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Query: UMLS:C0476273 (
respiratory distress
)
19,632
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Four patients developed severe
wheezing
and dyspnea with clear chest films during the course of an influenza epidemic. A variety of factors appeared to play a role in the pathogenesis of the
respiratory distress
. Standard bronchodilator therapy produced no appreciable response. All patients did well with supportive care.
...
PMID:Influenza, respiratory distress and clear chest films: report of four cases. 62 3
Bronchial atresia, a congenital lesion that develops after the 16th wk of fetal life, may be more common than previously believed, and this probably explains some cases of so-called congenital lobar emphysema. It may produce symptoms of pulmonary infection,
wheezing
, and
respiratory distress
severe enough to justify elective resection of that part of the lung distal to the atresia. The roentgenographic features that make this a recognizable entity are the following: (1) There is localized hyperinflation of lung in a segmental or lobar distribution, with a circular or oval parahilar radiodensity. Bronchography will demonstrate that there is no filling of the bronchus supplying this part of the lung. (2) The occasional neonate with this condition may present with an intrathoracic mass suggesting retained fetal lung fluid in lobar distribution. Bronchography will demonstrate that there is no filling of the bronchus to that part of the lung. (3) A plug of desquamated tissue and mucus in the cyst-like bronchus just distal to the point of atresia appears to be an unvarying component of the syndrome. It most commonly presents as a round or oval density, but in some cases it may be shaped like a rod or tree and rarely contains an air-fluid level.
...
PMID:Bronchial atresia: a recognizable entity in the pediatric age group. 73 69
The clinical conditions, roentgenographic findings, and pulmonary function tests of 6 children (mean age, 10.9 years) with surgically treated congenital lobar emphysema (group 1) were compared with those of 5 children (mean age, 10.3 years) with congenital lobar emphysema who had been treated conservatively, i.e., nonsurgically (group 2). At the time of this study, patients in both groups were asymptomatic. Patients in group 1 were surgically treated because of severe
respiratory distress
in the newborn period, with the exception of one patient, who was eupneic as a newborn and was not operated on until the age of 9 years. Patients in group 2 were eupneic or mildly distressed in the neonatal period and received only conservative treatment. Two patients in group 1 had occasional
wheezing
and labored breathing, but no patient in group 2 had recurrent
respiratory distress
. Roentgenographically, at the time of the study, patients in group 1 had generalized overinflation, whereas those in group 2 had only localized overinflation of the involved lobe and minimal compression of remaining lung tissue. Pulmonary function studies in both groups were not significantly different (P greater than 0.05). Both groups had reduced forced vital capacities, large trapped gas volumes, and reduced forced expiratory flows at low lung volumes. Reductions in forced vital capacity were proportional to the unventilated volumes of lung either excised because of congenital lobar emphysema (group 1) or chronically obstructed by congenital lobar emphysema (group 2). These studies suggest that lung growth was not different in these 2 groups and that asymptomatic or midly symptomatic patients do not benefit from surgical treatment.
...
PMID:Congenital lobar emphysema: long-term evaluation of surgically and conservatively treated children. 93 22
The incidence of respiratory symptoms caused by grain dust during harvesting was surveyed in a group of Lincolnshire farmers. A quarter complained of
respiratory distress
after working on combine harvesters or near grain driers and elevators, with cough,
wheezing
, and breathlessness, sometimes so severe as to prevent work. The airborne dust around combine harvesters contained up to 200 million fungus spores/m3 air with Cladosporium predominant while drivers were exposed to up to 20 million spores/m3 air. Verticillium/Paecilomyces type spores, mostly from Verticillium lecanii, Aphanocladium album, and Paecilomyces bacillosporus, were abundant in the dust. Extracts of these species produced immediate weal reactions in skin tests, precipitin reactions with sera, and rapid decreases in FEV1 when inhaled by affected workers. There was no delayed reactions. Results suggest type I immediate hypersensitivity to the spores although the physical effect of a heavy dust deposit could be important. Drivers could be protected by cabs ventilated with filtered air.
...
PMID:Respiratory disease of workers harvesting grain. 94 Nov 15
Wheezing
lower respiratory tract illness in infancy and asthma share the clinical findings of
wheezing
and
respiratory distress
. Although the link between
wheezing
lower respiratory tract illness in infancy and the subsequent development of asthma is a limited one, both conditions do share some common risk factors, including exposure to environmental tobacco smoke, difficult living conditions (low socioeconomic class, crowding, allergen exposure), and increased risk in males. The impact of baseline lung function on
wheezing
lower respiratory tract illness risk is substantial and may be independent of airway reactivity. In contrast, the development of chronic airway inflammation mediated by allergic sensitization plays a central role in the development of persistent asthma. Although the endogenous risks for these two outcomes may be fixed, it is clear that caregivers may help to reduce or eliminate the exogenous risks listed earlier by parental education and improvement of the living conditions of young children.
...
