379 results on '"R Rodriguez-Roisin"'
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2. Featuring Characteristics of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, Procalcitonin and Lower Tract Infections and Inert Gas Studies
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R. Rodriguez-Roisin
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,General Engineering ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Pulmonary disease ,Inert gas ,business ,Gastroenterology ,Procalcitonin ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2021
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3. After a Five-Year Term
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R. Rodriguez-Roisin
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business.industry ,General Engineering ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Medicine ,business ,General Environmental Science ,Demography ,Term (time) - Published
- 2021
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4. Plasticity of vascular progenitor cells: Implications in pulmonary vascular remodelling in COPD
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M. Díez, V. I. Peinado, E. Ferrer, J. Ramírez, J. Roca, R. Rodriguez-Roisin, and J. A. Barberà
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Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Vascular progenitor cells (VPC) have shown in vitro and in vivo their ability to differentiate into endothelial cells (EC). Some evidence suggests that the plasticity of these cells to differentiate into other cell types might contribute not only to angiogenesis but also to perpetuate vascular lesions. Studies done in pulmonary arteries (PA) of patients with COPD have demonstrated the presence of VPC infiltrating the intima. Since intimal thickening is mainly constituted by smooth muscle cells (SMC), we asked whether VPC could play a role in wall thickening. Accordingly, the objective was to evaluate in vitro the plasticity of VPC to differentiate into SMC and EC of human PA. G-CSF-mobilized peripheral blood CD133+ cells from a commercial primary line were expanded and labelled with acetylated-LDL-DiI for tracking cell purposes. Then, cells were co-cultured with commercial primary lines of human PA EC or SMC (n = 3). As control, CD133+ cells were cultured alone, with minimal medium with or without VEGF (50ng·ml–1). After 6 and 12 days of growth, the phenotype of cultures was characterized by immunofluorescence with: lectin, -actin and CD31. Cells were also evaluated morphologically. After 6 days, VPC acquired the morphology and the phenotype of the cells with which they were co-cultured, EC (lectin+, CD31+, alpha-actin-) or SMC (alpha-actin+, lectin-, CD31-). VPC cultured 12 days alone or with VEGF did not acquire typical morphology and markers of mature EC or SMC of PA. We conclude that VPC have the potential to differentiate in vitro into SMC, and that this plasticity could contribute to perpetuate pulmonary vascular remodelling in COPD.
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- 2006
5. Bronchodilators are central to the management of stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in the elderly
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Eric D. Bateman, H. Covelli, Myrna Dolovich, S. Zavarah, Vicente Plaza, Vito Brusasco, Agustín Llopis González, James F. Donohue, M. Omahony, C. Reddy, D. Hess, D.D. Briggs, S. Nazir, J. Van Noord, A. Dzierba, P. Brassard, H. Brubaker, Mahyar Etminan, R. Kanner, Kenneth R. Chapman, S. Jelic, M. Erbland, Dean Fergusson, K. Vandermheen, John R. Anderson, S. Salpeter, Gustavo J. Rodrigo, Mohsen Sadatsafavi, L. Love, P. Gupta, Joseph-Leon Aumann, Bartolome R. Celli, Marc Miravitlles, Pma Calverley, R. Rodriguez-Roisin, R. Ahrens, Jose A. Castro-Rodriguez, Shawn D. Aaron, R. Lapidus, E. Janssens, P. Ernst, Rick Hodder, and Luis J. Nannini
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Inhalation ,business.industry ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Pulmonary disease ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Theophylline ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2010
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6. Adenosine 5'-monophosphate in asthma: gas exchange and sputum cellular responses
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A. M. Peña, Federico P. Gómez, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Joan Albert Barberà, Hernán A. Manrique, Phillip A. Munoz, and Josep Roca
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Adenosine monophosphate ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Bronchoconstriction ,Bronchial Provocation Tests ,Bronchoconstrictor Agents ,Cohort Studies ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Internal medicine ,Bronchodilator ,medicine ,Humans ,Albuterol ,Hypoxia ,Methacholine Chloride ,Asthma ,Pulmonary Gas Exchange ,business.industry ,Sputum ,Adrenergic beta-Agonists ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Adenosine ,Adenosine Monophosphate ,respiratory tract diseases ,Oxygen tension ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Anesthesia ,Salbutamol ,Female ,Methacholine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Adenosine 5′-monophosphate (AMP) bronchoprovocation reproduces the lung function abnormalities that occur spontaneously during acute asthma and detects peripheral airway inflammation better than direct bronchoconstrictive agents. Pulmonary gas exchange disturbances may reflect changes in small airways related to airway inflammation rather than bronchoconstriction alone. The present authors investigated whether AMP induced a greater imbalance in the ventilation/perfusion ratio than methacholine (MCh), at an equivalent degree of bronchoconstriction, with and without salbutamol pre-medication. In total, 36 asthmatics were studied in three randomised, double-blind, crossover studies: 1) before and after AMP or MCh; 2) before and 30 min after salbutamol or placebo, followed by AMP; or 3) MCh challenge. Sputum was collected before and 4 h post-challenge. Compared with MCh, AMP provoked similar pulmonary gas exchange abnormalities at an equivalent degree of intense bronchoconstriction (forced expiratory volume in one second decrease of 28–44%). While salbutamol blocked AMP- or MCh-induced bronchoconstriction, arterial oxygen tension ( P a,O 2 ) and alveolar–arterial oxygen tension difference ( P A–a,O 2 ) disturbances induced by AMP and MCh were only partially blocked ( P a,O 2 by 46 and 42%, respectively; P A–a,O 2 by 58 and 57%, respectively). Compared with MCh, AMP increased the percentage of neutrophils (mean±se increased from 28±4% to 38±4%), but this increase did not occur after salbutamol pre-treatment. Both adenosine 5′-monophosphate and methacholine induced similar peripheral airway dysfunction. The fully inhibited adenosine 5′-monophosphate-induced neutrophilia with residual hypoxaemia observed after salbutamol treatment is probably related to β 2 -agonists acting on both bronchial and pulmonary circulation.
