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

Thoracic physicians in New South Wales, Australia, and conservative in their administration of long-term oxygen therapy. Relatively few patients are being treated with it at present. Those who are use oxygen cylinders and concentrators in their homes. Use of long-term therapy is restricted to two groups: first, well-motivated patients who, after investigation and treatment, continue to have PaO2 values below 60 mm Hg and evidence of complications arising from hypoxia; and second, a few patients who have central apnea and severe desaturation of hemoglobin during sleep.
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PMID:Long-term oxygen therapy in Australia. 1031 2

Chronic airflow limitation (CAL) is a major contributor to the burden of ill-health in Australia and, where hypoxia is present, can be treated with home oxygen therapy (HOT). At Flinders Medical Centre, a prospective longitudinal study was undertaken to examine the impact of HOT on the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of subjects with CAL. All eligible adult patients, aged < 80 yrs, with a primary diagnosis of CAL who met the prescription guidelines of the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand were offered HOT and invited to participate. After baseline assessment, subjects were followed-up 3, 6 and 12 months after commencement of HOT. Physiological assessment and three validated HRQoL measures were applied, the Nottingham Health Profile (NHP), the Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire (CRQ) and, for a subset of the patients, the Medical Outcomes Study short-form 36-item questionnaire (SF-36). This study reports the results from January 1, 1991 to July 31, 1997. One hundred and fourteen CAL patients were included in the study. Female subjects experienced significant improvements from baseline in the energy, emotional reactions, sleep and physical mobility areas of the NHP, in the fatigue, emotional function and mastery dimensions of the CRQ and in the role-physical, vitality, role-emotional, and mental health dimensions of the SF-36. Males experienced significant improvements in the emotional reactions, sleep and social isolation areas of the NHP, in the fatigue dimension of the CRQ and in the vitality dimension of the SF-36. Some of the improvements in the various domains persisted for > 6 months. Female patients prescribed home oxygen therapy appear to have a greater overall improvement in health-related quality of life and survival than males. Follow-up is continuing.
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PMID:Effects of long-term oxygen therapy on quality of life and survival in chronic airflow limitation. 1039 40

Dyspnea, which has been defined as an "uncomfortable awareness of breathing," is a frequent and devastating symptom in advanced cancer patients. It has been reported to occur in 21-79% of patients evaluated a few days or weeks before death. In advanced cancer, the aim of effective management is to minimize the patient's perception of breathlessness, which depends in turn on a reliable assessment. Unfortunately, most of our knowledge and experience of dyspnea has been acquired through working with patients with chronic pulmonary disease, and there is a dearth of literature relating specifically to the assessment of dyspnea in advanced cancer. Dyspnea is a complex sensation including several dimensions, such as antecedents (physiological and psychological events or stimuli preceding the development of dyspnea), mediators (characteristics of individuals or their environment affecting the response), reactions to dyspnea, and consequences or outcomes that result once the individual has reacted to a stimulus. The literature gives us many tools to measure these aspects. For example, antecedents may be assessed by the British Medical Research Council Questionnaire, the American Thoracic Questionnaire (ATS-DLD-78) and the Dyspnea Interview Schedule. Mediators of dyspnea may be measured by the ATS-DLD-78, the Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire (CRQ), the Dyspnea Interview Schedule, the Pulmonary Functional Status Scale (PFSS) and the Therapy Impact Questionnaire (TIQ). Reactions to dyspnea may be assessed by the Dyspnea Visual Analogue Scale (DVAS), the TIQ and the Borg Scale, and the consequences of it by the TIQ, the Baseline Dyspnea Index (BDI), the Transition Dyspnea Index (TDI), and CRQ, and by the Oxygen Cost Diagram (OCD), the Dyspnea Interview Schedule and the Modified Medical Research Council Dyspnea Scale (MRC). No single assessment tool considers all the different components of dyspnea, and the final choice will depend on the purpose of the assessment, taking into account that the provision of quality of life is of paramount importance to patients who have limited time left to them and that the assessment should not therefore detract from the quality of life by being overlong, complicated or invasive.
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PMID:Assessment of dyspnea in advanced cancer patients. 1042 43

