frequency and minute ventilation during normoxia and reduced the ventilatory response to 6%
CO2
. In the same animals under anaesthesia, upper airway (UA) cooling decreased respiratory frequency and increased peak inspiratory flow in SLN-intact but not in SLN-sectioned animals.
CO2
in the UA caused a
tachypnoea
which was also present in SLN-sectioned animals and when the nose was bypassed. These results show that UA afferents participate in ventilatory control in neonatal guinea-pigs. Moderate UA cooling causes a SLN-dependent decrease in respiratory frequency but UA
CO2
causes
tachypnoea
which is not SLN-mediated and contrasts with the inhibitory effect of UA
CO2
on breathing described in adults of other species.
...
PMID:Effects of superior laryngeal nerve section on ventilation in neonatal guinea-pigs. 852 18
A 6-year old female child received succinylcholine (1 mg.kg-1) and isoflurane (concentrations of 1.5-2 percent) and developed at the end of surgery a hypermetabolic syndrome suggestive of malignant hyperthermia (MH) with masseter muscle spasm, muscle rigidity,
tachypnea
, systolic hypertension (140 mm Hg), tachycardia (205 beats.min-1), hypercarbia (end expiratory
CO2
71 mmHg), and an increase in body temperature (39.2 degrees C). The child responded well to therapy which included cooling, hyperventilation with pure oxygen and dantrolene administration. However, blood creatine kinase and myoglobin elevations were moderate (respectively 375 IU.L-1 and 114 micrograms.L-1) and an in vitro halothane and caffeine contracture test was negative. Differential diagnostic proposals are discussed and compared to the clinical incident.
...
PMID:Malignant hyperthermia suggestive hypermetabolic syndrome at emergence from anesthesia. 871 51
Complications may occur when nutritional support is administered either parenterally or enterally. Inappropriate nutritional formulas with high carbohydrate loads can precipitate respiratory failure in patients with compromised lung function, induce respiratory distress which manifests as dyspnea and
tachypnea
in an originally normal lung condition, produce hypercapnic acidosis in mechanically ventilated patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) as well as patients recovering from acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) without chronic lung disease, or result in difficult weaning. Hypercaloric mixed substrates administered either parenterally or enterally can also have profound impacts on gas exchange and energy expenditure. This report describes a patient who experienced exacerbation of respiratory distress and hypercapnic acidosis during recovery from septic ARDS as the result of a nutritionally-related increase in
CO2
production. As carbohydrate calories were decreased,
CO2
production diminished and the hypercapnia was resolved. The importance of indirect calorimetry cannot be overemphasized during tailoring of nutritional support for the critically ill patients.
...
PMID:Hypercapnic respiratory acidosis precipitated by hypercaloric carbohydrate infusion in resolving septic acute respiratory distress syndrome: a case report. 903 53
This report presents the case of a 2-year-old boy who had a bifid epiglottis associated with Joubert's syndrome. He had episodic
tachypnea
and apnea, inspiratory stridor, aspiration, and growth and mental retardation. Direct laryngoscopy demonstrated agenesis of the right half of the epiglottis and hypertrophied mucosa over the arytenoid cartilage. After the hypertrophied mucosa was partially vaporized with a
CO2
laser, the inspiratory stridor soon improved and the aspiration was alleviated. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed cerebellar vermian agenesis and enlargement of the fourth ventricle.
...