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- 2008
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7. The impact of stepwise withdrawal of inhaled corticosteroids on exacerbations in COPD patients receiving dual bronchodilation: WISDOM study
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H Magnussen, P Chanez, R Dahl, M Decramer, B Disse, H Finnigan, AM Kirsten, R Rodriguez-Roisin, K Tetzlaff, L Towse, H Watz, E Wouters, and P Calverley
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine - Published
- 2015
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8. Physiological responses to the 6-min walk test in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
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Alejandro Casas, Thierry Troosters, Joan Albert Barberà, Jordi Vilaró, R. Rabinovich, Josep Roca, and R Rodriguez-Roisin
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Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Walking ,Respiratory physiology ,Oxygen ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,Maximal Voluntary Ventilation ,Oxygen Consumption ,Heart Rate ,Internal medicine ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Humans ,Respiratory system ,Aged ,Pulmonary Gas Exchange ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,chemistry ,Exercise Test ,Respiratory Mechanics ,Cardiology ,Arterial blood ,Pulmonary Ventilation ,business ,Respiratory minute volume - Abstract
The 6-min walking test (6MWT) is frequently used to assess functional capacity in chronic cardiopulmonary disorders because of its simplicity. The study examines the physiological responses during encouraged 6MWT in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Pulmonary oxygen (O2) uptake (V'O2) was measured in 20 male patients (age 66+/-6 yrs, forced expiratory volume in one second 45+/-14% predicted) during 6MWT and incremental cycling, in random order. O2 tension in arterial blood, carbon dioxide tension in arterial blood and arterial lactate concentration ([La]art) were obtained in the last 10 patients. During the 6MWT, V'O2 showed a plateau after the 3rd min (1.39+/-0.28, 1.42+/-0.31, and 1.40+/-0.30 L x min(-1), 4th, 5th and 6th min, respectively), and minute ventilation (V'E) (42+/-8 L x min(-1)) was 91% maximal voluntary ventilation. No differences were shown between 6MWT (6th min) and peak cycling exercise in V'O2 (1.40+/-0.30 versus 1.41+/-0.28 L x min(-1), respectively), cardiac frequency (126+/-13 versus 130+/-12 beats x min(-1)), or arterial respiratory blood gases. The two tests were significantly different in V'E (42+/-8 versus 47+/-8 L x min(-1), 6MWT versus cycling, respectively), carbon dioxide production (1.30+/-0.31 versus 1.45+/-0.18 L x min(-1)) and [La]art (2.9+/-1.99 versus 5.9+/-1.51 M). The study demonstrates that an encouraged 6-min walking test generates a high but sustainable oxygen uptake. Since the oxygen uptake plateau reflects the integrated response of the system, it may explain the high prognostic value of the 6-min walking test.
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- 2002
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9. Bacterial colonisation in patients with bronchiectasis: microbiological pattern and risk factors
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R Rodriguez-Roisin, T Solé, R de Celis, Antonio Xaubet, J Angrill, A. Torres, Ana Rañó, Carlos Agustí, and Juan R. González
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Haemophilus Infections ,Microbiological culture ,Adolescent ,Bronchi ,Gastroenterology ,Sputum culture ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pseudomonas Infections ,Risk factor ,Respiratory Tract Infections ,Aged ,Analysis of Variance ,Bronchiectasis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Sputum ,Bacterial Infections ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Haemophilus influenzae ,Surgery ,Colonisation ,Bronchoalveolar lavage ,Female ,Original Article ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid - Abstract
Background: A study was undertaken to investigate the incidence, diagnostic yield of non-invasive and bronchoscopic techniques, and risk factors of airway colonisation in patients with bronchiectasis in a stable clinical situation. Methods: A 2 year prospective study of 77 patients with bronchiectasis in a stable clinical condition was performed in an 800 bed tertiary university hospital. The interventions used were pharyngeal swabs, sputum cultures and quantitative protected specimen brush (PSB) bacterial cultures (cut off point ≥102 cfu/ml) and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) (cut off point ≥103 cfu/ml). Results: The incidence of bronchial colonisation with potential pathogenic microorganisms (PPMs) was 64%. The most frequent PPMs isolated were Haemophilus influenzae (55%) and Pseudomonas spp (26%). Resistance to antibiotics was found in 30% of the isolated pathogens. When the sample was appropriate, the operative characteristics of the sputum cultures were similar to those obtained with the PSB taken as a gold standard. Risk factors associated with bronchial colonisation by PPMs in the multivariate analysis were: (1) diagnosis of bronchiectasis before the age of 14 years (odds ratio (OR)=3.92, 95% CI 1.29 to 11.95), (2) forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1)
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- 2002
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10. [Untitled]
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Conxi Lázaro, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Ferran Morell, Xavier Estivill, G. Ercilla, Joan B. Soriano, T.H. Beaty, Josep Roca, Josep M. Antó, M J Rodrigo, Jordi Sunyer, David Otero, and R. de Cid
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Chromosome 7 (human) ,Candidate gene ,Linkage disequilibrium ,education.field_of_study ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,business.industry ,Population ,medicine.disease ,Atopy ,Genetic marker ,Genetic linkage ,Immunology ,medicine ,Allele ,education ,business - Abstract
A number of genes/regions have recently been reported to be linked to asthma or its related phenotypes (i.e. atopy and bronchial hyperresponsiveness), by genetic linkage and allele-sharing methods. We have performed a case-control study comparing the allelic distribution of nine microsatellite markers and two genetic variants in a group of patients attended at emergency room departments because of an acute attack of asthma with respect to an external healthy population of controls. A total of 146 asthmatic subjects and 50 population controls from Barcelona, Spain, were genotyped for nine microsatellite markers from some asthma/atopy candidate genes/regions: the beta-subunit of the high-affinity IgE receptor (Fc epsilonRI-beta) located on chromosome 11; the 5q31-32 candidate region; the T-cell receptor genes, TCR-alpha on chromosome 14 and TCR-beta on chromosome 7. Two genetic variants of the beta-subunit of the high-affinity IgE receptor (Fc epsilonRI-beta) gene were also analyzed. None of the asthmatic or control individuals carried the Ile181Leu variant. There were no significant differences between asthmatic and control subjects neither for the polymorphic markers nor for the other variant of the beta-subunit of the high-affinity IgE receptor (Fc epsilonRI-beta) gene. No association could be observed in this sample of Spanish asthmatics with the genes/regions studied.