The assessment of severity is one of the most important issues in the management of the patient with community-acquired pneumonia. If forms the basis of decisions about hospitalization or admission to an intensive care unit. Age, comorbid illness and vital sign abnormalities have been shown to represent the principal criteria of pneumonia severity. Severe community-acquired pneumonia is characterized by one or more of the following criteria: acute respiratory failure, haemodynamic compromise, severe sepsis and septic shock, multilobar radiographic infiltrates, plus some additional laboratory parameters (blood urea nitrogen > 7 mM, lactate dehydrogenase > 260 U.L-1 and low serum albumin at admission). Several sets of corresponding simple clinical and laboratory criteria have consistently been shown to have considerable potential in predicting death caused by pneumonia. It was recently found that the tentative definition of severe community-acquired pneumonia provided by the American Thoracic Society guidelines is highly sensitive but poorly specific. An alternative rule, defining severe pneumonia as the presence of two of three minor criteria (systolic blood pressure < 90 mmHg, multilobar involvement and arterial oxygen tension/inspiratory oxygen fraction < 250) or one of two major criteria (mechanical ventilation and septic shock), had a sensitivity of 78%, a specificity of 94%, a positive predictive value of 75% and a negative predictive value of 95%. When validated in an independent patient population, this rule may contribute to a more uniform definition of severe community-acquired pneumonia.
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PMID:Severe community-acquired pneumonia: how to assess illness severity. 1044 81

This audit aimed to observe the management of acute asthma by primary and secondary care within a Health District. Asthma attacks occurring during the first 6 weeks of 1996 to patients between the ages of 3 and 74 years in Canterbury and Thanet District were notified by general practitioners, out-of-hours co-operatives and hospitals. Data were obtained retrospectively from the patient records. A total of 378 episodes was registered: 342 (90%) to primary care. Of these 234 (76% of patients aged 6 years or over) had a peak flow recorded; 114 (30%) were given emergency bronchodilation: oxygen was not used in primary care; 204 (54%) were given systemic steroids; and 43 (11%) were referred for hospital care of whom 36 were admitted. Of the attacks, 212 (69% of the patients aged 6 years or over) could be classified by percentage predicted peak flow and management compared to the Guidelines published by the British Thoracic Society. Twenty-eight patients presented with 'life-threatening' asthma: 20 (71%) were given emergency bronchodilation; oxygen was used in only two; 24 (86%) were given systemic steroids; and six (21%) were referred for admission. In their confidential enquiry into the asthma deaths the British Thoracic Society identified a failure to appreciate the severity of the attack, resulting in inadequate emergency treatment and delay in referring to hospital. These data suggest that, 15 years later, these problems may still exist.
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PMID:Are doctors still failing to assess and treat asthma attacks? An audit of the management of acute attacks in a health district. 1046 21

To investigate the accuracy of clinical severity assessment of asthmatics and to compare emergency and subsequent ward management with British Thoracic Society (BTS) Guidelines, the records of all patients admitted for severe asthma (46) over a 5-month period to a District General Hospital were inspected. Variations from recommended management were revealed. Appropriate oxygen administration was often not provided in casually and patients frequently left hospital before their discharge criteria were attained: recommended diurnal variations in peak flow were exceeded in 26%. Eleven per cent of discharges were against medical advice, making provision of adequate management logistically difficult. Adherence to BTS guidelines on the need for arterial blood gas (ABG) analysis would have led to a failure to detect significant hypoxaemia in 25% of cases. This study identified substantial variations from BTS management guidelines. It is suggested that oximetry is necessary on arrival to guide selection for arterial blood gas analysis.
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PMID:Acute adult asthma--assessment of severity and management and comparison with British Thoracic Society Guidelines. 1046 41

