Seminars in respiratory and critical care medicine
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Lung failure is the most common organ failure seen in the intensive care unit. The pathogenesis of acute respiratory failure (ARF) can be classified as (1) neuromuscular in origin, (2) secondary to acute and chronic obstructive airway diseases, (3) alveolar processes such as cardiogenic and noncardiogenic pulmonary edema and pneumonia, and (4) vascular diseases such as acute or chronic pulmonary embolism. This article reviews the more common causes of ARF from each group, including the pathological mechanisms and the principles of critical care management, focusing on the supportive, specific, and adjunctive therapies for each condition.
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The physiological and biochemical abnormalities that constitute multiple organ failure represent cellular perturbations that, importantly, need to be reconciled with a lack of significant cell death together with availability but impaired utilization of oxygen. In conjunction with the relatively rapid ability of the organ to recover in surviving patients, a paradigm of metabolic shutdown triggered by a decrease in mitochondrial energy production appears increasingly valid. This review discusses data demonstrating temporal changes in oxygen utilization through the septic process, evidence for mitochondrial derangements, and recovery of mitochondrial function preceding clinical recovery.