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Query: UMLS:C0729233 (Thoracic)
6,478 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

75 out of 77 children surviving IRDS with the aid of intermittent positive pressure ventilation have been followed up by age 2.6-7.6 years together with 68 matched controls. The morbidity of lower respiratory tract illnesses was significantly higher in IRDS survivors than in controls affecting a total of 48%, half whom were admitted to hospital on at least on occasion. Only 3 IRDS survivors had pneumonias beyound their third year, however. One child suffered from a moderate stridor due to a partial laryngeal stenosis and one from some dyspnoea at function caused by broncho-pulmonary dysplasia. Thoracic X-ray changes were found significantly more often and more marked in IRDS survivors but on the whole the changes were discrete. Neither the occurrence of pneumonia nor X-ray changes in the IRDS survivors were statistically relatable to a number of neonatal or therapeutical characteristics. Measurements of heart volume, respiratory frequency, oxygen saturation and acid-base values did not differ between the groups. Ventilated IRDS survivors, even with some degree of radiographic demonstrable residua, thus seem to have a good long-term prognosis with regard to lung function, irrespective of a preliminary high morbidity of lower respiratory tract illnesses.
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PMID:Long term prognosis of infants with severe idiopathic respiratory distress syndrome. II. Cardio-pulmonary outcome. 34 87

A Standardbred filly was admitted for evaluation of pleuritis and pneumonia. Heart rate was 80 to 120 beats/min, and the pulse was barely palpable. Thoracic and abdominal ultrasonography and echocardiography revealed substantial pericardial effusion with cardiac tamponade, fibrinous pericarditis, pleural effusion, and ascites. Initial electrocardiography revealed normal sinus rhythm with decreased amplitude of the QRS complexes consistent with pericardial effusion. Following thoracentesis, echocardiogram-guided pericardiocentesis was performed. Bacterial culture yielded no growth from any of the fluids, and bacteria were not seen on cytologic examination. Initial treatment included broad-spectrum antibiotic treatments, IV fluid therapy, and anti-inflammatory agent administration. On the basis of negative culture results, an immune-mediated cause was considered, and dexamethasone was instituted in a decreasing dosage regimen. Pericardial effusion, ventral edema, and ascites began to resolve within 3 days after beginning dexamethasone treatment. Thirty days following discharge, the filly was reexamined, and at that time, the prognosis for athletic performance was considered good so the horse was returned to race training. The final diagnosis in this case was idiopathic, effusive, nonconstrictive pericarditis with tamponade. Early identification, clinical understanding, and application of knowledge of the pathophysiologic mechanisms of pericarditis in horses, combined with use of diagnostic aids such as ultrasonography and aggressive therapy consisting of effusion drainage, pericardial lavage, antibiotics that penetrate the pericardium, and corticosteroids when indicated are critical for a successful outcome in horses with pericarditis.
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PMID:Idiopathic, aseptic, effusive, fibrinous, nonconstrictive pericarditis with tamponade in a standardbred filly. 128 43

The British Thoracic Society (BTS) guidelines for the treatment of community-acquired pneumonia recommend initial therapy with a betalactam antibiotic, with the addition of erythromycin if there are features of an atypical pneumonia. To see if these guidelines were being followed, a prospective study was undertaken of all adult patients admitted to hospital over a 3-month period who were given erythromycin for a community-acquired lower respiratory tract infection. Erythromycin was given to 62 patients who could be fully assessed. Continued prescription of erythromycin was justified in 10 (16%)--two patients with penicillin allergy, two with M. catarrhalis infection and one patient with legionnaires disease. Five patients had infections severe enough on admission to warrant combined therapy in line with the BTS recommendations. Five patients had erythromycin stopped on day 2. Erythromycin was prescribed on admission and continued unnecessarily in 47/62 patients, showing that the BTS recommendations are not being followed correctly.
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PMID:Audit of the use of erythromycin in the treatment of community-acquired lower respiratory infections. 147 Jul 8

