Articles: respiratory-distress-syndrome.
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Salud pública de México · May 1997
Comparative Study[Scales for evaluation of mortality of patients with trauma and adult respiratory distress syndrome].
To compare different scores and scales used to evaluate mortality in patients with trauma and adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). ⋯ Adult patients with trauma who develop ARDS showed high probability of death if additional clinical data of shock and consolidation in three or four quadrants of thorax X-rays are present, among other factors.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · May 1997
ONO-5046, an elastase inhibitor, attenuates endotoxin-induced acute lung injury in rabbits.
Endotoxin causes acute lung injury resembling acute respiratory distress syndrome. Elastase, as well as reactive oxygen species released from activated neutrophils, are thought to play pivotal roles in the pathogenesis of this lung injury. This study investigated whether ONO-5046, a specific elastase inhibitor, can attenuate acute lung injury induced by endotoxin in rabbits. ⋯ Endotoxin caused extensive morphologic lung damage, which was lessened by ONO-5046. In conclusion, intravenous ONO-5046 pretreatment attenuated endotoxin-induced lung injury in rabbits. This beneficial effect of ONO-5046 may be due, in part, to a reduction in the levels of mediators that activate neutrophils, in addition to the direct inhibitory effect on elastase.
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Damage to the respiratory system caused by inhalation of toxic products of combustion and the subsequent development of adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are the main lethal factors in burns patients. Treatment with exogenous surfactant is one of the therapeutic options. However, no clinical reports have yet been published about this therapy. ⋯ Intrabronchial application of surfactant by bronchoscopy during exhaustive conventional mechanical ventilation resulted in improved gas exchange with an increase in arterial O2 pressure (paO2); inspired O2 concentration (FiO2) was lowered and there was an improvement in lung compliance. Both patients survived this critical situation. We conclude that treatment with exogenous surfactant in postburn victims with ARDS is a promising therapeutic approach to improve the survival rate of these high-risk patients.
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The literature has been reviewed to evaluate the technique and clinical value of radionuclide measurements of microvascular permeability and oedema formation in the lungs. Methodology, modelling and interpretation vary widely among studies. Nevertheless, most studies agree on the fact that the measurement of permeability via pulmonary radioactivity measurements of intravenously injected radiolabelled proteins versus that in the blood pool, the so-called pulmonary protein transport rate (PTR), can assist the clinician in discriminating between permeability oedema of the lungs associated with the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and oedema caused by an increased filtration pressure, for instance in the course of cardiac disease, i.e. pressure-induced pulmonary oedema. ⋯ This may occur after cardiopulmonary bypass and major vascular surgery, for instance. By paralleling the clinical severity and course of the ARDS, the PTR method may also serve as a tool to evaluate new therapies for the syndrome. Taken together, the currently available radionuclide methods, which are applicable at the bedside in the intensive care unit, may provide a gold standard for detecting minor and major forms of acute microvascular lung injury, and for evaluating the severity, course and response to treatment.