PMID:Bifid epiglottis associated with Joubert's syndrome. 1121 29
Increased understanding of the mechanisms and effects of acute respiratory failure has not been accompanied by more precise criteria by which the clinician can determine when intubation should be carried out and invasive positive-pressure ventilation (IPPV) instituted in a given patient. The indications traditionally offered in reviews and textbooks have tended to be either so broad as not to be very helpful in an individual case, or of questionable clinical relevance and too cumbersome for practical use. This review updates the indications for IPPV in adult patients with acute respiratory failure by examining available evidence from clinical trials and by considering new management alternatives that have become available in the last 20 years. Indications for IPPV based on specific threshold values for P(
CO2
) and pH or on various indices of arterial oxygenation have generally not been validated by clinical evidence, and it is unlikely that any cutoff value would be applicable to all patients or all categories of acute respiratory failure. Stated another way, there is probably no single value for arterial P(
CO2
), pH, or P(O2) that by itself constitutes an indication for IPPV. Compelling face validity justifies the use of IPPV in cases of apnea or when it appears certain that respiratory arrest is about to occur. However, dyspnea,
tachypnea
, or the subjective impression of respiratory distress are probably not in themselves justification for emergency intubation. It should be possible to avoid IPPV and its attendant complications in many cases of acute hypercapnic respiratory failure. In acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, noninvasive positive-pressure ventilation (NPPV) should be the initial ventilation approach unless the patient has one of several specific exclusion criteria such as cardiovascular instability or severely impaired mental status. It may also be possible to avoid intubation through the use of NPPV in certain immunocompromised patients with early acute hypoxemic respiratory failure. However, in other settings of acute hypoxemic respiratory failure, such as acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome, this has not been shown. The use of IPPV may improve outcomes in patients with severe cardiogenic shock. However, IPPV has not proven to be beneficial in traumatic brain injury and flail chest, in the absence of other indications.
...
PMID:Indications for mechanical ventilation in adults with acute respiratory failure. 1187 5
Malignant hyperthermia is a potentially fatal pharmacogenetic disease triggered by volatile anesthetics and/or succinylcholine. Dysregulation of intracellular calcium homeostasis is the trigger of the acute crisis. Malignant hyperthermia crisis correspond to an hypermetabolic state, which occurred acutely and interesting skeletal muscular cell. Early manifestations grouped tachycardia,
tachypnea
, masseter spasm, mixed acidosis and raise of the end expiratory
CO2
pressure. Hyperthermia is a late sign, rhabdomyolysis is a sign of the severity of the malignant hyperthermia. The successful treatment is based on an early diagnosis, immediately interruption of triggering agents, intravenous administration of Dantrolene in sufficient dosage and starting of adequate symptomatic treatment. Prevention of this complication is based on asking the patient about genetic predisposition to malignant hyperthermia. Confirmation of the susceptibility to malignant hyperthermia can be provided by in vitro contracture test with halothane or caffeine after muscle biopsy.
...
PMID:[Malignant hyperthermia]. 1261 49
In this study, we examined the cardiorespiratory patterns of harbour seal pups under normoxic/normocarbic (air), hypoxic/normocarbic (15%, 12%, and 9% O2 in air), and normoxic/hypercarbic (2%, 4%, and 6%
CO2
in air) conditions while awake and sleeping on land. Animals were chronically instrumented to record electroencephalogram (EEG), electromyogram (EMG), and electrocardiogram (EKG) signals, which, along with respiration (whole-body plethysmography) and oxygen consumption (VO2), were recorded from animals breathing each gas mixture for 2-4 h on separate days. Our results show that for animals breathing air, VO2 was not significantly lower during slow-wave sleep (SWS; 7.71 +/- 0.39 mL O2 min(-1) kg(-1); all measurements are mean +/- SEM) than during wakefulness (WAKE; 8.80 +/- 0.25 mL O2 min(-1) kg(-1)) and was unaffected by changes in respiratory drive. Although there was no significant fall in VO2 associated with a decrease in arousal state, breathing frequency (f(R)) did decrease (from 18.80 +/- 1.50 breaths min(-1) in WAKE to 10.40 +/- 0.49 breaths min(-1) in SWS), while the incidence of long apneas (>20 s) increased (12.76 +/- 4.06 apneas h(-1) in WAKE and 31.95 +/- 2.37 apneas h(-1) in SWS). Breathing was rarely seen during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.
Tachypnea
was present at all levels of increased respiratory drive; however, hypoxia induced a dramatic bradycardia regardless of arousal state, while hypercarbia produced a tachycardia in SWS only. The hypoxic and hypercarbic chemosensitivities of harbour seal pups were similar to those of terrestrial mammals; however, unlike terrestrial mammals, where hypoxic and hypercarbic sensitivities are often reduced during SWS, the sensitivity of harbour seal pups to hypoxia and hypercarbia remained unchanged during the decrease in arousal state from WAKE to SWS.
...
