American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 2014
Lung Inhomogeneity in Patients with Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome.
Pressures and volumes needed to induce ventilator-induced lung injury in healthy lungs are far greater than those applied in diseased lungs. A possible explanation may be the presence of local inhomogeneities acting as pressure multipliers (stress raisers). ⋯ Lung inhomogeneities are associated with overall disease severity and mortality. Increasing the airway pressures decreased but did not abolish the extent of lung inhomogeneities.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 2014
Multicenter Study Comparative StudyClinical and Epidemiologic Phenotypes of Childhood Asthma.
Clinical and epidemiologic approaches have identified two distinct sets of classifications for asthma and wheeze phenotypes. ⋯ Clinical phenotypes were well supported by LCA analysis. The hypothesis-free LCA phenotypes were a useful reference for comparing clinical phenotypes. Thereby, we identified children with clinically conspicuous but undiagnosed disease. Because of their high area under the curve values, clinical phenotypes such as (recurrent) unremitting wheeze emerged as promising alternative asthma definitions for epidemiologic studies.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 2014
Impact of Forced Vital Capacity Loss on Survival After the Onset of Chronic Lung Allograft Dysfunction.
Emerging evidence suggests a restrictive phenotype of chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD) exists; however, the optimal approach to its diagnosis and clinical significance is uncertain. ⋯ At CLAD onset, a subset of patients demonstrating physiology more suggestive of restriction experience worse clinical outcomes. Further study of the biologic mechanisms underlying CLAD phenotypes is critical to improving long-term survival after lung transplantation.