In uncontrolled studies, noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) was found useful in avoiding endotracheal intubation in patients with acute respiratory failure (ARF) caused by severe community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). We conducted a prospective, randomized study comparing standard treatment plus NPPV delivered through a face mask to standard treatment alone in patients with severe CAP and ARF. Patients fitting the American Thoracic Society criteria for severe CAP were included in presence of ARF (refractory hypoxemia and/or hypercapnia with acidosis). Exclusion criteria were: severe hemodynamic instability, requirement for emergent cardiopulmonary resuscitation, home mechanical ventilation or oxygen long-term supplementation, concomitant severe disease with a low expectation of life, inability to expectorate or contraindications to the use of the mask. Fifty-six consecutive patients (28 in each arm) were enrolled, and the two groups were similar at study entry. The use of NPPV was well tolerated, safe, and associated with a significant reduction in respiratory rate, need for endotracheal intubation (21% versus 50%; p = 0.03), and duration of intensive care unit (ICU) stay (1.8 +/- 0.7 d versus 6 +/- 1.8 d; p = 0.04). The two groups had a similar intensity of nursing care workload, time interval from study entry to endotracheal intubation, duration of hospitalization, and hospital mortality. Among patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), those randomized to NPPV had a lower intensity of nursing care workload (p = 0.04) and improved 2-mo survival (88.9% versus 37.5%; p = 0.05). We conclude that in selected patients with ARF caused by severe CAP, NPPV was associated with a significant reduction in the rate of endotracheal intubation and duration of ICU stay. A 2-mo survival advantage was seen in patients with COPD.
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PMID:Acute respiratory failure in patients with severe community-acquired pneumonia. A prospective randomized evaluation of noninvasive ventilation. 1093 20

Thoracic involvement occurs more frequently in systemic lupus erythematosus than in any other connective tissue diseases, and more than half of patients with the disease suffer from the involvement. Primary intrathoracic manifestations include pleural disease (effusions and/or thickening), acute lupus pneumonitis, subacute interstitial lung disease including bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia and non-specific interstitial pneumonia with fibrosis, chronic interstitial lung disease of usual interstitial pneumonia, pulmonary hemorrhage, pulmonary vascular disease, small airway disease of bronchiolitis obliterans, and pulmonary arterial hypertension. Secondary intrathoracic manifestations include atelectasis due to diaphragmatic dysfunction, opportunistic pneumonia, drug and oxygen toxicity, aspiration, and pleuropulmonary consequences of cardiac and renal failure.
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PMID:Thoracic involvement of systemic lupus erythematosus: clinical, pathologic, and radiologic findings. 1066 51

Three sets of guidelines for the management of COPD that are widely recognized (from the European Respiratory Society [ERS], American Thoracic Society [ATS], and British Thoracic Society [BTS]) are reviewed and compared. None of the documents uses classic evidence-based documentation, and, in many instances, the recommendations are empiric because of a lack of scientific evidence. Overall, there is strong agreement between the documents. All three guidelines recommend inhaled bronchodilators as first-line therapy. Anticholinergics are noted to be well tolerated, although potential problems with beta(2)-agonists are mentioned. The ERS and BTS suggest that inhaled corticosteroids may be of value in patients documented to be steroid responders, whereas the ATS does not recommend their use at all. All three guidelines support the use of oxygen and pulmonary rehabilitation. There are varying levels of disagreement between the guidelines related to the role of spirometry, stratification of disease severity, and the use of theophylline and systemic corticosteroids. Other differences include the role for nebulizers and metered-dose inhalers, secretion clearance methodologies, and the treatment of acute COPD exacerbations and acute respiratory failure. All three guidelines agree that more research is needed to improve our understanding and management of COPD.
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PMID:Recommendations for the management of COPD. 1067 70

Thoracic electrical bioimpedance (TEB) is a harmless, noninvasive, user-friendly technology with wide patient acceptance. Stroke volume (SV) determination is important because it helps to define oxygen transport. Measurement of SV by TEB is rooted in concrete, basic electrical theory, as well as in theoretical models of electrical behavior of the human thorax and great thoracic vessels. This article is concerned with basic electrical theory as applied to TEB, signal acquisition, and the origin of the thoracic cardiogenic impedance pulse (delta Z). The appendix of the chapter features a more extensive overview of alternating current theory as applied to electrical bioimpedance.
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PMID:Electrophysiologic principles and theory of stroke volume determination by thoracic electrical bioimpedance. 1074 8


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