PMID:Respiratory chemosensitivity during wake and sleep in harbour seal pups (Phoca vitulina richardsii). 1554 2
In cattle, sheep and goats, during resting conditions, breathing frequency (f) greatly exceeds the value expected for their body weight (W, kg) from the allometric curve of other land mammals. It was postulated that this was the effect of the production of
CO2
during rumen fermentation. If this were the case, a high f should be a general characteristic of ruminants. Measurements of f have been obtained in 106 awake and resting animals of 56 species, of which 30 were non-ruminant land mammals, and 26 were ruminants. The ruminant species comprised 15 Bovidae (B), 6 Cervidae (CR), 3 Camelidae (CM), and 2 Giraffidae (G). Additional data of 14 species were available from the literature. The allometric function (f, breaths/min; W, kg) for non-ruminant species was f=53W(-0.251) and not different between males and females. The allometric curve remained unaltered with the inclusion of the 11 species of CR, CM and G, but it was greatly modified by the B species. The significantly higher f in ruminants, as a group, was contributed by B (P<0.001), whereas the f of CR, CM and G did not differ significantly from the non-ruminant values. We conclude that the high f of cattle and other domestic ruminants is a characteristic shared by many other species of the Bovidae family, but is not a general feature of ruminants. Out of various possibilities, it seems most probable that the
tachypnea
of Bovidae is in response to the elastic load imposed on the respiratory system by the rumen, the size of which exceeds that of other families of ruminants.
...
PMID:Breathing frequency in ruminants: a comparative analysis with non-ruminant mammals. 1570 41
This is the first study aiming to assess the effects of heliox in combination with nasal continuous positive airway pressure (Hx-nCPAP) as a rescue treatment in infants with refractory acute bronchiolitis. Fifteen out of 78 infants with acute bronchiolitis consecutively admitted to PICU fulfilled the inclusion criteria: clinical score>or=5 or arterial oxygen saturation (SatO2)<or=92% or PCO2>50 mmHg, despite supportive therapy, nebulized L-epinephrine, and heliox therapy through non-rebreathing reservoir facemask. Hx-nCPAP was added as a rescue treatment. Baseline mean (standard deviation) values were: clinical score of 7.4 (1.2) points; PCO2 of 63.8 (12) mmHg; respiratory rate (RR) of 66.4 (9.9); and SatO2 of 88.6 (4.7)%. Clinical score, PCO2, RR and SatO2 improved during the study time (P<0.05). After 1 h the mean clinical score decreased by 1.5 points, with a total average decrease of 3.5 points at the end of the study period. The mean PCO2 diminished by 9 and 25 mmHg, after 1 and 48 h, respectively. The mean RR decreased 13 rpm after 1 h and 30 rpm after 48 h. The Hx-nCPAP total duration ranged from 2 to 14 days. Only one patient required endotracheal intubation. No adverse effects were detected. All patients recovered fully. In conclusion, Hx-nCPAP improved the clinical score, decreased the
tachypnea
and enhanced the
CO2
elimination of infants with refractory acute bronchiolitis within 1h of administration, in a safe and non-invasive manner. Hx-nCPAP might reduce the need for endotracheal intubation. Further studies are needed.
...
PMID:Nasal continuous positive airway pressure with heliox in infants with acute bronchiolitis. 1640 57
It has been estimated in Japan that Western-life style increases maternal mortality because of pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE). We report a 29-year-old primipara who suffered PTE due to deep venous thrombosis (DVT) in her 29th weeks' gestation. Except for slight
tachypnea
, she was relatively stable. Anticoagulation with heparin was started immediately. The retrievable inferior vena cava filter (IVC-F) was inserted. Four hours before surgery with discontinuation of heparin, the cesarean section was performed under general anesthesia. We used transesophageal echocardiography, a pulmonary artery catheter and end tidal
CO2
monitoring for early detection and rapid management of recurrent PTE. She had no trouble during operation and her baby was born without serious symptoms. After recovery from anesthesia, she was admitted to the intensive care unit. Heparin was restarted after confirmation of hemostasis. On the 3rd postoperative day, we started thrombolytic therapy with urokinase which was tapered off during a week. Heparin was switched to warfarine gradually. On the 10th postoperative day, IVC-F could not be removed because of remaining DVT. She was discharged on daily warfarine. We experienced the perioperative management for cesarean section at 29 weeks' gestation following PTE due to DVT.
...
PMID:[Perioperative management for cesarean section in a patient with pulmonary thromboembolism due to deep venous thrombosis]. 1751 98
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