Articles: respiratory-distress-syndrome.
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The Journal of pediatrics · Jul 1975
Comparative StudyAngiotensin-I-converting enzyme activity in idiopathic respiratory distress syndrome of the newborn infant and in experimental alveolar hypoxia in mice.
Serum angiotensin-I-converting enzyme activity was found to be elevated in infants with idiopathic respiratory distress syndrome when compared with healthy premature infants, normal infants, and acutely ill full-term infants. Serum and lung CE activity has been found to be elevated in mice exposed to hypobaric alveolar hypoxia which also stimulated renal renin production. These findings suggest that alveolar hypoxia stimulates the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and this system may be involved in the response to the stress of IRDS.
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J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Feb 1975
Surgical management of anomalous left pulmonary artery causing tracheobronchial obstruction. Pulmonary artery sling.
An anomalous left pulmonary artery causing tracheobronchial obstruction is a rare malformation seen in infancy. Sixty-four cases have been described in the literature, with 17 survivors with or without surgical therapy. We reviewed the literature and the 5 cases seen at The Children's Memorial Hospital during the past 20 years. ⋯ The important diagnostic clues are an anterior indentation of the esophagus on esophagography, narrowing of the lower end of the trachea and right bronchus on bronchography, and anomalous origin of the left pulmonary artery from the right on angiography. We prefer to approach this anomaly by a left anterolateral thoracotomy with transection and end-to-end anastomosis of the anomalous left pulmonary artery in front of the trachea. Respiratory complications due to residual tracheomalacia are common after the operation.