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- 2000
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11. Ventilator-associated lung injury in ARDS
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J. Russell, A. Slutsky, F. Lemaire, G. Ramsay, J. Mancebo, C. Richard, J. Marini, Ch. Brun-Buisson, J. Carlet, D. Cook, G. Dobb, J. Hall, R. Hubmayr, R. Rodriguez-Roisin, J. Takala, and M. Tobin
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ARDS ,Ventilator-associated lung injury ,business.industry ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2000
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12. Evidence of the Effectiveness of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure in the Treatment of Sleep Apnea/Hypopnea Syndrome
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Eugeni Ballester, J.M. Montserrat, Eva Carrasco, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Joan Ramon Badia, C Fornas, J de Pablo, and Lourdes Hernández
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Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Body Mass Index ,law.invention ,Positive-Pressure Respiration ,Sleep Apnea Syndromes ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Internal medicine ,Weight Loss ,Odds Ratio ,medicine ,Humans ,Continuous positive airway pressure ,Life Style ,Sleep hygiene ,business.industry ,Epworth Sleepiness Scale ,Standard treatment ,Apnea ,Sleep apnea ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,nervous system diseases ,Treatment Outcome ,Anesthesia ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Hypopnea ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is worldwide considered as the standard treatment of sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome (SAHS) although studies on the effectiveness of this treatment are limited. The aim of our study was to evaluate the effectiveness of CPAP in improving SAHS-related symptoms, daytime function, perceived health status, and quality of life in patients with moderate to severe SAHS. The effect of conservative treatment (CT) measures-sleep hygiene and weight loss- was compared with CT + CPAP. We included 105 consecutive patients (13 females, age 53 +/- 10 yr, body mass index [BMI] = 32 +/- 6 kg/m2, apnea/hypopnea index [AHI] = 56 +/- 20, Epworth sleepiness scale [ESS] = 12 +/- 5) who met our criteria for CPAP treatment. Patients were randomly allocated in two groups of similar characteristics. Group 1 (n = 37) was asked to improve sleep hygiene and started a weight loss program. Group 2 (n = 68) received, in addition, treatment with CPAP. Both groups were followed through weekly telephone calls and appointments. Sleepiness, other symptoms related to SAHS, daytime function, perceived health status, and quality of life were assessed through questionnaires at inclusion and after 3 mo of treatment. The relief of sleepiness and other SAHS-related clinical symptoms and improvement in perceived health status was much greater in Group 2 receiving CT + CPAP compared with Group 1, only receiving CT. The odds of experiencing a treatment response with CPAP + CT compared with CT alone was 6.52 (odds ratio [OR] = 2.51 to 17.6, 95% confidence interval [95% CI]). CPAP is currently the treatment of choice. At this time, the indication of CPAP treatment in moderate to severe SAHS is adequately supported.
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- 1999
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13. Forced oscillation technique for the evaluation of severe sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome: a pilot study
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Joan Ramon Badia, J.M. Montserrat, M. Rotger, Luis Hernández, Eugeni Ballester, Ramon Farré, Daniel Navajas, and R Rodriguez-Roisin
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Polysomnography ,Concordance ,Pilot Projects ,Sleep Apnea Syndromes ,Forced Oscillation Technique ,Humans ,Medicine ,In patient ,Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted ,Respiratory system ,Monitoring, Physiologic ,Sleep disorder ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,respiratory tract diseases ,Airway Obstruction ,Anesthesia ,Sleep (system call) ,business - Abstract
The forced oscillation technique (FOT) is a noninvasive method of potential clinical interest for quantitatively assessing airway mechanics during sleep. We investigated the applicability of FOT as a diagnostic tool for noninvasive assessment of airflow obstruction in patients with sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome (SAHS) during sleep. In seven patients previously diagnosed with severe SAHS (mean+/-SD apnoea/ hypopnoea index (AHI) 67+/-14) we performed a full polysomnography (PSG) together with on-line measurement of respiratory impedance (IZI) using FOT. For each patient we determined: 1) number of respiratory events conventionally detected by full PSG, those obtained by FOT and their degree of concordance; and 2) the characteristics and values of IZI during the respiratory events. FOT was well tolerated and easily applied in conjunction with a conventional sleep setup. The mean number of respiratory events x h(-1) detected by PSG and FOT were 55+/-16 and 58+/-17, respectively, with a strong concordance. IZI increased from a baseline of 11+/-4 to 50+/-20 cmH2O x L(-1) x s during apnoea (mean+/-SD). In all but one patient intermittent increases of IZI occurred immediately before each obstructive apnoea. In four patients, the increases of IZI developed at end-expiration whereas in two others occurred during inspiration. During hypopnoea most of the patients showed decreases of IZI during expiration. In conclusion, forced oscillation technique can be used as a noninvasive and complementary tool for the diagnosis of respiratory events and provides an on-line quantitative approach for continuous monitoring of airflow obstruction during sleep in patients with sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome.
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- 1998
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14. Effect of a platelet-activating factor (PAF) antagonist, SR 27417A, on PAF-induced gas exchange abnormalities in mild asthma
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Victor I. Peinado, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Joan Albert Barberà, Kian Fan Chung, Josep Roca, and Federico P. Gómez
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neutrophils ,Leukocyte Count ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Oral administration ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Platelet Activating Factor ,Respiratory system ,Asthma ,Inhalation ,Platelet-activating factor ,Pulmonary Gas Exchange ,business.industry ,Airway Resistance ,Respiratory disease ,medicine.disease ,Thiazoles ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Anesthesia ,Arterial blood ,Female ,Bronchoconstriction ,Blood Gas Analysis ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Inhaled platelet-activating factor (PAF), both in normals and in asthmatic patients, provokes transient systemic effects, neutropenia, bronchoconstriction and arterial oxygenation abnormalities similar to those shown in spontaneous exacerbations of asthma. To investigate the efficacy of a new PAF-receptor antagonist, SR 27417A, on all these changes after PAF challenge, 12 nonsmoking patients (four females and eight males) (mean+/-SEM) age 24+/-1 yrs with mild asthma (forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) 93+/-3% predicted) were studied in a double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over fashion 2 weeks apart. PAF aerosol challenge (18 microg) was carried out 3 h after oral administration of either SR 27417A (20 mg) or placebo. Respiratory system resistance (Rrs) and arterial blood gases and neutrophil cell counts were measured at baseline, before compound/placebo administration, and at 5, 15 and 45 min after PAF. Compared to vehicle, SR 27417A brought about moderate attenuation of PAF-induced neutropenia at 5 min (by 140%; p
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- 1998
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15. Nebulized Glutathione Induces Bronchoconstriction in Patients with Mild Asthma
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R Rodriguez-Roisin, L de Jover, Joan Albert Barberà, William MacNee, R M Marrades, and Josep Roca
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Bronchoconstriction ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pharmacology ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Placebo ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Double-Blind Method ,medicine ,Humans ,Albuterol ,Saline ,Asthma ,Aerosols ,Analysis of Variance ,Cross-Over Studies ,business.industry ,Nebulizers and Vaporizers ,Respiratory disease ,Free Radical Scavengers ,Glutathione ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Bronchodilator Agents ,respiratory tract diseases ,chemistry ,Anesthesia ,Toxicity ,Salbutamol ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To assess the effects on bronchial responsiveness of nebulized glutathione (GSH), one of the most efficient scavengers of oxidant substances in the airways, we studied eight patients with mild asthma (FEV1, 88 +/- 11% predicted [SD]) in a randomized, double-blind, cross-over, placebo-controlled fashion. Bronchial challenge was measured using both FEV1 and total pulmonary resistance (Rrs) by the forced oscillation technique. Patients received nebulized GSH (600 mg with 4 ml of 0.9% sodium chloride) or placebo (identical saline solution) over a period of 25 min, 1 wk apart. Placebo provoked subclinical mild bronchoconstriction (changes from baseline: FEV1, -1%; Rrs, +17%); by contrast, GSH caused major airway narrowing (changes from baseline: FEV1, -19%; Rrs, +61%) and induced cough (four patients) or breathlessness (three patients). Differences between placebo and GSH after challenge were also noticeable in both FEV1 (p = 0.03) and Rrs (p = 0.02). Neither osmolarity (660 mosm.kg-1) nor pH (3.0) of the GSH solution accounted for these effects. Nebulized salbutamol (5.0 mg) given before the GSH challenge blocked GSH-induced bronchoconstriction. Furthermore, GSH-induced FEV1 falls were inversely correlated with metabisulfite bronchoprovocation (provocative dose [PD20], 1.49 +/- 1.83 mumol) but not with methacholine challenge. The detrimental effects of nebulized GSH on the airway bronchial tone in patients with mild asthma strongly suggests bronchoconstriction provoked by sulfite formation.
