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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (
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28,634
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pneumothorax during operation is always clinically serious. The symptoms are usually sudden
cyanosis
, accompanied by cardio-vascular
collapse
and difficulty or even impossibility to ventilate owing to increased pressures of insufflation. Immediate or secondary bilateral pneumothorax is relatively common, then may appear associated complications such as subcutaneous emphysema or pneumo-mediastinum. Early diagnosis is necessary to apply simple treatment and avoid a course which may be rapidly fatal. The authors report 3 cases of pneumothorax during anesthesia and consider the clinical forms, the mechanisms and causes of this accident.
...
PMID:[Peroperative pneumothorax]. 2 55
General pharmacological effects of [Ethyl p-(6-guanidinohexanoyloxy)benzoate] methanesulfonate (FOY), a new antiproteolytic agent, were studied and the following results were obtained. Acute administration of large doses of FOY in conscious dogs and rabbits caused a decrease in spontaneous motility, ataxia,
cyanosis
,
collapse
, mydriasis, and respiratory paralysis. The agent had no effect on the central nervous system and exhibited hypotensive effects in dogs in doses of more than 1 mg/kg. Hypotensive responses were not inhibited by treatment with atropine or hexamethonium. FOY had no effects on ECG in the rabbit at doses of less than 30 mg/kg and at doses from 10(-6) to 10(-4)g/ml, distinctly reduced the amplitude of the spontaneous and rhythmic contractions of the isolated rabbit ileum, guinea-pig ileum and rat uterus preparation. The contractile response to nerve stimulation, noradrenaline and barium was suppressed in isolated guinea-pig vas deferens. FOY had no effects on the twitch response of gastrocnemius muscle to sciatic nerve stimulation in rats. The drug caused local irritant effects in rabbits and rats.
...
PMID:[Pharmacological action of [ethyl p(6-guanidinohexanoyloxy)benzoate] methanesulfonate (FOY)]. 23 87
The aetiology of congenital lobar emphysema is not always evident. In the group with demonstrable check-valve mechanism, which allows the air to enter but not to leave the lung, there is either internal stenosis or external compression of the bronchus. When no cause can be found, the condition is called idiopathic, although in some cases alveolar fibrosis has been demonstrated, the check-valve mechanism being in these cases at an alveolar level. In the small group of rare cases of bronchial atresia, air which enters through a collateral ventilation cannot be removed by the same route; in these case too, the check-valve mechanism exists at the alveolar level. Five cases of "congenital lobar emphysema" are presented. One case showed no bronchial anomaly; another case showed an increase in interstitial connective tissue in the lung; tow cases showed hypoplasia or absence of bronchial cartilage; in one case, bronchial atresia was found at operation. Infants show a typical symptomatology of dyspnoea and
cyanosis
, and a typical chest X-ray with unilateral radiolucency and a delicate lung pattern,
collapse
of surrounding lung tissue, and mediastinal hernia. In older children, the diagnosis is made either incidently or following a complication. The condition is usually found in the left upper and the right middle lobe. Treatment is surgical and consists of resection of the emphysematous segments.
...
PMID:Congenital lobar emphysema. 86 84
Cardiac herniation is a rare, highly lethal complication of intrapericardial pneumonectomy, demanding urgent treatment. The condition presents in the immediate or early postoperative period. Cardiovascular
collapse
is invariably present. Elevation of the jugular venous pressure and
cyanosis
in the drainage area of the superior vena cava are frequently noted. ECG may demonstrate the abnormal position and some ischemia of the heart. The effects of cardiac herniation are due to a combination of cardiac malposition, with subsequent torsion of the great vessels, obstruction to the outflow of blood from the heart and strangulation of the prolapsed ventricles by the borders of the pericardial defect. The diagnosis rests on an awareness of this condition, its clinical manifestations and radiological examination. Urgent reduction of the herniated heart gives the only possibility of survival. Prevention of possible recurrence must be considered.
...
PMID:Cardiac herniation following intrapericardial pneumonectomy. 89 61
In 26 dogs, a single subcutaneous injection of N-nitroso-N-methylurethane produced acute lung injury characterized by tachypnea
cyanosis
, increased static lung recoil, and decreased lung compliance. During the first few days, light microscopic examination revealed widespread interstitial and perivascular edema and alveolar
collapse
. At the same time, electron microscopy showed the major alteration to be widespread necrosis of both types of alveolar epithelial cells without significant injury to the vascular endothelium. During recovery, new epithelial cells appeared which probably were derived from granular pneumocytes. These cells developed into mature granular pneumocytes through a phase in which they resembled fetal granular pneumocytes. The late stage was characterized by a picture resembling diffuse interstitial fibrosis but which was due to irreversible closure of clusters of small airspaces with no apparent increase in collagen. Elastic recoil of the lungs, as reflected by peak inspiratory airway pressure, increased during the acute phase and showed a return toward normal that was coincident with the appearance of mature granular pneumocytes in the regenerating epithelium. Lung compliance decreased during the acute phase and in most animals returned toward normal during the recovery phase. These observations strongly suggest that the alteration in lung mechanics is related to epithelial necrosis and that recovery is related to epithelial regeneration.
