The American journal of medicine
-
Clinical and morphologic observations are described in two patients with severe pulmonary arterial hypertension without pulmonary venous hypertension from fibrosing mediastinitis. In one patient, both main pulmonary arteries and one major pulmonary vein were severely narrowed by dense fibrous tissue; in the second patient, only the right main pulmonary artery was severely narrowed. Both patients had normal intrapulmonary arteries and normal pulmonary parenchyma. ⋯ Each of these seven previously described patients had severe changes in the small intrapulmonary arteries. Of the other two previously described patients with pulmonary hypertension from fibrosing mediastinitis, one had severe narrowing of only the main right pulmonary artery, and the other, of both main pulmonary arteries. Thus, although pulmonary arterial hypertension in patients with fibrosing mediastinitis is usually due to obstruction of multiple large pulmonary veins and to severe secondary changes in small intrapulmonary arteries, fibrosing mediastinitis can cause severe pulmonary hypertension by obstructing the right or both main pulmonary arteries.
-
Phentolamine in amounts of 10 to 40 microgram/kg/min was infused intravenously for the emergency treatment of acute pulmonary edema due to left ventricular failure. Fourteen patients with arteriosclerotic heart disease, ranging in age from 52 to 87 years, had clinical and roentgenographic signs of pulmonary edema. ⋯ A reduction in the pulmonary artery wedge pressure to 14 mm Hg and an increase in the cardiac index to 2.5 liters/min/m2 was observed in response to this alpha adrenergic blocking agent. Reduction in peripheral resistance with phentolamine was associated with reversal of pulmonary edema.
-
From 1970 to 1974, among thousands of trainees seen at two large military installations who were subjected to the same physical and environmental stresses, only four recruits were hospitalized because of acute exertional rhabdomyolysis, renal failure and coagulopathy. The illness followed the performance of vigorous exercise. ⋯ In an attempt to explain this association, the data in these four cases are summarized. The hypothesis is then developed that rhabdomyolysis and endothelial damage, terminating in severe coagulopathy, may more likely occur in patients with sickle cell trait who are subjected to virorous physical exertion.