We report the results of a morphological analysis of 60 pulmonary biopsies gathered from a multi center study, organised by the clinico-pathological research group on Wegener's Disease under the auspices of the French Language Society of Thoracic Medicine. Forty of the sixty cases analysed were retained after indexing the histological aspects in order to specify their diagnostic value. Two groups of lesions were distinguished, which had different significance. Group A: These include the three major diagnostic criteria, which reinforce one another as they associate: 1) The polymorphoneutrophil microabscesses with limited central necrosis or an extended necrosis like the contours of a relief map. 2) An angiitis (arteries, veins, capillaries) with eccentric focal parietal crescent-shaped microabscesses. 3) Polymorphous granulomas with giant cells. Group B: In this group are the minor morphological observations (table II) of a lesser value and significance. 1) Acute or chronic lesions with alveolar haemorrhage, endogenous lipid pneumonia, xanthomatous granulomas, an organising pneumonia with an alveolitis. 2) Bronchial lesions: Bronchitis and necrotising bronchiolitis, which is more rarely follicular. 3) Sero-fibrinous or infiltrative neutrophil pleural lesions with focal microabscesses, elastolysis and elastophagia with giant cells in the elastic lamina. Thirteen cases presented with misleading lesions, which was a possible source of diagnostic error and led to a discussion of several associated disorders (Goodpasture's syndrome, and collagen disorder syndrome) or there may be systemic angiitis (Giant cell or lymphocytic) or also systemic or tissue eosinophilia (Churg-Strauss syndrome, bronchocentric granulomatosis) or necrotising bronchitis (atrophic polychondritis) or other forms of nodular interstitial fibrosis, such as histiocytosis X. We would like to stress the great polymorphic variation of the lesions and the difficulties which confront pathologists in the diagnosis of Wegener's Disease, above all when it is localised to the lung. There is value in finding at least one major diagnostic criteria which is associated with a minor criteria and with the help of the C.ANCA levels may lead to a narrow clinicopathological correlation and allows for a fairly precise approach to the diagnosis and identification of early or unusual lesions and thus to the early treatment of patients before irreversible renal failure appears.
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PMID:[Pulmonary lesions in Wegener's disease. Report of the French Anatomo-clinical Research Group. Study of 40 pulmonary biopsies]. 150 87

Thoracic disease in the HIV negative immunocompromised host is most frequently caused by infection. Patterns of involvement produced on the chest radiograph include (1) lobar or segmental consolidation, (2) nodules with rapid growth and/or cavitation, and (3) diffuse lung disease. The lung also may be directly involved by lymphoma, metastases, drug reactions, radiation pneumonitis, or nonspecific interstitial pneumonitis. The lung is a frequent target organ for opportunistic infections in AIDS patients, particularly of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and tuberculosis. Computed tomography may be particularly helpful in these patients in the detection of early disease and in the characterization of patterns and extent of involvement as well as complications.
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PMID:Thoracic disease in the immunocompromised patient. 157 Mar 94

One hundred forty-three patients with bronchogenic carcinoma were studied prospectively with computed tomography (CT) to determine the accuracy of CT in the evaluation of mediastinal nodal metastases. Mediastinal lymph nodes were localized according to the lymph node mapping scheme of the American Thoracic Society and were considered abnormal if they exceeded 1 cm in short-axis diameter. All patients underwent surgical staging, which consisted of either mediastinoscopy alone or mediastinoscopy and thoracotomy. At the time of surgical staging, all accessible nodes were either removed or sampled. The sensitivity of CT for mediastinal nodes on a per-patient basis was 64%, with a specificity of 62%. The sensitivity of CT for individual nodal stations involved with tumor was only 44%. The presence of obstructive pneumonitis did not appreciably alter the sensitivity of CT, but the specificity was lower (43%). The likelihood of metastases increased with lymph node size; however, seven of 19 (37%) lymph nodes that measured 2-4 cm in short-axis diameter were hyperplastic and did not contain metastases. The relative insensitivity of CT makes formal nodal sampling at the time of mediastinoscopy or thoracotomy essential to detect lymph node metastases.
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PMID:Bronchogenic carcinoma: analysis of staging in the mediastinum with CT by correlative lymph node mapping and sampling. 173 40

