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Query: UMLS:C0476273 (
respiratory distress
)
19,632
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
3-methylindole (3-MI) dissolved in the lipophilic carrier Cremophore EL was administered intraperitoneally to male, twelve-week-old Sprague-Dawley rats. Gross and histopathologic changes in the lungs were studied using light microscopy at three time-periods following administration: 16, 24, and 46 hours. Both 3-MI and Cremophore caused changes in bronchiolar epithelium at 16 hours. By 46 hours, Cremophore-injected rats showed no effects of the carrier; whereas, 3-MI rats showed severe lung changes characterized by airway epithelial and pulmonary vascular endothelial necrosis and sloughing, cellular infiltration by lymphocytes and macrophages, perivascular edema, alveolar edema, and lymph stasis. Grossly, the controls showed no effect of the carrier and none died during the studies. In contrast, 3-MI injected rats quickly became lethargic and displayed
tachypnea
, anorexia, and progressive
respiratory distress
. Two of five 3-MI rats in the final group died just prior to 46 hours. All of this group had grossly congested lungs and marked pleural effusion. The lesions and time course showed similarities to those observed in ruminants and mice. We conclude that 3-MI in Cremophore causes an acute progressive pneumonitis in rats and suggest that the rats may be a suitable model for 3-MI-induced and similar toxic lung diseases in domestic animals and people.
...
PMID:Pulmonary changes in rats following administration of 3-methylindole in cremophore EL. 298 Feb 17
A patient with acute hyperleukocytotic myelogenous leukemia who presented with acute
respiratory distress
is reported. Clinical manifestations included dyspnea,
tachypnea
, hyperventilation, and cyanosis. Blood gas analysis revealed hypoxemia, hypocapnia, and metabolic acidosis. Chest X-ray and perfusion lung scanning were normal. Pulmonary leukostasis syndrome (PLS) was later confirmed at autopsy. In a patient with hyperleukocytosic from acute nonlymphocytic leukemia and
respiratory distress
, a normal perfusion lung scintigraph should make one consider the PLS.
...
PMID:Acute respiratory failure in hyperleukocytotic acute myeloid leukemia: the role of perfusion lung scintigraphy. 316 47
Epiglottitis may occur at any age. The typical presentation in the young child and young adult is well known, but the presentation in patients at the extremes of age has not been characterized. At our locale, from 1974 to 1984, 19 children 24 months of age or less and, from 1979 to 1984, 9 adults 50 years of age or greater with epiglottitis were seen in the emergency department. In the infantile group, rapidly progressive interference with swallowing, vocalization, and respiration was encountered in less than half the patients. Symptoms were often prolonged before parents sought attention for their child. No preference was shown for maintenance of the upright position while at rest, as recumbency did not promote stridor or initiate
respiratory distress
. Respiratory complaints were common and included cough,
tachypnea
, and retractions. Drooling or retention of pharyngeal secretions was uncommon. The adult population had a history of symptoms that spanned several days. Extreme sore throat, pooling of oral secretions, muffled voice, and elevated temperature were uncommon. Dysphagia and mild respiratory complaints were frequent. Upper airway obstruction did occur. At both extremes of age, exceptions to the classic clinical pattern of epiglottitis occurred with significant frequency. Despite this, diagnosis and management in the emergency department were appropriate in most cases.
...
PMID:Epiglottitis at the extremes of age. 337 97
A full-term infant developed bilateral pneumothoraces and
respiratory distress
shortly after birth, despite initially good Apgar scores. Persistent
tachypnea
, hypoxemia, and a chest X-ray remarkable for diffuse alveolar and interstitial infiltrates prompted a lung biopsy at 4 months of age. The biopsy revealed desquamative interstitial pneumonitis with the unique demonstration by electron microscopy of numerous alveolar brush cells. Respiratory brush cells occur normally in the trachea and bronchi of humans and mammals. Although identical cells have been noted in the alveoli of rats, they have never been reported in the alveoli of humans. We present the first electron microscopical demonstration of the alveolar brush cell in humans.
