Respiration; international review of thoracic diseases
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Comparative Study
Bronchoalveolar lavage: comparison of three commonly used procedures.
We have studied three different lavage procedures (100, 200 and 300 ml) in patients with pulmonary sarcoidosis (stage I). The effect of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) on cell yield, lavage fluid recovery, dwelling time, lavage-induced arterial oxygen desaturation and occurrence of side effects was analyzed. The patients did not differ significantly in prelavage lung function and blood gas parameters. ⋯ Cough was the most often reported side effect (9 patients); fever was observed in 6 patients, dyspnea in 4 (all undergoing large-volume lavage). Considering our results we do not think that it is justifiable to increase the volume of instilled fluid above 200 ml, because this may lead to serious side effects without increasing benefits. Using lower than 200 ml volumes decrease diagnostic yield although the risk of developing side effects is much lower.
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We studied the performance of a portable pulse oximeter in 123 consecutive adult patients by spot-checking with a finger probe and by spectrophotometry of oxygen saturation on a simultaneous arterial blood sample. 88 patients were overtly hypoxemic (HbO2 less than 90%) and 26 showed severe hypoxemia (HbO2 36-70%). The differences between the two methods showed a skewed distribution with a positive tail due to the over-estimation of lower saturation values by the pulse oximeter. Overall, the 95% confidence interval for the median difference ranged from -0.6 to +0.5%. ⋯ Pulse oximetry can be recommended as a first assessment of the respiratory balance only if a cut-off value of HbO2 equal to 90% in nonsmoking, air-breathing subjects is acceptable. The finger probe implies a response delay of approximately 30 s, making the instrument rather insensitive to short hypoxemic transients. With a predictive value around 90%, the pulse oximeter may be a useful portable screening tool.
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Case Reports
Adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma in the same lobe of the lung. A case report.
Multiple primary lung cancers, either synchronous or metachronous, are unusual. We treated a 70-year-old man with double synchronous lung cancers in the right upper lobe, an adenocarcinoma and a squamous cell carcinoma. As multiple malignant lesions in an early stage may be curable, those patients in whom a lung cancer has already been detected, and who have an increased risk, such as long history of heavy smoking or of exposure to some carcinogens, an aggressive check-up should be performed and should be closely watched.
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The areas of perivascular edema cuffs surrounding pulmonary arteries and veins were sequentially measured as an index of the fluid transport unit in lung interstitium (FTULI) in epinephrine-induced and oleic acid-induced pulmonary edema in rats. The former edema represents a model of hemodynamic edema and the latter, permeability pulmonary edema, respectively. In epinephrine-induced pulmonary edema, both the ratio of edema cuff area to cross-sectional area of the pulmonary artery (Rr) and the ratio of lung weight to body weight (L/B) were increased in parallel, reached maximum levels at 0.5 h after the treatment, and returned to the control levels after 3 h. ⋯ Rr returned close to the control level in 24 h but L/B remained elevated so that rate of recovery was delayed. The cuffs around the veins appeared similar to those around the arteries, but were very slight in both models. The difference in the time course of Rr and L/B in the two models may suggest that the recruitment of FTULI is insufficient in oleic acid-induced pulmonary edema; this limitation seems to be an important factor which makes the permeability edema refractory to treatment, together with the damage to the blood gas barrier.
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Pulmonary function has been studied extensively in patients with unilateral diaphragmatic paralysis (UDP), but there is scarce information regarding the respiratory function during sleep in this condition. We therefore studied pulmonary function in 12 patients with UDP when awake and when asleep. Diaphragmatic dysfunction was confirmed by the demonstration of low maximal transdiaphragmatic pressures in most of our patients; paradoxical gastric pressure swing was observed in 6 patients. ⋯ The mean maximum decrease in SaO2 was 15.2 +/- 6.2% and the time with an SaO2 drop of more than 5% of the awake SaO2 was 25.4 +/- 22.8 min. None of our patients was in respiratory failure or had clinical evidence of cor pulmonale. We conclude that UDP leads to significant nocturnal hypoxemia but, in the absence of systemic lung disease, does not lead to chronic respiratory failure and cor pulmonale.