Results 311 to 320 of about 548,774 (332)
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ACUTE RESPIRATORY DISTRESS SYNDROME
Critical Care Clinics, 1997Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) occurs in a wide range of adult and pediatric critical care settings. This article provides an overview of ARDS including the controversies in definition, a summary of pathophysiology, diagnosis, clinical presentation, and management options. The article also attempts to emphasize new management options in the
R C, Sachdeva, K K, Guntupalli
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Acute respiratory distress syndrome
BMJAbstract The understanding of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) has evolved greatly since it was first described in a 1967 case series, with several subsequent updates to the definition of the syndrome. Basic science advances and clinical trials have provided insight into the mechanisms of lung injury in ARDS and led to ...
Katherine D, Wick +2 more
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Surgical Clinics of North America, 1974
Better filtration of banked blood, good general pulmonary care, and precautions against aspiration are noted as important preventive measures. Prevention and treatment of sepsis, both pulmonary and nonpulmonary, are major factors. Indiscriminate and prolonged use of broad spectrum antibiotics as “prophylaxis” may only add to the problem with ...
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Better filtration of banked blood, good general pulmonary care, and precautions against aspiration are noted as important preventive measures. Prevention and treatment of sepsis, both pulmonary and nonpulmonary, are major factors. Indiscriminate and prolonged use of broad spectrum antibiotics as “prophylaxis” may only add to the problem with ...
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Acute respiratory distress syndrome
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 2004Several combination therapies have been described throughout this article: in all likelihood, it is combination therapy that will allow improved survival of ARDS patients. As medicine moves into the future, clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of therapies for ARDS will be performed.
Pamela A, Wilkins, Thomas, Seahorn
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American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2020
RATIONALE Response to PEEP in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) depends on recruitability. We propose a bedside approach to estimate recruitability accounting for the presence of complete airway closure.
Lu Chen +11 more
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RATIONALE Response to PEEP in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) depends on recruitability. We propose a bedside approach to estimate recruitability accounting for the presence of complete airway closure.
Lu Chen +11 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Current Problems in Pediatric and Adolescent Health Care, 2013Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is commonly associated with severe sepsis. While the criteria for diagnosis have evolved since the first description in 1967, the characteristics of hypoxemia, tachypnea, rapidly progressing acute respiratory failure, and poor lung compliance continue.
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The Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Annals of Internal Medicine, 2004This review describes the clinical, etiologic, and physiologic basis of the acute respiratory distress syndrome and summarizes how its molecular pathogenesis leads to respiratory failure.
Claude A, Piantadosi, David A, Schwartz
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Acute respiratory distress in cattle
Veterinary Record, 1975The term "fog fever" was originally used identify a disease of adult cattle grazing lush pastures in the autumn. Unfortunately, the name has subsequently been applied to other respiratory disorders which occurred under different epidemiological circumstances, so that the name "fog fever" has lost much of its original specificity and become almost ...
R G, Breeze +3 more
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ARDS („acute respiratory distress syndrome“)
1998Das fruher als »adult«, heute besser als »acute« bezeichnete »respiratory distress syndrome »(ARDS) wurde 1967 erstmals von Ashbaugh und Petty bei Patienten mit Dyspnoe, Tachypnoe und Zyanose im Lancet beschrieben.
Michael Heck, Michael Fresenius
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Acute Respiratory Distress in Adults
Radiology, 1973Several nonpulmonary conditions may cause acute respiratory distress in adults. A review of 75 such patients revealed that the physiological and pathological patterns were constant, but the roentgenologic appearance was variable. Autopsy findings in one-third of the group consistently included heavy, wet lungs.
D R, Dyck, C J, Zylak
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