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- 1997
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16. Inhaled nitric oxide and arterial oxygen tension in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and severe pulmonary hypertension
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T.W. Higenbottam, M J Diaz de Atauri, Joan Albert Barberà, George Cremona, S. Akamine, R Rodriguez-Roisin, and Yoshihiko Katayama
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Cardiac output ,Hypertension, Pulmonary ,Vasodilator Agents ,Lung injury ,Nitric Oxide ,Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction ,Administration, Inhalation ,medicine ,Humans ,Single-Blind Method ,Lung Diseases, Obstructive ,Letters to the Editor ,COPD ,Lung ,Inhalation ,Pulmonary Gas Exchange ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,Arteries ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary hypertension ,Oxygen ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,Papers ,Female ,business ,Blood Gas Monitoring, Transcutaneous - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inhaled nitric oxide (NO) is a selective pulmonary vasodilator which can improve gas exchange in acute lung injury. However, it is uncertain that this effect on arterial oxygenation can be generalised to all lung diseases. METHODS: The effects of inhaled NO on gas exchange were studied in nine patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), 11 patients with severe pulmonary hypertension, and 14 healthy volunteers. A randomized sequence of 40 ppm of NO or air was inhaled for 20 minutes through an orofacial mask. RESULTS: Inhaled NO reduced mean (SE) transcutaneous arterial oxygen tension (TcPO2) from 9.6 (0.3) to 8.9 (0.4) kPa in healthy volunteers and from 7.4 (0.6) to 7.0 (0.5) kPa in patients with COPD. There was no change in TcPO2 in patients with severe pulmonary hypertension. During inhalation of NO and air no change occurred in transcutaneous arterial carbon dioxide tension (TcPCO2), arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) measured by pulse oximeter, or cardiac output determined by the transthoracic impedance method. CONCLUSIONS: Inhaled NO does not improve TcPO2 nor increase cardiac output in normal subjects and patients with COPD, suggesting that inhaled NO worsens gas exchange. This could represent inhaled NO overriding hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction in COPD. The finding that TcPO2 also fell when normal subjects inhaled NO suggests that a similar mechanism normally contributes to optimal gas exchange. Whilst inhaled NO can improve oxygenation, this effect should not be considered to be a general response but is dependent on the type of lung disease.
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- 1997
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17. Adjustment of DLCO for hemoglobin concentration
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Albert Cobos, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Joan Albert Barberà, J. M. Campistol, Josep Roca, Jose-Vicente Torregrosa, M A Félez, Orlando Díaz, and R M Marrades
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Anemia ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Carbon monoxide diffusing capacity ,Hemoglobins ,Recovery period ,DLCO ,Internal medicine ,Diffusing capacity ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Prospective Studies ,Erythropoietin ,Aged ,Carbon Monoxide ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Surgery ,Cardiology ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Pulmonary Diffusing Capacity ,Chronic renal failure ,Female ,Hemoglobin ,business - Abstract
The equation proposed by Cotes and coworkers is currently considered as the most acceptable to correct carbon monoxide diffusing capacity (DLCO) for hemoglobin concentration [Hb] by both the American Thoracic Society (ATS) and the European Respiratory Society (ERS) guidelines for standardization of DLCO. In a previous study on 24 anemic patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation (1), we found that DLCO is underestimated using the equation of Cotes and coworkers. To further explore this finding, 28 anemic patients ([Hb] = 8.2 +/- 1.0 (SD) g/dl) with chronic renal failure were prospectively studied during the recovery period of anemia (5.4 +/- 3.5 mo). In all 28 subjects, the slope deltaDLCO/delta[Hb] computed as ratio of overall change in DLCO to overall change in [Hb] throughout the study period was 1.40 +/- 0.72 ml CO/min/mm Hg/g/dl. The individual relationship between measured DLCO and [Hb] closely fitted a simple linear regression. The resulting equations for adjustment of DLCO (DLCOadj) to a standard [Hb] of 14.6 g/dl for men and 13.4 g/dl for women are: [equations: see text]. The present adjustment function for DLCO is linear and independent of the observed DLCO values, whereas the formulas previously proposed are curvilinear, DLCO correction varying with the measured DLCO values. For a measured DLCO of 15 ml CO/min/mm Hg and [Hb] ranging from 7 to 12 g/dl, the present DLCO adjustment is higher (by 2.7 ml CO/min/mm Hg, on average) than that proposed by Cotes and coworkers. This difference appears to be relevant for a precise interpretation of DLCO in patients with normocytic anemia in different clinical conditions.