...
PMID:Experimental acute alveolar injury in the dog. Morphologic--mechanical correlations. 125 90
A 13-week oral repeated dose toxicity study of suplatast tosilate (IPD-1151T), a new anti-allergic agent, as well as a 5-week recovery study were carried out at dose levels of 0 (control), 50, 150, 450 and 1350 mg/kg/day using male and female beagle dogs. The results were as follows: 1. In general conditions, soft feces and diarrhea with specific smell were dose-dependently observed in males and females given 450 mg/kg/day or more. Both sexes given 1350 mg/kg/day, revealed reeling with dropped head, abnormal gait, dysstasia, lying at lateral or prone position, sedation, and tremor, and one male and one female in this group died after showing respiratory depression,
collapse
and
cyanosis
. 2. There were no significant or remarkable changes in body weight, food consumption, water consumption, ophthalmology, electrocardiogram, urinalysis, hematology, biochemistry, fecal occult blood test, and absolute and relative organ weights. 3. Pathological examination in dead animals revealed hemorrhagic change in the heart and slight vacuolar changes in hepatocytes. In survived animals, there were no pathological changes attributable to the IPD-1151T. 4. In electron microscopic examination, there were no abnormalities in the liver and kidney attributable to the IPD-1151T. 5. After 5-week recovery period, above-mentioned changes disappeared. 6. From the above results, the non-effective dose level and the toxic dose level were estimated to be 150 mg/kg/day and 1350 mg/kg/day, respectively, and no sex differences were found.
...
PMID:[A thirteen-week oral repeated dose toxicity study of suplatast tosilate (IPD-1151T) in dogs]. 132 Dec 64
This is a complex condition, recognized primarily in brachycephalic breeds, that results in varying degrees of upper airway obstruction. The signs consist of respiratory distress, stridor, reduced exercise tolerance, and in more severe cases,
cyanosis
and
collapse
. The inherent anatomy of the brachycephalic skull contributes to the development of these signs. Such anatomic features include: a shortened and distorted nasopharynx, stenotic nares, an elongated soft palate, and everted laryngeal saccules. The increased negative pressure created in the pharyngolaryngeal region, as a result of these obstructing structures, ultimately results in distortion and
collapse
of the arytenoid cartilages of the larynx.
...
PMID:Brachycephalic airway obstructive syndrome. 180 47
The hypoplastic left heart syndrome, which characteristically presents in the first few hours of life with cardiovascular
collapse
, is treated by reconstructive surgery (Norwood's procedure) beginning in the neonatal period. If untreated, more than 95% of infants with this malformation die within the first month of life. The case described involves the development of increasing
cyanosis
7 weeks following bilateral superior vena caval-pulmonary artery (SVC-PA) anastomosis in an infant born with a hypoplastic left heart (including aortic and mitral valve stenosis) and an anatomic variant of bilateral superior vena cavae. The use of Tc-99m MAA proved efficacious in quantitating the differential perfusion to each lung, establishing the site of a postoperative stenosis in an anastomotic channel, and documenting systemic perfusion, thus confirming the right-to-left shunt from the superior vena cava to the systemic circulation that resulted in increasing
cyanosis
.
...
PMID:Use of Tc-99m MAA in determining the etiology of increasing cyanosis following SVC-PA anastomosis for the hypoplastic left heart syndrome. 186 52
Between October 6, 1986 and September 17, 1987, 11 patients underwent insertion of mandibular dental prostheses by the same oral surgeon. Three patients suffered cardiac arrest during surgery and subsequently died. Two of the patients who died had received general anaesthetics and the other had intravenous sedation given by three different anaesthetists. All three patients arrested suddenly, developing profound
cyanosis
and electrical mechanical dissociation, underwent prolonged resuscitative efforts, and had marked hypoxaemia and hypercapnia, despite cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Two other patients had signs of injection of air but survived, one suffering cardiac
collapse
and the other sustaining massive subcutaneous emphysema. Air embolism was produced by inadvertent injection of a mixture of air and water, passing through the hollow dental drill, directly into the mandible to the facial and pterygoid plexus veins and thence to the superior vena cava and right atrium.
...
PMID:Fatal air embolism during dental implant surgery: a report of three cases. 227 34
Tracheal
collapse
and bilateral laryngeal paralysis were diagnosed in an 8-month-old Cocker Spaniel that had acute onset of dyspnea and
cyanosis
. Surgical exploration of the mediastinum revealed an abscess involving the ventral wall of the trachea immediately caudal to the thoracic inlet. Both recurrent laryngeal nerves were entrapped in fibrous tissue surrounding the abscess. The dog recovered after tracheal resection and anastomosis and freeing of the entrapped nerves. The peritracheal abscess was suspected to have been the result of esophageal perforation secondary to foreign body penetration.
...
PMID:Peritracheal abscess associated with tracheal collapse and bilateral laryngeal paralysis in a dog. 233 74
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