Results 121 to 130 of about 8,735 (178)

Bronchiolitis Obliterans

Clinical Pediatrics, 1975
A case of severe, probably viral pneumonitis in a three-year-old child is presented, which resulted in complete atelectasis of the left lung, and in diffuse changes of bronchiolitis and bronchitis obliterans. The case represents a variant of bronchiolitis obliterans.
H, Azizirad   +3 more
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Bronchiolitis Obliterans

Seminars in Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2000
Bronchiolitis obliterans (BO) is a fibrotic lung disease involving the small conducting airways. BO may be classified by etiology and underlying disease or, more commonly, by histopathological pattern. The two major histopathological categories are (1) BO organizing pneumonia (BOOP) and proliferative bronchiolitis and (2) constrictive bronchiolitis ...
L, Angel, A, Homma, S M, Levine
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Bronchiolitis Obliterans

Clinical Reviews in Allergy & Immunology, 2003
Bronchiolitis obliterans (BO) is a disease of small airways that results in progressive dyspnea and airflow limitation. It is a common sequela of bone marrow, lung, and heart-lung transplantation, but can also occur as a complication of certain pulmonary infections, adverse drug reaction, toxic inhalation, and autoimmune disorders.
Petey, Laohaburanakit   +2 more
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Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome

2023
Bronchiolitis obliterans (BO) is the only late-onset pulmonary complication after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) to be recognized as a pulmonary graft-versus-host disease, affecting approximately 10% of HSCT recipients. Although the diagnosis of BO used to require a lung biopsy, it is now based primarily on pulmonary function
Louise Bondeelle, Anne Bergeron
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Bronchiolitis obliterans

Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine, 2004
Bronchiolitis obliterans (BO) occurs in both post-lung transplant and nontransplant-related individuals, and is characterized by mainly irreversible airflow obstruction that is often ultimately progressive.While post-lung transplant BO is a major cause of lung allograft dysfunction, and hence is better characterized than nontransplant-related BO, it is
Andrew, Chan, Roblee, Allen
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Congenital Bronchiolitis Obliterans

Beiträge zur Pathologie, 1975
A case is described of intrauterine pneumonia with "Congenital Bronchiolitis Obliterans" in a premature infant who died 35 hours after delivery. The patient presented from birth with increasingly severe respiratory insufficiency. Post-mortem histological examination of the lung revealed obliterative bronchiolitis, a rare disease which the patient most ...
N, Rosen, E, Gaton
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Bronchiolitis Obliterans

Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 1998
Hospital survival rates in experienced lung transplantation centers exceed 90%, but late survival for lung allograft recipients is clouded by bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS). Bronchiolitis obliterans is the characteristic pathological feature of this late syndrome of chronic lung allograft dysfunction, which is thought to represent chronic lung
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Bronchiolitis obliterans

Pneumologia (Bucharest, Romania), 2006
The article presents an integral approach of obliterative bronchiolitis (definition, etiopathogenesis, clinical aspects, investigations and therapy). It is a rare but severe disease. The most frequent etiology in children is the viral infection, mostly due to adenoviruses.
openaire   +3 more sources

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