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- 1997
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18. Comparison of manual and automatic CPAP titration in patients with sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome
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E Botifoll, Patricia Lloberes, A Ramirez, J.M. Montserrat, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Eugeni Ballester, A Reolid, and Concepción Gistau
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Polysomnography ,Positive pressure ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Positive-Pressure Respiration ,Automation ,Sleep Apnea Syndromes ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Cpap titration ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Sleep apnea ,Apnea ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,respiratory tract diseases ,Anesthesia ,medicine.symptom ,Airway ,business ,therapeutics ,Hypopnea ,circulatory and respiratory physiology - Abstract
Automatic CPAP (auto-CPAP) is engineered to automatically provide a positive pressure to the upper airway in response to apnea, hypopnea, airflow limitation, or snoring in patients with the sleep apnea/ hypopnea syndrome (SAHS). Self-adjusted CPAP has theoretical advantages over traditional fixed CPAP. We investigated the value of auto-CPAP regulation in 20 patients with SAHS in order to predict future fixed-level CPAP needs, as an alternative method to conventional polysomnographically (PSG)-controlled CPAP titration. This was accomplished through comparison of the optimal CPAP level obtained with PSG with that obtained with auto-CPAP. There were no significant differences between the optimal CPAP level achieved with full PSG or with auto-CPAP. As a secondary analysis, we analyzed auto-CPAP performance with regard to sleep-stage distribution and arousals in a group of nine male patients, and compared it with the previous group of 20 patients in which manually CPAP titration was guided by PSG. After adequate CPAP was reached, upward and downward fluctuations in the CPAP level had no significant effect on sleep architecture or fragmentation. We conclude that auto-CPAP permits the prediction of future fixed-level CPAP needs, and does so without sleep disruption.
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- 1996
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19. Community-acquired pneumonia in the elderly: A multivariate analysis of risk and prognostic factors
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Joaquim Fernández-Solà, Raúl Riquelme, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Ramon Estruch, J P de la Bellacasa, Josep Mensa, Carme Hernandez, Mustafa El-Ebiary, and Antoni Torres
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Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Cohort Studies ,Community-acquired pneumonia ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Pneumonia, Bacterial ,Humans ,Medicine ,Risk factor ,Geriatric Assessment ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Case-control study ,Odds ratio ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Community-Acquired Infections ,Hospitalization ,Pneumonia ,Case-Control Studies ,Multivariate Analysis ,Cohort ,Female ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
To assess the risk and prognostic factors of community-acquired pneumonia occurring in the elderly (over age 65 yr) requiring hospitalization, two studies, case-control and cohort, were performed over an 8-mo period in a 1,000-bed university teaching hospital. We studied 101 patients with pneumonia (cases), age 78.5 +/- 7.9 yr (mean +/- SD). Each case was matched for sex, age (+/- 5 yr), and date of admission (+/- 2 d) with a control subject, without pneumonia during the preceding 3 yr, arriving at the emergency room. Etiologic diagnosis was obtained in 43 of 101 (42%) cases. The main microbial agents causing pneumonia were: Streptococcus pneumoniae (19 of 43, 44%), and Chlamydia pneumoniae (9 of 43, 21%). Gram-negative bacilli were uncommon (2 of 43, 5%). The multivariate analysis demonstrated that large-volume aspiration, and low serum albumin (< 30 mg/dl) were independent risk factors associated with the development of pneumonia. Crude mortality rate was 26% (26 of 101), while pneumonia-related mortality was 20% (20 of 101). The attributable mortality was 23% (odds ratio [OR]: 11.3; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 3.25 to 60.23; p < 0.0001). The multivariate analysis showed that patients had a worse prognosis if they were previously bedridden, had prior swallowing disorders, body temperature on admission was less than 37 degrees C, respiratory frequency was greater than 30/min or had three or more affected lobes on chest radiograph. Age by itself was not a significant factor related to prognosis. Among the significant risk factors, only nutritional status is probably amenable to medical intervention. The prognostic factors found in this study may help to identify, upon admission, those subjects at higher risk and who may require special observation.
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- 1996
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20. Posters
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V. Cerny, P. Zivny, P. Dostal, R. Parizkova, L. Zabka, R. E. Hodgson, A. T. Bosenberg, G. P. Hadley, H. Spapen, M. Diltoer, E. Suys, M. Borremans, J. Ramet, L. Huyghens, B. Afessa, R. Murphy, L. Hogans, B. Meyers, H. Mentec, P. Gruchet, P. Squara, B. De Jonghe, I. Peillon, J. P. Sollet, G. Bleichner, Z. Zivkovic, S. Mihailovic, M. Jakovljevic, D. W. Ryan, O. G. W. Weldon, S. N. Gower, S. M. Whiteley, A. Bodenham, E. De Robertis, J. M. Liu, C. Svantesson, P. L. Oahm, J. Thöme, S. Blomquist, B. Jonson, C. Pelagatti, M. Barattini, C. Poli, L. Ricupero, M. Olmastroni, P. Pieraccioni, M. B. Padelletti, P. Romagnoli, A. Masi, G. F. Rossi, K. Kurz-Müller, M. Tryba, P. Pelosi, D. Chiumello, M. Croci, L. Gattinoni, G. Kofings, M. Kyriakidis, A. Betrosian, L. Georgiou, P. Toufouzas, C. M. Lim, J. E. Choi, Y. Kon, S. D. Lee, W. S. Kim, P. H. Park, D. S. Kim, W. D. Kim, Y. Koh, B. H. Jung, S. Mazzi, N. Petrucci, F. Agostini, F. Vischi, M. Mitic-Milikic, M. Vukcevic, Lj. Nagomi Obradovic, S. Sekulic, J. Peláez, M. J. Asensio, M. Jiménez, M. Sisón, S. Yus, V. Cerdeño, K. Nishizuka, K. Tashiro, Y. Matsumoto, T. Kobayashi, Y. Suzuki, E. De Blasio, A. De