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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (
collapse
)
28,634
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Death in normobaric hyperoxia was related in the past to
pulmonary insufficiency
of the edematous lung. However, high arterial O2 tension on final
collapse
led to the suggestion that the heart and not the lung is the first organ that fails. We measured aortic flow, coronary flow, left ventricular pressure, affluent and effluent PO2, PCO2, and pH in the working heart excised from control and normobaric O2-exposed rats (51-63 h). The oxygen consumption (VO2) of experimental hearts was not different from control, but mechanical power output (PVAP) (calculated from pressure-volume area) was reduced as a function of O2 exposure time. Myocardial contractility indexes, maximal elastance and maximal time derivative of pressure, increased as a function of O2 exposure time, being below control values after 50 h and above control values after 60 h. The individual slopes for the regression of VO2 vs. PVAP rose as a function of exposure time from values below control after 50 h exposure to values above control after 60 h. Energetic efficiency (PVAP/VO2) decreased as a function of O2 exposure time and points to possible heart failure in the intact animal. After 50 h O2 exposure the heart was energetically more efficient than the control. Possible changes in the heart are discussed.
...
PMID:Heart energetic efficiency in O2-exposed rats studied in isolated working heart. 149 Sep 35
In 19 anesthetized piglets 3 ventilatory modes were studied after inducing
pulmonary insufficiency
by bronchoalveolar lavage by the method of Lachmann. The lavage model was considered suitable for reproduction of severe respiratory distress. This model was reproducible and stable with respect to alveolar
collapse
, decrease in static chest-lung compliance and increase in extravascular lung water. The ventilatory modes studied were volume-controlled intermittent positive-pressure ventilation (IPPV), pressure-controlled inverse ratio ventilation (IRV), and pressure-controlled high-frequency positive-pressure ventilation (HFPPV). The 3 ventilatory modes were used in random sequence for at least 30 min to produce a ventilatory steady state. Ventilation with no PEEP, permitting alveolar
collapse
, was interposed between each experimental mode. The ability to open collapsed alveoli, i.e. alveolar recruitment, was different. The recruitment rate for IPPV was 74%, but for IRV and HFPPV it was 95%, respectively. Although IRV provided the best PaO2, this was at the expense of high airway pressures with circulatory interference and reduced oxygen transport. In contrast to this, HFPPV provided lower airway pressures, less circulatory interference and improved oxygen transport. In the clinical setting there might be negative effects on vital organs and functions unless the ventilatory modes are continuously and cautiously adapted to the individual requirements in different phases of severe respiratory distress. Therefore, one ventilatory strategy could be to "open the airways" with IRV, but then switch to HFPPV in an attempt to maintain the airways open with lesser risk of barotrauma and with improved oxygen transport.
...
PMID:An experimental study of different ventilatory modes in piglets in severe respiratory distress induced by surfactant depletion. 174 8
Lipoprotein secretion and vitamin E transport depend on an adequate supply of inositol which functions synergistically with choline. Feeding rats a choline deficient diet was associated with decreased linoleic and arachidonic acids and increased docosapentenoic and docosahexenoic acids in liver phosphatidylethanolamine. Lipoprotein secretion by the liver is impaired by long chain omega 3 fatty acids and by the high carbohydrate diet of Kwashiorkor. Pulmonary surfactant is a lipoprotein which functions in preventing alveolar
collapse
in the lung. Inositol supplements to premature infants altered the composition of surfactant phospholipids and reduced the need for oxygen therapy. Oxygen free radicals, generated in oxygen therapy, convert low density lipoproteins (LDL) into potent toxins, without adequate antioxidants and free radical scavengers to block free radical generation. Vitamin E deficiency predisposes humans to increased susceptability to oxygen toxicity leading to Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), a form of chronic
pulmonary insufficiency
.
...
PMID:Sudden infant death syndrome and lipoproteins. 266 28
Osteoporosis may be a significant factor in unfavorable results following open cardiac surgery. This brief case report describes the fatal outcome of mitral valve replacement in an elderly woman with congestive heart failure complicated by severe osteoporosis. Profound
collapse
of the thoracic spine resulted in
pulmonary insufficiency
. The discussion includes substantiation that this phenomenon is not unusual but rather can be expected to occur in postmenopausal women who are inactive, not receiving calcium and vitamin D supplements, and are suffering from congestive heart failure for which loop diuretics are administered. Bone mineral density testing is essential to determine and track the efficacy of treatment.
...
PMID:Osteoporosis: a factor in mortality following cardiac surgery. 1074 47
A male infant (gestational age, 26 weeks and 1 day; birthweight, 752 g) was treated for respiratory distress syndrome and thereafter required mechanical ventilation due to chronic
pulmonary insufficiency
. On the 34th day after birth, urine volume suddenly decreased and hypotension, oliguria, and generalized edema developed. Laboratory studies revealed rapid progression of severe hyponatremia and hyperkalemia. Although hypovolemic shock was suspected, the patient did not respond to conventional treatment of volume expansion and inotropic support. Only treatment with glucocorticoids was effective. Two weeks later, cranial ultrasonography revealed multiple, right-sided, cystic lesions that were subsequently diagnosed as cerebral infarction by magnetic resonance imaging. Several cases of extremely low birthweight infants with circulatory
collapse
after the acute period have been described recently, but the cause has been unclear. There has been no previous report of a case accompanied by cerebral infarction.
...
PMID:A case report of an extremely low birthweight infant with circulatory collapse accompanied by cerebral infarction after the acute period. 1590 14
Organophosphate (OP) poisoning causes a cholinergic crisis with a wide range of clinical effects including central apnea, pulmonary bronchoconstriction and secretions, seizures, and muscle weakness. The morbidity and mortality from acute OP poisoning is attributed to respiratory failure but the relative contributions of the central and peripheral effects in producing
collapse
of the respiratory system are unclear. In this study we used a novel adult rat model of acute OP poisoning to analyze the pathophysiology of acute OP poisoning. We found that poisoning caused rapidly lethal central apnea. In animals sustained with mechanical ventilation, we found that following central apnea there ensued progressive
pulmonary insufficiency
that was variable in timing and severity. Our findings support the hypothesis that OP poisoning in this animal model causes a sequential "two hit" insult, with rapid central apnea followed by delayed impairment of pulmonary gas exchange with prominent airway secretions.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of respiratory failure following acute dichlorvos poisoning in a rodent model. 1735 Jun 89
The indications for a corrective surgical procedure for the complex 3-dimensional deformations of the spine collectively known under the term scoliosis, essentially depend on knowledge of the underlying etiology, the time of initial diagnosis in relation to the growth curve of the child and on considerations about the general operability of the patient. An early onset of scoliosis in childhood under defined diagnostic criteria is usually associated with a fast progression of spinal curvature and requires early surgical intervention during the growth period, while scoliosis in adolescence often allows a delayed surgical intervention until all conservative means have been taken into consideration. Corrective measures in the growing spine require procedures and adjustable hardware which can be adapted to vertebral and thoracic growth and thus anticipate the threat of
pulmonary insufficiency
due to postural and spinal
collapse
. Towards the end of puberty when spinal growth slowly comes to an end, corrective spinal fusion procedures are considered in those cases of early and late onset scoliosis, where curvature progression is likely to occur.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of scoliosis in childhood and adolescence: Age group and etiology-related indications and choice of instrumentation]. 2615 39