Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0476273 (respiratory distress)
19,632 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Postpneumonectomy pulmonary oedema (PPO) develops in approximately 5% of patients undergoing pneumonectomy or lobectomy, and has a high associated mortality (>50%). In its extreme form, PPO follows a clinical and histopathological course indistinguishable from acute respiratory distress syndrome. Perioperative fluid overload, impaired lymphatic drainage following node dissection and trauma caused by surgical manipulation have been implicated in the pathogenesis of PPO. However, PPO more probably represents the pulmonary manifestation of a panendothelial injury consequent upon inflammatory processes induced by the surgical procedure, which involves collapse and re-expansion of the operative lung to permit hilar dissection and pulmonary resection. High inspired oxygen concentrations are required to overcome the effects of shunt. Animal studies have shown that pulmonary ischaemia/reperfusion can result in oedema formation, possibly due to the generation of pro-oxidant forces. Moreover, plasma taken from patients undergoing lobectomy or pneumonectomy (but not lesser resections) shows evidence of oxidative damage. Such evidence suggests either that the high inspired oxygen concentrations associated with one-lung ventilation, or ischaemia/reperfusion injury, may modulate post-pneumonectomy pulmonary oedema. Mechanisms by which redox imbalance may result in tissue damage and postpneumonectomy pulmonary oedema are discussed.
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PMID:The pathogenesis of lung injury following pulmonary resection. 1078 Jul 50

The objective of this study was to discuss the case of a patient with severe smoke inhalation-related respiratory failure treated with extracorporeal support. The study was set in a 12-bed multi-trauma intensive care unit at a level one trauma center and hyperbaric medicine center. The patient under investigation had carbon monoxide poisoning, and developed acute respiratory distress syndrome and cardiovascular collapse following smoke inhalation. Rapid initiation of extracorporeal support, extreme inverse-ratio ventilation and intermittent prone positioning therapy were carried out. Admission and serial carboxyhemoglobin levels, blood gases, and computerized tomography of the chest were obtained. The patient developed severe hypoxia and progressed to cardiovascular collapse resistant to resuscitation and vasoactive infusions. Veno-venous extracorporeal support was initiated. Cardiovascular parameters of blood pressure, cardiac output, and oxygen delivery were maximized; oxygenation and ventilation were supported via the extracorporeal circuit. Airway pressure release ventilation and intermittent prone positioning therapy were instituted. Following 7 days of extracorporeal support, the patient was decannulated and subsequently discharged to a transitional care facility,neurologically intact. Smoke inhalation and carbon monoxide poisoning may lead to life-threatening hypoxemia associated with resultant cardiovascular instability. When oxygenation and ventilation cannot be achieved via maximal ventilatory management, extracorporeal support may prevent death if initiated rapidly.
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PMID:Extracorporeal support in an adult with severe carbon monoxide poisoning and shock following smoke inhalation: a case report. 1078 73

Formaldehyde is a physiological intermediary metabolite taking part in many biological process in the body. It is a constituent of many items of daily use, including foods. It is also used in medicine for treatment of some conditions. A 40% solution of formaldehyde in water is known as formalin. Formalin is irritating, corrosive and toxic and absorbed from all surfaces of the body. Ingestion is rare because of alarming odour and irritant effect but documented in accidental, homicidal or suicidal attempts. Ingestion can lead to immediate deleterious effects on almost all systems of the body including gastrointestinal tract, central nervous system, cardiovascular system and hepato-renal system, causing gastrointestinal hemorrhage, cardiovascular collapse, unconsciousness or convulsions, severe metabolic acidosis and acute respiratory distress syndrome. No specific antidote is available. Treatment of toxicity is supportive care of the various organ systems. Multidisciplinary approach is required for proper management.
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PMID:Toxicity of ingested formalin and its management. 1096 10