PMID:Risk factors for developing wheezing and asthma in childhood. 143 15
This case illustrates an unusual cause of
respiratory distress
in the pediatric population. A high degree of suspicion is necessary to make the diagnosis of plastic bronchitis.
Wheezing
and cough will lead to the diagnosis of reactive airway disease and/or foreign body aspiration. Chest radiographs may yield additional information, but the diagnosis is made by bronchoscopy and removal of the casts. Any child with severe
respiratory distress
refractory to aggressive conventional medical therapy and with a history or radiograph suggestive of plastic bronchitis should be considered a candidate for bronchoscopy. As clinicians, we must always remember the dictum, "All that wheezes is not asthma."
...
PMID:Plastic bronchitis: an unusual cause of respiratory distress in children. 145 41
Three young children with Down syndrome developed fever, cough,
wheezing
, irritability, and tachypnea. They had bilateral infiltrates on their chest radiographs and developed
respiratory distress
, which required their hospitalization. Laboratory studies suggested that the children had mycoplasma pneumonia. These children may have experienced severe mycoplasma infections early in life because of their Down syndrome-associated immune abnormalities. When young children with Down syndrome develop pneumonia, physicians should consider Mycoplasma pneumoniae as the possible etiologic agent.
...
PMID:Severe mycoplasma pneumonia in young children with Down syndrome. 153 77
The benefit of beta-adrenergic agonists in the treatment of acutely
wheezing
infants and young children has not been well documented in the outpatient setting. To determine the efficacy of nebulized metaproterenol sulfate, 74 children aged 36 months or younger with acute
wheezing
participated in a double-masked, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial. Children received nebulized metaproterenol, either as an initial treatment or after a control treatment with normal saline solution. At baseline and 20 minutes after each treatment, an assessment was made that included measurements of heart rate, respiratory rate, oxygen saturation, and clinical variables related to respiratory compromise with the use of a standardized
respiratory distress
index (RDI). Children who received saline solution as initial therapy had no significant differences from baseline in any of the assessment measures. After metaproterenol therapy, children demonstrated an increase in heart rate ([mean +/- SD] 147 +/- 14 beats per minute vs 153 +/- 16 beats per minute), a decrease in respirations (50/min +/- 5/min vs 45/min +/- 7/min), improvement (lower scores) on the RDI (24 +/- 4 vs 15 +/- 2), and an increase in oxygen saturation (94.1% +/- 2.7% vs 95.3% +/- 3.0%). Patients aged 12 months or younger (n = 37) benefited from metaproterenol treatment (improvement in respiratory rate and RDI) but not to the same degree as children aged 24 months or older (n = 23) (improvement in respiratory rate, RDI, and oxygen saturation). Compared with assessments made before metaproterenol treatment, patients with respiratory syncytial virus infection (n = 21) had improvement in respirations (52/min +/- 7/min vs 45/min +/- 6/min) and RDI scores (22 +/- 4 vs 14 +/- 3). Based on a priori criteria (reduction in a premedication respiratory rate of 20% and an RDI score of 50%), responders to metaproterenol therapy included 45% of the entire sample and, respectively, 40% of those aged 12 months or younger, 52% of those aged 24 months or older, and 48% of patients who tested positive for respiratory syncytial virus. Although there appears to be an age-dependent degree of response, metaproterenol is effective in relieving the
respiratory distress
of young acutely
wheezing
children, including those with documented respiratory syncytial virus bronchiolitis.
...
PMID:The efficacy of nebulized metaproterenol in wheezing infants and young children. 155 72
Vocal cord dysfunction is a little recognized cause of dyspnea and
wheezing
. Its lack of recognition has often led to the institution of inappropriate therapeutic methods, including intubation and tracheostomy. Awareness of this possible cause of
respiratory distress
should allow early institution of appropriate psychotherapy, rather than unnecessary medical intervention.
...
PMID:Variable vocal cord dysfunction: an asthma variant. 141 29
We have been following for one year 39 patients, who had been hospitalized in our Institute for an episode of bronchiolitis in the period between November 1986 and April 1987. Only 30 patients (17 males and 13 females) have completed the follow up. The patients have been divided into two groups. The group A (subsequent episodes of broncho-stenosis) was made up of 14 subjects, where as the group B (not-subsequent episodes of broncho-stenosis) counted 16 subjects. In the first group the episodes of
wheezing
have been 3,14 for Year (range 1-6). The patients of the two groups didn't differ for the gestational age, birth weight,
respiratory distress
in the first life hours; they moreover were homogeneous for the clinical gravity score and for the period in bed. We have evaluated if certain environmental factors such as the passive smoking, the socio-economical and dwelling conditions of the family and some genetic features such as the familiarity for atopy and the Ig E level may predispose the patients affected by bronchiolitis to a higher incidence of recurrent
wheezing
. Our data show how the above mentioned factors do not influence the recurrent
wheezing
in the patients with preceding bronchiolitis.
...
PMID:[Recurrent wheezing in subjects with preceding bronchiolitis. Role of environmental and genetic factors]. 194 92
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