...
PMID:Alveolar brush cells in an infant with desquamative interstitial pneumonitis. 337 86
We studied the change in ion transport function by measuring the basal transepithelial potential difference (PD) across the ciliated epithelium of the nose in 85 term neonates during the first 72 hours of life. Differences in PD associated with the mode of delivery or the presence of respiratory disease and differences in the PD response to the superfusion of amiloride (10(-5) mol/L) were assessed. We also studied term neonates with transient
tachypnea
of the newborn (TTN) and acute respiratory insufficiency. Basal PDs during the first 24 hours of life were higher in neonates delivered by cesarean section without prior labor (-29.7 +/- 2.5 mV) and in those with TTN (-38.5 +/- 6.0 mV) than in neonates born during normal spontaneous vaginal delivery (-23.0 +/- 2.9 mV) or cesarean section with prior labor (-23.7 +/- 0.7 mV) or in those with respiratory insufficiency (-22.4 +/- 2.3 mV). The percentage inhibition of PD by amiloride superfusion (less than 24 hours) was significantly lower in infants with TTN (30.9 +/- 4.9%) and after cesarean section without prior labor (31.8 +/- 2.2%) than in other groups (37.6 +/- 1.6%). By 48 hours, nasal PDs after cesarean section without prior labor and in neonates with TTN had declined; and by 72 hours, values were similar to those in other groups; respiratory rate paralleled the decline in PD. The respiratory rate of neonates with respiratory insufficiency remained high and paralleled the persistence of
respiratory distress
. Amiloride sensitivity was similar for all groups by 72 hours. These findings indicate (1) that PDs vary with the mode of delivery and support a role for labor in the normal transition of respiratory epithelial ion transport and (2) that TTN is associated with abnormal epithelial ion transport.
...
PMID:Electrical potential difference and ion transport across nasal epithelium of term neonates: correlation with mode of delivery, transient tachypnea of the newborn, and respiratory rate. 338 20
In neonatal disease states where lung compliance is reduced (e.g., inadequate resorption of fetal lung fluid or, surfactant deficiency) an infant's normally low functional residual capacity (FRC) decreases even further.
Tachypnea
is an efficient compensatory maneuver for the newborn. We evaluated the effect of different bed and body positions on the increased respiratory rate observed in infants with transient
tachypnea
of the newborn (TTN), infant
respiratory distress
syndrome (RDS), and bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). Seventeen infants were studied (TTN, n = 6; RDS, n = 6; BPD, n = 5) in four different positions: supine flat, supine elevated, prone flat, and prone elevated. Respiratory rate and heart rate were evaluated in each position. Analysis of variance for the three patient groups showed a lower respiratory rate when the bed was elevated 20-30 degrees compared to flat (P = 0.0001), in the prone posture compared to supine (P = 0.031), and no significant difference in heart rate. The lowest mean respiratory rate occurred when patients were in the prone elevated position. The significant improvement in
tachypnea
seen in the prone and elevated positions was likely related to improved FRC resulting from reduced cephalad stress on the diaphragm from the abdomen. Positioning neonatal patients with respiratory insufficiency was a simple and safe therapeutic maneuver with prompt and demonstrable benefit.
...
PMID:The effect of body position on the respiratory rate of infants with tachypnea. 350 6
Over a 7-year period, 15 pregnant women admitted to Parkland Memorial Hospital for acute pyelonephritis developed respiratory insufficiency characterized by dyspnea,
tachypnea
, hypoxemia, and radiographic evidence of pulmonary infiltrates. Clinical manifestations usually appeared 24 to 48 hours after the patient was admitted and varied from mild
respiratory distress
to pulmonary failure in three; these three required tracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation. We found no evidence that pulmonary edema was caused by intravenous fluid overload. Oxygen therapy and ventilation were given to maintain the arterial PO2 at 80 mm Hg or greater, and erythrocyte transfusions were given to six women to correct anemia. Women with pulmonary injury were more likely to have multisystem derangement than a control group without respiratory involvement, but there were no clinical risk factors that were predictive at admission. This syndrome was probably caused by permeability pulmonary edema, likely mediated by endotoxin-induced alveolar-capillary membrane injury since other evidence of endotoxemia was common. Thrombocytopenia, hemolysis, intravascular coagulation, renal dysfunction, and transient cardiomegaly concomitant with hyperdynamic ventricular function are all explicable from endotoxin effects.