Mammalian lung surfactant is a mixture of phospholipids and four surfactant-associated proteins (SP-A, SP-B, SP-C, and SP-D). Its major function is to reduce surface tension at the air-water interface in the terminal airways by the formation of a surface-active film highly enriched in dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), thereby preventing alveolar collapse during expiration. SP-A and SP-D are large hydrophilic proteins, which play an important role in host defense, whereas the small hydrophobic peptides SP-B and SP-C interact with DPPC to generate and maintain a surface-active film. Surfactant replacement therapy with bovine and porcine lung surfactant extracts, which contain only polar lipids and SP-B and SP-C, has revolutionized the clinical management of premature infants with respiratory distress syndrome. Newer surfactant preparations will probably be based on SP-B and SP-C, produced by recombinant technology or peptide synthesis, and reconstituted with selected synthetic lipids. The development of peptide analogues of SP-B and SP-C offers the possibility to study their molecular mechanism of action and will allow the design of surfactant formulations for specific pulmonary diseases and better quality control. This review describes the hydrophobic peptide analogues developed thus far and their potential for use in a new generation of synthetic surfactant preparations.
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PMID:Surfactant protein B and C analogues. 1100 26

A 30-year-old HBsAg-positive woman was admitted to the hospital because of 6 days of progressive shortness of breath. She was in severe respiratory distress with circulatory collapse. She had an enlarged liver but no stigmata of chronic liver disease or signs of cirrhosis. She had rapidly developed respiratory arrest and was transferred to intensive care unit. Heart ultrasonography and Doppler scan showed right heart straining and high pulmonary artery pressure. Despite cardiovascular and respiratory support she died a few hours after admission. Autopsy revealed combined hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma infiltrating the entire liver, metastatic invasion of lung blood vessels and absence of right ventricular hypertrophy. The incidence of hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma, a variant of hepatocellular carcinoma, is roughly 2-3% and the presenting symptoms are abdominal pain, weight loss, jaundice, fever or decompensation of liver disease. Associated HBsAg positivity and cirrhosis are reported in 20-30% and 60% of patients, respectively. Metastases to lungs are relatively frequent but this is the first report of hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma presented with acute respiratory distress due to massive pulmonary embolism.
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PMID:Combined hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma presented with massive pulmonary embolism. 1102 Aug 95

Ventilator-induced lung injury is a major outcome determinant of the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Ventilatory strategies that limit ventilator-induced lung injury should improve outcome from ARDS. The ARDSnet trial showed improved survival in subjects ventilated with a lower tidal volume. Although this trial developed and tested a rigorous clinical protocol, it did not define the limits to which tidal volume reduction would benefit outcome. It is also not at all clear if it is the reduction in tidal volume or the reduction in plateau airway pressure that confers this benefit. Finally, ventilator-induced lung injury occurs more commonly from repetitive collapse and re-expansion of injured lung units rather than from the overdistention of persistently aerated lung units. This was not addressed in the trial design. Thus, further study using targeted open-lung strategies are also needed.
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PMID:Toward a better ventilation strategy for patients with acute lung injury. 1109 2

Mechanical ventilation is the mainstay of therapy for acute lung injury, a disease with remainingly high morbidity and mortality. As a result of an improved understanding that mechanical ventilation itself can contribute to and aggravate the disease process, the term ventilator-associated lung injury (VALI) has been introduced. Main risk factor for VALI are (1) alveolar overdistention caused by excessivly high tidal volumes and/or inspiratory pressures (volu-/barotrauma), as well as (2) cyclic alveolar collapse promoted by insufficient endexpiratory pressure. So called "lung-protective ventilatory strategies" aim at minimizing these risk factors by the use of small tidal volumes and high PEEP levels. High frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) can be regarded as an ultimate form of this approach, combining minimal pressure changes with a high continuous distending pressure (CDP). That CDP is generated using high fresh gas flows ("Super-CPAP"), while a piston pump incorporated into the system creates an oscillatory flow at frequencies ranging from 3-7 Hz. An initial lung volume recruitment manoeuvre is mandatory for the optimal use of HFOV. Whereas for many years HFOV is a well established therapy for the infant respiratory distress syndrome, experience in adults is still rare. First results, however, look promising, and HFOV might as well turn out as a valuable treatment modalitiy for ARDS.
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PMID:[High frequency oscillatory ventilation as therapy for acute lung injury and ARDS] . 1115 18