Sio, D. Golia, A. Papa, M. Giurbino, G. Paulone, V. Evangelista, M. Imhoff, H. Greive, J. H. Lehner, D. Löhlein, K. P. Kelly, T. Busch, K. Loge, H. Gerlach, K. J. Falke, R. Rossaint, S. Herreo, T. Suarez, J. Mosácula, M. Lacort, J. A. Lapuerta, J. Guerra, A. Benini, M. Borelli, L. Lampati, M. Acciaro, A. Pesenti, M. Verweij, R. Marcolin, M. Bombino, N. Patroniti, A. Sordi, M. Tsareva, I. Petkoy, R. Kishen, B. J. M. Bowles, A. N. Thomas, I. F. Geraghty, J. Goodall, S. Grasso, R. Giuliani, F. Puntillo, L. Mascia, T. Fiore, N. Brienza, V. M. Ranieri, E. Pavlou, E. Zevla, M. Stavropoulou, Ch. Papazacharias, E. Loannidou, F. X. González, R. Rull, M. A. López-Boado, N. Fábregas, A. Alcón, L. A. Moreno, E. Zavala, Ch. Hering, M. Ferrer, J. R. Masclans, M. Castellá, R. Anglés, R. Rodriguez-Roisin, J. Roca, J. Milic-Emili, G. Polese, M. Planas, A. Rossi, B. Bermejo, M. Valls, M. Picó, I. Porta, F. J. de Latorre, R. Rodríguez-Roisin, R. Anglès, R. Ferrer, R. Peracaula, M. C. Bellamy, S. N. Smith, P. L. Dahm, J. Thörne, H. Rossetti, J. L. G. Amaral, G. A. J. Amarante, Y. Juliano, N. F. Novo, O. Resta, P. Guido, V. Picca, M. P. Foschino, G. A. Lecce, F. Affuso, F. Scarpelli, M. Sergi, M. Rizzi, F. Kirby, V. Healy, D. Mannion, E. Sweeney, A. Gil, J. M. SamPedro, J. Hernández, J. Carrizosa, F. Herrero, A. Martin, D. Sandaz, G. Rialp, G. López-Velarde, M. Subirana, E. Bak, J. A. Santos, E. Ormaechea, A. Net, S. Benito, J. Mancebo, I. Vallverdú, H. Stricker, G. Domenighetti, B. Waldispuehl, H. J. Feickert, Ch. Kayser, M. Sasse, T. Grüning, D. Pappert, G. Merker, R. Steinau, M. Wenz, M. Lange, G. Kaczmarczyk, C. De Deyne, J. Decruyenaere, E. Hoste, F. Colardyn, Y. Bar-Lavie, U. Borg, J. Kuramoto, N. Habashi, H. N. Reynolds, B. Walder, M. A. Bründler, A. Spiliopoulos, R. Zürcher, L. Nicod, J. A. Romand, A. V. Alyoshkin, T. V. Zarubina, R. S. Okhuysen, F. Bristow, B. E. Alpert, R. C. Frates, M. De Laat, F. Vermassen, A. J. Betbesé, M. Pérez, A. Santos, A. Betbesé, J. K. K. Kanhai, H. Strijdhorst, J. C. Pompe, H. A. Bruining, P. E. M. Huygen, L. Teba, S. G. Singh, H. V. Dedhia, G. Ferrari Vivaldi, G. Pedersini, C. Cingia, M. Ferrari, P. Marzollo, M. Kunert∼, L. Scheuble∼, M. Johanns’, F. Adnet, M. L. Benaissa, R. Bekka, P. Plaisance, C. Lapandry, F. Lapostolle, F. Baud, M. Solca, I. Ravagnan, A. Pedoto, R. Piquemal, P. F. Dequin, E. Hazouard, A. Legras, D. Perrotin, G. Ginies, E. Calzia, K. H. Lindner, P. Radermacher, H. Steltzer, P. Krafft, C. G. Krenn, P. Fridrich, A. F. Hammerle, R. S. Gill, J. V. Pappachan, M. A. Young, B. L. Taylor, G. B. Smith, Alexandra Lachana, V. Dimitroula, P. Stergiou, G. Nakos, C. Haberthür, B. Fabry, D. Zappe, C. Volta, S. Gottfried, P. Goldberg, P. Beuret, M. J. Carton, V. De Pasquale, M. L. Harlay, A. Cannamela, J. C. Ducreux, G. Tempelhoff, A. A. Eremenko, N. I. Chaus, D. I. Levicov, L. V. Bozhieva, P. Revuelta, F. Frutos, C. Núñez, P. Garrido, J. M. Lorenzo, L. Tamayo, E. Freire, A. Silva, J. Caminha, A. Carneiro, E. Reis, N. Rocha, M. Lopes, Cardoso A. Paes, F. Rua, J. D. Young, K. G. Allman, C. -J. Wallin, M. Rundgren, S. Eriksson, H. Hjelmqvist, L. G. Leksell, E. M. Nicolayenko, A. V. Grischenko, A. V. Fomicheva, S. A. Soltan, N. A. Stepanov, M. Anaslasaki, P. Agouridakls, K. Katsanoulas, E. Moloudl, E. Chaniotakls, E. Askitopoulou, P. Agouridakis, S. Lampakis, F. Chaniotaki, H. Groutsou, C. Gregoretti, P. Navaleai, G. Foti, M. Turello, P. Muato, K. Šakić, M. Pećina, Š Šakić, F. Del Nogal, M. J. Jiménez, M. A. García, J. Suárez, S. Temprano, R. Díaz, J. López, E. Zupancich, F. Turani, L. Tessitore, P. Mastrofrancesco, G. Celeste, D. Curatola, A. F. Sabato, K. P. Kellv, U. Ludwigs, A. Sánchez, J. M. Jiménez, A. Guerrero, S. Martínez, M. Chirosa, M. Marín, P. J. Young, M. Rollinson, G. Downward, S. Henderson, A. Mas, M. Martínez, E. Díaz, D. Joseph, F. Baigorri, LI. Blanch, L. Blanch, M. Perez, M. Martinez, A. J. Betbese, R. Jam, U. Lucangelo, E. Hernández, M. R. Jam, D. Ortiz, S. Ayala, M. Noray, L. I. Blanch, C. Royo, O. Díaz, F. Saldías, M. Andresen, D. Arriagada, A. Dougnac, P. F. Laterre, M. Raynaert, R. Jorquera, E. Florence, B. Espeel, J. Roeseler, G. Capodilupo, M. S. Reynaert, C. Gabrielli, F. Michel, L. Nibbe, R. Kuhlen, S. Hausmann, M. Max, M. Sprenger, Ch. Haberthür, K. Falke, M. Olivei, C. Galbusera, R. Veronesi, A. Palo, A. Comelli, M. Zanierato, G. Iotti, J. X. Brunner, A. Braschi, M. Rinaldi, M. Viganó, T. Stopar, K. Danovitch, A. Gursahaney, S. B. Gottfried, P. Reper, R. Danckaert, O. Wybaux, R. Jagodzinski, P. Lampaert, R. Jeunen, A. Vanderkelen, M. Pinder, J. Lipman, H. Hon, J. H. S. Low, and M. Wells
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Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine - Published
- 1996
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21. Undetected viral infection in diffuse alveolar damage associated with bone marrow transplantation
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J M Martín-Campos, A Liopart, Josep M. Sierra, E Carreras, Joan Albert Barberà, R Rodriguez-Roisin, T Ribalta, and Ciril Rozman
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Human cytomegalovirus ,Herpesvirus 4, Human ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Cytomegalovirus ,Herpesvirus 1, Human ,In situ hybridization ,Betaherpesvirinae ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Diffuse alveolar damage ,Lung ,In Situ Hybridization ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,Retrospective Studies ,biology ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cytomegalovirus Infections ,Immunology ,Female ,Autopsy ,Viral disease ,Bone marrow ,business - Abstract
To investigate the presence of nondiagnosed viral lung infections in patients who developed acute respiratory failure and diffuse pulmonary infiltrates after bone marrow transplantation (BMT), we studied necropsy-obtained lung specimens with features of diffuse alveolar damage (DAD) where no other specific histological diagnosis could be established, by using in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. Lung tissue samples obtained at necropsy from 19 patients (12 males and 7 females; 31 +/- 11 yrs mean +/- SD age) who died 56 +/- 36 days after BMT (12 allogeneic and 7 autologous), were studied retrospectively using specific deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) probes to detect cytomegalovirus (CMV), herpes simplex virus (HSV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and adenovirus genomes. Tissue samples were additionally processed with antibodies to CMV and HSV antigens. Cells infected by CMV were detected by in situ hybridization in five cases, and by immunohistochemistry in four cases. Combining the results of both procedures, a previously undiagnosed CMV infection was found in six patients. All of them had received an allogeneic BMT and had developed graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). No evidence of cells infected by HSV, EBV, or adenovirus was found in any case. No viral infection was detected either in recipients of autologous marrow or in recipients of allogeneic BMT without GVHD. These results indicate that pulmonary cytomegalovirus infection not detected by conventional histological examinations may be present in patients with diffuse alveolar damage associated with bone marrow transplantation, especially in recipients of allogeneic marrow who develop graft-versus-host disease. Furthermore, the use of in situ hybridization and/or immunohistochemistry on pulmonary histology might improve the diagnosis of viral lung infections in patients receiving bone marrow transplantation.