Thoracic compliance measurements by use of readily available equipment were determined to be practical and safe in dogs. Twenty healthy dogs (age 1 to 16 years, weight 2.3 to 49.5 kg) were anesthesized for routine procedures such as dentistry or neutering. The animals were first hyperventilated to reduce pulmonary atelectasis, to check for leakage at the endotracheal tube cuff, and to induce mild hypocarbia, thus minimizing voluntary respiratory efforts. Total thoracic compliance measurements were calculated as the difference between exhaled volumes at static inspiratory pressures of 15 and 20 cm of H2O, divided by the pressure difference, and expressed as a function of body weight. The procedure was easy, took 5 to 10 minutes, and caused no recognizable ill effects in any of the dogs studied. Mean total thoracic compliance was 42.25 +/- 32 ml/cm of H2O. There was a significant correlation with weight, but no significant relationship was seen between compliance and age, or gender. The mean weight-adjusted total thoracic compliance was 1.85 +/- 0.56 ml/cm of H2O/kg. In studies in a small group of dogs with documented respiratory tract disease, 4 of 7 had a mean compliance greater than 2 SD below the normal range. Thus, this test may become part of the routine workup of any animal being anesthetized for procedures such as bronchoscopy to evaluate respiratory tract disease. Routine monitoring of animals on ventilators could provide early warning of complications such as pneumonia, pleural effusion, or pulmonary edema.
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PMID:Static thoracic compliance as a measurement of pulmonary function in dogs. 176 78

Immediately after induction therapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia, a 2 1/2-year-old child developed invasive pulmonary aspergillosis revealed by pneumothorax, an unusual manifestation. Despite treatment with amphotericin B, status epilepticus occurred; this manifestation was related to diffuse ischemic cerebral lesions probably caused by cerebral aspergillosis. Outcome was fatal. Early invasive pulmonary aspergillosis is responsible for non-specific pneumonia. Thoracic CT scan and fiberoptic bronchoscopy are informative investigations. At recovery of bone marrow aplasia, the occurrence of hemoptysis and the discovery of excavated lesions on roentgenograms are suggestive of the diagnosis. Cerebral aspergillosis should be routinely considered whenever neurologic symptoms develop in a patient with agranulocytosis, fever, and pneumonia. The prognosis of invasive aspergillosis depends above all on the promptness of treatment; amphotericin B should be given intravenously whenever broad spectrum antimicrobial therapy fails to induce apyrexia in a patient with agranulocytosis.
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PMID:[Fatal cerebral and pulmonary aspergillosis in acute leukemia in a child]. 226 96

Virtually only researchers from developed countries have done studies of risk factors for acute respiratory infections (ARIs) since these countries have an infrastructure that can support large multidimensional epidemiologic studies while developing countries do not. Yet results from these countries studies are not always relevant to developing countries since risk factor exposures in developing countries. For example, the predominant problem in developing countries is that ARIs in children is that ARIs in children 5 years old often result in death whereas in developed countries morbidity predominates. Based on studies in developed countries, there is plenty of evidence that strong associations exist between ARIs and chronic disease in adults, direct and passive smoking, and breast feeding. Thus policy need not request additional studies to base proper changes in public health policy. Yet researchers do need to collect more data on the associations between ARIs and HIV infections, low birth weight, and other possible risk factors. In fact, some are now examining relationships between ARIs and malnutrition, vitamin A supplementation, and indoor air pollution in developing countries. Some of the more important issues in developed countries are the links between maternal antibody levels and passive immunity in infants, the links between air pollution and ARIs, and the reasons for a rise in pneumonia in the aged. Another area that scientists need to explore is the association between respiratory infection (especially between 1-12 months old) and subsequent ARI. Further epidemiologists should standard data collection methods in both developed and developing countries. For example, the chronic respiratory questionnaire of the American Thoracic Society can serve as a model for acute symptom questionnaires.
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PMID:The epidemiology of acute respiratory infections in children and adults: a global perspective. 228 16

Sera from 252 patients with community-acquired pneumonia were examined for the presence of antibodies to 15 antigens of 7 Legionella spp. by indirect immunofluorescent antibody testing. The sera had been collected as part of the British Thoracic Society/Public Health Laboratory Service study of community-acquired pneumonia in adults. We also examined sera from 20 patients with gram-negative sepsis. Using a limited range of antigens of L. pneumophila, nine cases of legionellosis were diagnosed in the original study. However, using antigens to other Legionella spp., we identified two further cases, caused by L. micdadei and L. gormanii respectively. Twenty-six other patients had titres of 16 or 32 to one or more antigens, most commonly L. bozemanii serogroup 1, L. micdadei and L. dumoffi. None of the patients with non-legionella pneumonia, however, had significant changes in legionella antibody titres. All of the patients with Gram-negative sepsis had titres of less than 16.
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PMID:Prevalance of antibodies to 15 antigens of Legionellaceae in patients with community-acquired pneumonia. 240 43


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