Results 171 to 180 of about 19,243 (206)
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Respiratory Alkalosis in Hepatic Coma
Archives of Internal Medicine, 1956The electrolyte abnormalities which have been described in hepatic failure include a decrease in plasma sodium, chloride, and carbon dioxide content and an elevation of lactic and pyruvic acid.* Elevation of the blood ammonia has also been reported, and, while there seems to be poor correlation between actual blood levels and symptoms of hepatic coma ...
P, VANAMEE +4 more
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Respiratory Alkalosis: A Quick Reference
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 2008This article serves as a quick reference for respiratory alkalosis. Guidelines for analysis and causes, signs, and a stepwise approach are presented.
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Respiratory Acidosis and Alkalosis
DeckerMed Medicine, 2009Respiratory acid-base disorders are those disturbances in acid-base equilibrium that are expressed by a primary change in CO2 tension (Pco2) and reflect primary changes in the body’s CO2 stores (i.e., carbonic acid). A primary increase in Pco2 (and a primary increase in the body’s CO2 stores) defines respiratory acidosis or primary hypercapnia and is ...
Nicolaos E. Madias, Horacio J. Adrogué
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Respiratory care, 2001
Respiratory alkalosis is an extremely common and complicated problem affecting virtually every organ system in the body. This article reviews the various facets of this interesting problem. Respiratory alkalosis produces multiple metabolic abnormalities, from changes in potassium, phosphate, and calcium, to the development of a mild lactic acidosis ...
G T, Foster, N D, Vaziri, C S, Sassoon
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Respiratory alkalosis is an extremely common and complicated problem affecting virtually every organ system in the body. This article reviews the various facets of this interesting problem. Respiratory alkalosis produces multiple metabolic abnormalities, from changes in potassium, phosphate, and calcium, to the development of a mild lactic acidosis ...
G T, Foster, N D, Vaziri, C S, Sassoon
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Respiratory Alkalosis Accompanying Ammonium Toxicity
Journal of Applied Physiology, 1956The infusion of ammonium acetate has been shown to cause an increased respiratory rate and results in respiratory alkalosis in unanesthetized dogs.
J W, POPPELL +3 more
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Lactic acid kinetics in respiratory alkalosis
Critical Care Medicine, 1991To evaluate the impact of respiratory alkalosis on the elimination of intravenously infused lactate.Prospective, randomized, crossover study.Medical ICU of a university hospital.Eight patients treated by ventilatory support for neurologic or neuromuscular diseases.Patients were investigated on two occasions: during normoventilation (pH 7.42 +/- 0.1 ...
W, Druml +4 more
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RESPIRATORY ALKALOSIS DURING ANESTHESIA
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1939Increased pulmonary ventilation in the human individual, whether voluntary or involuntary, is accompanied by a series of biochemical and physiologic changes which are proportional to the intensity and duration of hyperventilation. The resulting symptoms and signs are numerous, 1 but certain of these are reasonably characteristic. Dizziness, blurring of
M. H. SEEVERS +3 more
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An Unusual Cause of Respiratory Alkalosis
Chest, 1991A 56-year-old man with a longstanding tracheostomy presented to the hospital with upper GI bleeding and was found to have a profound respiratory alkalosis. The cause of this patient's involuntary hyperventilation was hiccuping complicated by the absence of glottic closure.
L A, Campbell, S H, Schwartz
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Respiratory acidosis and alkalosis in children
The Journal of Pediatrics, 1948Summary Respiratory acidosis and alkalosis occur probably more frequently than isgenerally believed and should be considered in patients presenting derangements of the respiratory mechanism. Cases illustrating the two conditions are presented. The diagnoses of respiratory acidosis and alkalosis are dependent not only on determinations of total ...
S, SPECTOR, C F, MC KHANN
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Respiratory acidosis and alkalosis.
Clinical nephrology, 1977The physiology of respiratory control of acid-base balance is reviewed. The pathophysiological mechanisms during hypercapnia and hypocapnia are discussed in the light of the causes and clinical manifestations of these disturbances. In addition to the role of the kidney in the compensatory processes of these disturbances, renal functional changes during
M, Martinez-Maldonado +1 more
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