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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (
collapse
)
28,634
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Six female Wistar albino rats were exposed to the hypoxia of a simulated altitude of 5500 m, three for a period of one week and three for a month. They developed ultrastructural changes in the pulmonary trunk consisting of evaginations of muscle cells of its media through gaps in the internal elastic lamina to press into the underlying endothelial cells. Such evaginations were usually devoid of myofilaments and organelles. Some appeared so electron-lucent as to be unrecognisable as muscle apart from the unequivocal connection with the parent smooth muscle cells. Elsewhere we have demonstrated that muscular evaginations in normal pulmonary blood vessels are an artefact brought about by
collapse
of lung tissue and that they can be avoided by distending the lung. Hence in the present investigation, in which the pulmonary trunk was fixed in distension, the evaginations are interpreted as indicating contraction of the muscle cells able to overcome the distending force. We interpret them as evidence of constriction of muscle cells in the media of the pulmonary trunk in response to hypoxia.
Thorax
1978 Feb
PMID:Evagination of smooth muscle cells in the hypoxic pulmonary trunk. 64 38
Five asthmatic patients developed
collapse
of one lung. Three of the patients were children and three of the five had repeated episodes of atelectasis. Episodes of atelectasis were usually associated with localised chest pain, which was not pleuritic in character, and with breathlessness, but without wheezing. The were not related to clinically apparent respiratory infections or to deterioration of the underlying asthma. The cause is obscure, but re-expansion seems to be hastened by oral corticosteroid therapy.
Thorax
1978 Apr
PMID:Unilateral pulmonary collapse in asthmatics. 66 80
Of the various densities occurring in the lower zones of the standard postero-anterior chest radiograph, one sign has been ignored. Coarse linear densities at the bases may be due to adjacent lower lobe contraction. The cause is related to bending or kinking of the lower zone bronchi, usually the superior and inferior branches of the lingular bronchi. The densities are probably due to mucus-filled bronchi or alveolar atelectasis distal to the kink. resulting from poor bronchial drinage, and may indicate more extensive disease. The left lower lobe
collapse
may not be visible on the chest radiograph but the presence of these densities should alert the observer to the more important associated abnormality.
Thorax
1976 Oct
PMID:"Sentinel lines"--an unusual sign of lower lobe contraction. 99 14
Surgical plombage was used as a form of
collapse
therapy for pulmonary tuberculosis before the advent of reliable chemotherapy. A patient developed stridor, recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis, and obstruction of the superior vena cava and eventually died as a result of haemorrhage into a large intrathoracic cyst, secondary to a polystan pack inserted 38 years previously.
Thorax
1992 Apr
PMID:Fatal mediastinal compression as a late complication of surgical plombage. 158
A prospective study was carried out to assess the value of bronchoscopic cryotherapy for palliation of inoperable bronchial carcinoma with bronchial obstruction. Symptoms, lung function, and chest radiographic and bronchoscopic findings were recorded serially before and after 81 cryotherapy sessions in 33 consecutive patients. Most patients improved in terms of overall symptoms, stridor, and haemoptysis and they had an overall improvement in dyspnoea. Objective improvement in lung function was seen in 58% of patients and the changes in lung function correlated with symptoms. Bronchoscopic evidence of relief of bronchial obstruction was seen in 77% of patients and 24% showed improvement in degree of
collapse
on the radiograph. There were no important complications. These results compare favourably with the results in published series of patients having laser therapy. It is concluded that bronchoscopic cryotherapy is valuable for the palliation of inoperable bronchial carcinoma.
Thorax
1990 Jul
PMID:Bronchoscopic cryotherapy for advanced bronchial carcinoma. 206 57
Fifty patients with inoperable, symptomatic endobronchial carcinoma were treated by a single exposure of intraluminal radiotherapy. A high dose rate afterloading system (the micro-Selectron-HDR) was used to minimise radiation exposure for staff. Haemoptysis was relieved in 24 of 28 patients, breathlessness in 21 of 33 patients, and cough in nine of 18 patients. Radiological
collapse
resolved in 11 of 24 patients. Treatment was given on an outpatient basis and was well tolerated. Intraluminal radiotherapy appears to offer an effective alternative to conventional fractionated external beam radiotherapy.
Thorax
1990 Oct
PMID:Intraluminal irradiation for the palliation of lung cancer with the high dose rate micro-Selectron. 170 Oct 61
A patient is described who presented with left upper lobe
collapse
due to endobronchial metastatic prostate carcinoma. Treatment with the oral antiandrogen cyproterone acetate resulted in resolution of the occluding endobronchial carcinoma and lobar re-expansion.
Thorax
1990 Jan
PMID:Lobar collapse due to endobronchial metastatic prostatic carcinoma: re-expansion with antiandrogen treatment. 213 26
The pathophysiological mechanism of pulmonary oedema following rapid re-expansion of a collapsed lung is poorly understood. It has been suggested that the period of
collapse
or subsequent reinflation produces an increase in pulmonary microvascular permeability. To investigate this, the pulmonary accumulation of the plasma protein transferrin was measured by radiolabelling it in vivo with indium-113m. Plasma protein accumulation was calculated after correcting the accumulation of transferrin for changes in intrathoracic blood distribution by simultaneously monitoring technetium-99m labelled red blood cells. Functional images of plasma protein accumulation were constructed for the lung fields on a pixel by pixel basis. Investigations were performed on 14 subjects after drainage of a pleural effusion (n = 9) or evacuation of a pneumothorax (n = 5), and on 11 control subjects. Plasma protein accumulation was greater over the regions of lung re-expansion (-0.1-9.6, mean 2.9 x 10(-3)/min) than over the corresponding region of the contralateral lung (-1.2-0.8, mean 0.01 x 10(-3)/min; p less than 0.001). Patients who had undergone re-expansion procedures also had significantly greater plasma protein accumulation than normal controls. Nine of the 14 patients in the re-expansion group had clearly identifiable areas of increased plasma protein accumulation that corresponded to the part of the lung that had been re-expanded; no regional abnormalities were recorded in the control group. These results suggest that the reinflated lung displays abnormal microvascular permeability.
Thorax
1990 Jun
PMID:Changes in pulmonary microvascular permeability accompanying re-expansion oedema: evidence from dual isotope scintigraphy. 239 90
Giant emphysematous bullae are believed to produce symptoms of pulmonary compression and
collapse
by containing gas under pressure that has been generated through valvular feeding airways. To examine this hypothesis, we have measured oxygen and carbon dioxide tensions (PO2, PCO2) in four patients and pressure within the bullae in three patients immediately before surgery. During spontaneous tidal respiration PO2 in the bulla was higher than arterial PO2 but did not rise as fast during the breathing of oxygen. The intra-bulla pressure during inspiration was negative (-5.5 to -19 cm H2O) and similar to pleural pressure in phase and degree. During intermittent positive pressure ventilation in two patients airway pressures were transmitted to the bulla with the development of a positive end expiratory pressure within the bulla. Histological examination of the walls of the bullae in the four patients and adjacent lung tissue in an additional patient failed to identify any valvular mechanism. The available information suggests that bullae develop after retraction and
collapse
of surrounding lung away from a region of weakness.
Thorax
1989 Jul
PMID:Origin and behaviour of emphysematous bullae. 250
An expandable metal stent has been used to treat bronchial
collapse
due to polychondritis in one patient and extrinsic bronchial compression secondary to bronchogenic tumour in another.
Thorax
1989 Aug
PMID:Use of expandable metal stents in the treatment of bronchial obstruction. 279 47
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