Results 111 to 120 of about 161,430 (166)
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Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 1985
It is important to have an understanding of pulmonary edema because of the frequency of its occurrence in companion animals, the deleterious cardiopulmonary responses to edema, its relation to an underlying primary disease, and the potential for successful treatment.
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It is important to have an understanding of pulmonary edema because of the frequency of its occurrence in companion animals, the deleterious cardiopulmonary responses to edema, its relation to an underlying primary disease, and the potential for successful treatment.
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Chest, 1973
A 21-year-old man was in a coma and had pulmonary edema after ingesting 80 mg of methadone orally. Prompt use of naloxone hydrochloride reversed the respiratory depression. The diagnosis and treatment of methadone-induced pulmonay edema is reviewed.
A L, Goldman, R W, Enquist
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A 21-year-old man was in a coma and had pulmonary edema after ingesting 80 mg of methadone orally. Prompt use of naloxone hydrochloride reversed the respiratory depression. The diagnosis and treatment of methadone-induced pulmonay edema is reviewed.
A L, Goldman, R W, Enquist
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Postobstruction Pulmonary Edema
Chest, 1989Several occurrences of pulmonary edema following relief of acute upper airway obstruction have been reported. The edema is associated with normal cardiac filling pressures and responds promptly to conservative therapy. Its origin may be attributed to the cardiopulmonary effects of the vigorous inspiratory effort that the spontaneously breathing patient
D, Younker, C, Meadors, L, Coveler
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The American Journal of Medicine, 1978
Pulmonary edema fluid analyses and hemodynamic evaluations were performed in two uremic patients with acute pulmonary edema. The colloid osmotic pressure of the pulmonary edema fluid ranged from 57 per cent to 93 per cent that of the serum. Although cardiac function was normal in both patients, the serum colloid osmotic pressure--pulmonary artery wedge
E C, Rackow +3 more
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Pulmonary edema fluid analyses and hemodynamic evaluations were performed in two uremic patients with acute pulmonary edema. The colloid osmotic pressure of the pulmonary edema fluid ranged from 57 per cent to 93 per cent that of the serum. Although cardiac function was normal in both patients, the serum colloid osmotic pressure--pulmonary artery wedge
E C, Rackow +3 more
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Postpneumonectomy pulmonary edema
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1993Pulmonary edema is an uncommon but serious complication associated with major resection of the lung, usually after pneumonectomy. The pathophysiology of this condition is not completely understood, but recent experimental and clinical data suggest that this condition results from a combination of increased filtration gradient across the pulmonary ...
O M, Shapira, D M, Shahian
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Radiology, 1978
Unilateral pulmonary edema was found to occur following or in conjunction with 18 different clinical situations. In half of them the edema developed on the same side as the causative factor and was related to conditions altering the delicate balance at the alveolar-capillary interface.
L, Calenoff, G D, Kruglik, A, Woodruff
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Unilateral pulmonary edema was found to occur following or in conjunction with 18 different clinical situations. In half of them the edema developed on the same side as the causative factor and was related to conditions altering the delicate balance at the alveolar-capillary interface.
L, Calenoff, G D, Kruglik, A, Woodruff
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Postobstructive pulmonary edema
Journal of Critical Care, 2010Postobstructive pulmonary edema (POPE; also known as negative pressure pulmonary edema) is a potentially life-threatening complication in which pulmonary edema occurs shortly after the relief of an upper airway obstruction. The incidence of POPE has been reported to be as high as 1 in 1000 general anesthetic cases and commonly presents as acute ...
Ashish, Udeshi +2 more
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Southern Medical Journal, 1999
Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema may be caused by upper airway obstruction due to laryngospasm after general anesthesia. This syndrome of "negative pressure pulmonary edema" is apparently well known among anesthesiologists but not by other medical specialists.We reviewed the cases of seven patients who had acute pulmonary edema postoperatively.There was ...
S R, Lathan +3 more
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Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema may be caused by upper airway obstruction due to laryngospasm after general anesthesia. This syndrome of "negative pressure pulmonary edema" is apparently well known among anesthesiologists but not by other medical specialists.We reviewed the cases of seven patients who had acute pulmonary edema postoperatively.There was ...
S R, Lathan +3 more
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POSTPNEUMONECTOMY PULMONARY EDEMA
Chest Surgery Clinics of North America, 1998The adult respiratory distress syndrome seen after pneumonectomy is an uncommon but usually lethal complication. Its etiology remains unknown, although several factors such as fluid overload, endothelial damage, lymphatic interruption, and hyperinflation are thought to be involved in its pathogenesis.
J, Deslauriers, A, Aucoin, J, Grégoire
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Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema
Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 2003Pulmonary edema is differentiated into two categories--cardiogenic and noncardiogenic. Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema is due to changes in permeability of the pulmonary capillary membrane as a result of either a direct or an indirect pathologic process. It is a spectrum of illness ranging from the less severe form of ALI to the severe ARDS.
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