Results 211 to 220 of about 493,555 (265)
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Unilateral lung injury

Current Opinion in Critical Care, 2003
Mechanical ventilation is a supportive lifesaving therapy that can potentially cause lung injury if periodic alveolar overdistension, or cyclic collapse, and reopening occur. The use of a low tidal volume with moderate to high positive end-expiratory pressure improves the survival of patients with acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress ...
Lluis, Blanch   +2 more
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Traumatic injury to lung

The American Journal of Surgery, 1955
Abstract A brief consideration has been made of the pathology of the principal types of lung trauma with incident or closely allied trauma to chest wall and pleura. It has been emphasized that failure of respiratory function secondary to a number of mechanisms is the lethal factor in most of these injuries.
A de L, MAYNARD   +2 more
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Blast Lung Injury

Prehospital Emergency Care, 2006
Current trends in global terrorism mandate that emergency medical services, emergency medicine and other acute care clinicians have a basic understanding of the physics of explosions, the types of injuries that can result from an explosion, and current management for patients injured by explosions.
Scott M, Sasser   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

LUNG PRESERVATION AND LUNG INJURY

Chest Surgery Clinics of North America, 1995
Lung preservation and its attendant ischemia-reperfusion injury is a complex phenomenon that begins with lung injury that may be present in the donor before any preservation intervention. Acute preservation interventions in common use include single-flush perfusion and donor core-cooling on cardiopulmonary bypass.
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Proteases and lung injury

Critical Care Medicine, 2003
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) represents an inflammatory process that is initiated by diverse systemic and/or pulmonary insults, resulting in a clinical syndrome of severe respiratory distress and refractory hypoxemia. Neutrophils and their cytotoxic products, including oxidants and proteases, such as elastase, have been implicated as ...
Theo J, Moraes   +2 more
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Lung Vascular Injury

Chest, 1988
I n this paper I introduce some new developments in the study of lung vascular injury and revisit some older approaches that need a fresh look. Lung vascular injury is becoming more and more fascinating as findings and techniques in other fields are adapted to lung vessels. Most topics of the Aspen Conference related to lung vascular injury; I tried to
openaire   +2 more sources

Lung/Pleural Injuries

2017
Thoracic trauma account for about 25% of all trauma deaths and may produce injuries to endothoracic organs that play a vital role in normal physiology and homeostasis; some injuries to the chest and its contents, if unrecognized or untreated, may produce death within minutes.
Moroni C.   +6 more
openaire   +1 more source

Perioperative Lung Injury

Best Practice & Research Clinical Anaesthesiology, 2008
Patients are at risk for several types of lung injury in the perioperative period. These injuries include atelectasis, pneumonia, pneumothorax, bronchopleural fistula, acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome. Anesthetic management can cause, exacerbate or ameliorate most of these injuries.
openaire   +2 more sources

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