Thorax
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Pulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma may contribute to respiratory dysfunction in patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and features of pneumonitis. Opportunistic infections are readily recognised in endoscopic material, but pulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma is easily missed, so that patients are deprived of specific treatment. The clinical and pathological findings from nine cases of pulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma have been reviewed; these were found among 84 patients with AIDS and pneumonitis undergoing fibreoptic bronchoscopy and bronchoalveolar lavage. ⋯ Factors that may cause difficulties in diagnosis include the focal nature of some lesions and the pleural or parenchymatous location of others. In addition, in the lung as in the skin, the early stages of Kaposi's sarcoma resemble granulation tissue. Such lesions are far more difficult to recognise than is the late nodular stage.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Role of cryoanalgesia in the control of pain after thoracotomy.
Thoracotomy causes severe postoperative pain, which is difficult to manage since the use of systemic analgesics often causes respiratory depression. Cryoanalgesia of the intercostal nerves has been advocated as an effective means of local analgesia without serious side effects. A prospective randomised blind trial to investigate the efficacy of the technique was carried out. ⋯ Statistical analysis of the scores of postoperative pain and analgesic consumption showed that there was no significant difference between the trial and the control group. There was, however, a suggestion of an increase in the long term morbidity, although these figures were not amenable to statistical analysis. Thus is has not been possible to demonstrate a role for cryoanalgesia in the control of post thoracotomy pain.
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Comparative Study
Thermal dye double indicator dilution measurement of lung water in man: comparison with gravimetric measurements.
The thermal dye double indicator dilution technique for estimating lung water was compared with gravimetric analyses in nine human subjects who were organ donors. As observed in animal studies, the thermal dye measurement of extravascular thermal volume (EVTV) consistently overestimated gravimetric extravascular lung water (EVLW), the mean (SEM) difference being 3.43 (0.59) ml/kg. In eight of the nine subjects the EVTV -3.43 ml/kg would yield an estimate of EVLW that would be from 3.23 ml/kg under to 3.37 ml/kg over the actual value EVLW at the 95% confidence limits. ⋯ One subject was excluded from analysis because the EVTV measurement grossly underestimated its actual EVLW. This error was associated with regional injury observed on gross examination of the lung. Experimental and clinical evidence suggest that the thermal dye measurement provides a reliable estimate of lung water in diffuse pulmonary oedema states.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Oral progesterone treatment in chronic obstructive lung disease: failure of voluntary hyperventilation to predict response.
Previous studies have shown that some patients with chronic obstructive lung disease and hypercapnia will respond to medroxyprogesterone with improvement in arterial blood gases. The exact mechanism of this effect is unclear but it is presumed to be a result of ventilatory stimulation. To determine whether the ability to correct arterial blood gas abnormalities by voluntary hyperventilation would predict a subsequent favourable response to progesterone, we studied 11 subjects with chronic obstructive lung disease and chronic hypercapnia. ⋯ The groups responded similarly with a significantly higher Pao2 and lower Paco2 while having medroxyprogesterone acetate than while having placebo. Two patients with polycythaemia showed a reduction in haemoglobin concentration while taking progesterone. It is concluded that the response to medroxyprogesterone is not predictable from spirometric or blood gas changes after voluntary hyperventilation.