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- 1996
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22. Gas exchange, expiratory flow obstruction and the clinical spectrum of asthma
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G Hedenstierna, R Rodriguez-Roisin, and Peter D. Wagner
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Spirometry ,Pulmonary Circulation ,Severity of Illness Index ,Ventilation/perfusion ratio ,Asymptomatic ,Ventilation-Perfusion Ratio ,medicine ,Humans ,Asthma ,Multiple inert gas elimination technique ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Pulmonary Gas Exchange ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,respiratory system ,Airway obstruction ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,Airway Obstruction ,Pulmonary Alveoli ,Anesthesia ,Arterial blood ,Blood Gas Analysis ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
More than any other chronic respiratory disease, asthma is characterized by functional and clinical variability: expiratory flow obstruction, dyspnoea and wheezing may be absent, mild, or severe. Moreover, pulmonary gas exchange often does not closely relate to measured airway obstruction. Accordingly, the correlation between arterial oxygen tension and airflow (Pa,O2) rate indices of obstruction is poor, both in a single patient over time, and within groups of clinically similar patients. Here, these concepts are extended by examining relationships between airflow obstruction and gas exchange across the clinical spectrum of asthma (from asymptomatic to acute severe). Six individual studies encompassing 86 patients are analysed together, focusing on: 1) airways obstruction; 2) arterial blood gas data; and 3) the distribution of alveolar ventilation/perfusion (V'A/Q') ratios, measured by the multiple inert gas elimination technique. V'A/Q' mismatching was greater than normal even when forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) was normal, but with increasing severity of airways obstruction there was essentially no further deterioration in gas exchange until FEV1 reached about 40% of predicted normal values. Then, with little further airways obstruction, gas exchange rapidly worsened, Pa,O2 falling to about 50 torr. This study emphasizes that what has been observed in individual patients and within clinically similar patient groups can be extended across the spectrum of asthma severity: airways obstruction and gas exchange are poorly correlated. Furthermore, these results suggest that spirometric data alone may not adequately define remission, nor clearly identify those patients liable to serious gas exchange deterioration.
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- 1996
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23. Visual and different automatic scoring profiles of respiratory variables in the diagnosis of sleep apnoea-hypopnoea syndrome
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C Ascasco, Patricia Lloberes, O Carrasco, J.M. Montserrat, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Eugeni Ballester, and C Fornas
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Polysomnography ,Audiology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Sleep Apnea Syndromes ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Oximetry ,Respiratory system ,Sleep disorder ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Sleep laboratory ,Respiratory disease ,Method of analysis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Sleep (system call) ,business - Abstract
The purpose of our study was to explore the diagnostic accuracy of different methods of scoring night time recording of respiratory variables (NTRRV) for the diagnosis of the sleep apnoea-hypopnoea syndrome (SAHS). Within a 2 week period, we performed a partially attended night time recording of respiratory variables and a full polysomnography (PSG) for reference in patients with suspected SAHS. Night time recording of respiratory variables was carried out using equipment which records, and continuously displays on a monitor, oximetry, airflow, chest and abdominal motion and body position. Night time recording of respiratory variables was scored manually and automatically, according to different combinations of the parameters described previously. Full polysomnography was performed in the Sleep Laboratory following conventional standards. Thirty six patients were studied. Visual analysis and different automatic scoring profiles of night time recording of respiratory variables were compared to full polysomnography in terms of agreement, sensitivity and specificity. Visual scoring of night time recording of respiratory variables gave the finest agreement-sensitivity-specificity relationship. Automatic scoring of nighttime recording of respiratory variables showed a trend to underestimate the apnoea-hypopnoea index (AHI) with respect to full polysomnography due mainly to underrecognition of hypopnoeas. Agreement-sensitivity-specificity relationships of automatic night time recording of respiratory variables with respect to full polysomnography varied depending on the automatic profile used. Some had a good agreement and sensitivity whilst others had a good specificity. These findings show that visual scoring of night time recording of respiratory variables is the most accurate method of analysis when compared to full polysomnography. The usefulness of the automatic methods of scoring of respiratory variables depends on the end-point chosen and is not reliable enough to be used in all situations. Night time recording of respiratory variables represents a real complement to conventional full polysomnography in clinical practice.