A mathematical model of the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) lung, incorporating simulated gravitational superimposed pressure and alveolar opening and closing pressures, was used to study the mean tidal pressure-volume (PV) slope ("effective compliance") during incremental and decremental positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) trials with constant tidal volume (VT) "ventilation." During incremental PEEP, the PEEP giving maximum mean tidal PV slope did not coincide with "open lung PEEP" (minimum PEEP preventing end expiratory collapse of 97.5% of alveoli inflated at end-inspiration), and it varied greatly with varying VT and "lung mechanics." Incremental PEEP with a low VT tests recruitment by the peak pressure, not prevention of collapse by PEEP. During decremental PEEP with a low VT, maximum mean tidal PV slope occurred with PEEP 2-3.5 cm H2O below open-lung PEEP, unless closing pressure was high. High VT, high "specific compliance," and high opening pressures caused slightly greater underestimation of open-lung PEEP. Maximum mean tidal PV slope was always higher (e.g., 93.7 versus 16.69 ml/cm H2O), and the variation in PV slope with PEEP was greater, during decremental PEEP. The maximum PV slope during a decremental PEEP trial with a low VT may be a useful method to determine open-lung PEEP in ARDS, and should be studied clinically.
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PMID:Best compliance during a decremental, but not incremental, positive end-expiratory pressure trial is related to open-lung positive end-expiratory pressure: a mathematical model of acute respiratory distress syndrome lungs. 1120 28

The Wilhelmy balance was used for in vitro testing of surface parameters of surfactants used for respiratory distress syndrome therapy. Two commercial protein-free surfactants, ALEC and Exosurf, were compared with pure forms of the three main phospholipids in natural surfactants, dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylglycerol (PG), and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), and their binary mixtures, PC with PE and PG each in the ratio 2:3. Surface excess films (15 A2/molecule) were compressed at 1.2 cycles/min past collapse to a compression ratio of 4:1. The maximum surface pressure, spreading time, compressibility, respreading ratio, recruitment index, and hysteresis area were compared. A consolidated list of criteria for selection of suitable surfactants was compiled from the literature. A relative scoring system was devised for comparison based on these criteria. PC/PG (2:3) performed the best as it fulfilled all the criteria and obtained the highest relative score. Exosurf also performed well, except on the respreading criterion. ALEC and PC/PE were equivalent in their performance and performed well, except on two criteria: hysteresis area and recruitment index. Thus the scoring system proposed here proved valuable to rate the overall efficacy as well as relative merits of surfactant formulations.
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PMID:Scoring of surface parameters of physiological relevance to surfactant therapy in respiratory distress syndrome. 1124 46

Surgical therapy for dialysis-related spondyloarthropathy was investigated regarding its spinal manifestation. Between August 1985 and May 1998, 31 operations were performed on 16 male and 14 female patients; of these, 17 had cervical and 13 had lumbar spinal disorders. The average patient age was 59 years. The average period of hemodialysis was 14.8 years. Twenty-eight of 30 patients had cystic bone lesions and 24 had carpal tunnel syndrome. Four major postoperative complications occurred: death from paralysis and respiratory distress, severe kyphosis from the collapse of the grafted bone, deep infection from instrumentation, and wire breakage and bone fusion failure. Postoperative results with an average follow-up period of 2.7 years were good in 19 cases (63%), fair in 8 cases (27%), and poor in 3 cases (10%). As yet, surgical intervention for dialysis-related spondyloarthropathy is still regarded as a noncurative treatment; furthermore, the anterior approach to the cervical spine has a high risk for postoperative complications.
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PMID:Surgical therapy for dialysis-related spondyloarthropathy: review of 30 cases. 1128 30


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