...
PMID:Pulmonary injury complicating antepartum pyelonephritis. 357 94
We studied pulmonary function 1 year after neonatal
respiratory distress
(RD) in 54 infants who had been treated at birth in the same neonatal intensive care unit. RD was related to hyaline membrane disease in 36 cases (group I) and to other causes in 18 cases (group II). Compared with predicted values, dynamic lung compliance (CL) was lower (less than -2 SD) and total pulmonary resistance (RL) was higher (+2 SD) in 18 (33%) and 12 (22%) infants, respectively. The relationships between these functional abnormalities at 1 year of age and the characteristics of the neonatal respiratory disease were assessed using a multifactorial analysis (multiple correspondences analysis). We found that elevated RL (greater than +2 SD) at 1 year of age was very significantly related with hyaline membrane disease, involving both high rate of positive pressure ventilation and prolonged intubation, and with the presence of both
tachypnea
and abnormal chest X rays at the time of discharge. Compared with elevated RL, the relationships between low CL (less than -2 SD) and the same neonatal characteristics were less significant; in particular, there was no strong link between low CL and hyaline membrane disease. Finally, birth before 30 weeks gestation was an index of severity.
...
PMID:Pulmonary function at 1 year of age in survivors of neonatal respiratory distress: a multivariate analysis of factors associated with sequelae. 365 29
A radiographic pattern associated with
respiratory distress
, distinct from hyaline membrane disease and transient
tachypnea
of the newborn, is described in eight infants of diabetic mothers. The radiographic findings demonstrate a regional distribution of reticulogranular densities accompanied by increased lung volumes. Clinical features were gestationally mature infants in moderate
respiratory distress
with
tachypnea
, hypercapnia, and hypoxemia requiring supplemental oxygen, with steady improvement and uneventful recovery within 2 weeks. There was no bacteriologic evidence of infection or radiographic evidence of delayed lung fluid absorption. The mothers had mild diabetes. These features characterize a newly recognized entity in diabetes-related idiopathic lung disease of the newborn. Possible causative factors are discussed.
...
PMID:A newly recognized profile in neonatal lung disease with maternal diabetes. 387 61
Infants born to opiate-dependent women frequently have low birth weights and low 1- and 5-min Apgar scores. Significant postnatal problems, excluding neonatal withdrawal, can include jaundice, infection, aspiration pneumonia, transient
tachypnea
, and hyaline membrane disease. Neonatal abstinence may be severe and persist for as long as 3 months. Abstinence symptoms can include central nervous system hyperirritability, gastrointestinal dysfunction,
respiratory distress
, tremors, fever, high-pitched cry, increased muscle tone, uncoordinated sucking and swallowing reflexes, dehydration, and possible electrolyte imbalance. During the first week of life, increased respirations associated with hypocapnia and alkalosis may occur. The Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale has been used to quantify the neurobehavioral effects on neonates of narcotics administered prenatally. A marked decline in mortality rates of infants born to opiate-dependent mothers is evident. In Philadelphia, infant morbidity has been related not only to the type of maternal narcotic dependence, but also to the amount of prenatal care. Infants whose mothers received prenatal care have been found to have higher birth weights similar to infants of control mothers. Although the newborn with intrauterine exposure to narcotic agents may appear normal at birth, the effects of the pharmacologic agent may not become apparent until later in development. To obtain a more favorable outcome for the high-risk mother and child involved in the problems of perinatal addiction, several recommendations are proposed.
...
PMID:Effects of maternal opiate abuse on the newborn. 388 86
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