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- 1996
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24. Aetiology and prognostic factors of patients with AIDS presenting life-threatening acute respiratory failure
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Antonio Xaubet, J. M. Sanchez-Nieto, A. Torres, Carlos Agustí, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Miró Jm, Gatell Jm, M. El-Ebiary, and Ramon M. Marrades
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Survival rate ,Mechanical ventilation ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,education.field_of_study ,AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections ,business.industry ,Pneumonia, Pneumocystis ,Respiratory disease ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Respiration, Artificial ,Surgery ,Survival Rate ,Pneumonia ,Pneumocystis carinii ,Respiratory failure ,Acute Disease ,Multivariate Analysis ,Female ,Emergencies ,Respiratory Insufficiency ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,AIDS Population - Abstract
Respiratory failure is a significant contributor to morbidity and mortality in patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). We performed a study to investigate the aetiology, prognostic factors, and short- and long-term outcome of AIDS patients with life-threatening respiratory failure and pulmonary infiltrates. Forty-two AIDS patients (29 of whom required mechanical ventilation), admitted to a Respiratory Intensive Care Unit (ICU) from 1985 to 1992 because of severe respiratory failure (arterial oxygen tension/fractional inspiratory oxygen (Pa,O2/FI,O2) ratio at hospital admission 19 +/- 14 kPa (mean +/- SD)) and diffuse pulmonary infiltrates, were studied for evaluation of the aetiology and outcome. Necropsy studies were performed in 14 out of 23 (61%) patients who died. Pneumocystis carinii was the most common aetiology of pulmonary infiltrates (28 patients (67%)). Overall, 19 patients survived (45%) and 23 (55%) died. A multivariate analysis of prognostic factors influencing the outcome of the whole population showed that the presence of P. carinii pneumonia and the requirement for mechanical ventilation (MV) were the major determinants of outcome for this type of patient. The median survival time after ICU discharge for P. carinii pneumonia patients was lower (49 days) when compared to that of the remaining patients (154 days). Median survival time after ICU discharge for patients needing MV (112 days) did not differ from that observed in patients not requiring artificial ventilatory support (154 days). Although the ICU survival rate in this study was reasonable, 55% for the whole population, and 36% for P. carinii pneumonia patients, the poor outcome after ICU discharge, in particular for P. carinii pneumonia patients, deserves the reassessment of ICU admission criteria for this type of AIDS population.
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- 1995
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25. Semirecumbent position protects from pulmonary aspiration but not completely from gastroesophageal reflux in mechanically ventilated patients
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J P de la Bellacasa, Mauricio Orozco-Levi, A. Torres, C. Piera, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Mustafa El-Ebiary, and Miquel Ferrer
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Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Artificial ventilation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Supine position ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Posture ,Oropharynx ,Pneumonia, Aspiration ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Supine Position ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radionuclide Imaging ,Intubation, Gastrointestinal ,Gamma counter ,Mechanical ventilation ,Cross Infection ,business.industry ,Esophageal disease ,Pharynx ,Reflux ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Respiration, Artificial ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pulmonary aspiration ,Anesthesia ,Technetium Tc 99m Sulfur Colloid ,Gastroesophageal Reflux ,Female ,business - Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of two body positions (supine and semirecumbency) on the dynamics of gastroesophageal reflux (GER) in 15 patients requiring mechanical ventilation and having a nasogastric tube in place. Samples of gastric contents, pharyngeal and bronchial secretions, and blood were obtained at baseline and every hour during a period of 5 h after nasogastric tube isotopic instillation of 37 megabecquerels of Tc99m. Radioactivity counting (RAc) was performed using a gamma counter with correction for decay. Irrespective of the body position, all patients showed at 3, 4, and 5 h after the isotope instillation a significant increase in RAc of the oropharyngeal contents (p0.05, each), indicating GER. Although RAc values in the pharynx were higher in supine from 1 through 4 h (p0.05), at the end of the study (5 h) the values did not differ between each position. Likewise, the slopes of the regression lines of sequential oropharyngeal RAc values were not different between each position (0.39 +/- 0.09 versus 0.45 +/- 0.11, respectively). In contrast, RAc values in bronchial secretions were higher at 5 h in the supine position compared with baseline (p0.05) and to semirecumbency (p0.01). These results strongly support that GER in mechanically ventilated patients with a nasogastric tube is a feature occurring irrespective of body position. Semirecumbent position does not protect completely from GER and subsequently from oropharyngeal colonization from gastric origin.
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- 1995
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26. Role of bronchoalveolar lavage in the diagnosis of fat embolism syndrome
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Eugeni Ballester, César Picado, N. Roger, A. Torres, Antonio Xaubet, Carlos Agustí, R Rodriguez-Roisin, and E. Zabala
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cell Count ,Embolism, Fat ,Diagnostic evaluation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Bronchoscopy ,Fat embolism syndrome ,medicine ,Humans ,Oil Red O ,Acute respiratory failure ,Embolization ,Coloring Agents ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Lipids ,Bronchoalveolar lavage ,chemistry ,Clinical diagnosis ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,business ,Azo Compounds ,Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid - Abstract
Fat embolism syndrome (FES) is a serious clinical disorder occurring in trauma patients. The diagnosis of fat embolism syndrome may be difficult to establish clinically. We therefore wanted to investigate the usefulness of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) in the diagnostic evaluation of fat embolism syndrome. We analysed the presence of fat droplets in BAL cells in 32 trauma patients (7 with full diagnostic criteria of fat embolism syndrome, 17 with incomplete diagnostic criteria, and 8 with no diagnostic criteria at the time of bronchoscopy), 9 nontrauma patients with acute respiratory failure and radiographic pulmonary infiltrates, and a control group composed of 10 individuals. An increased percentage of oil red O positive alveolar macrophages (cut-off point > 3%) in BAL was found in 6 out of 7 patients with definite clinical criteria of fat embolism syndrome, and in 6 out of 20 trauma patients without the clinical diagnosis of fat embolism syndrome. In two patients with fat embolism syndrome, sequential BAL showed that the percentage of positive macrophages decreased when the clinical manifestations disappeared. An increased number of BAL macrophages with fat droplets was also observed in two trauma patients without evidence of fat embolism syndrome after long-bone surgical intervention. By contrast, all non-trauma patients had a percentage of positive cells lower than 3%. Our findings suggest that BAL oil red O positive macrophages are frequently observed in trauma patients irrespective of the presence of fat embolism syndrome. Conceivably, a high number of oil red O positive macrophages could reflect clinically silent fat embolization.
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- 1995
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27. Salbutamol inhibits pulmonary effects of platelet activating factor in man
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R Rodriguez-Roisin, Joan Albert Barberà, M. Rotger, Kian Fan Chung, Josep Roca, Cristina Santos, and M A Félez
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Pulmonary Circulation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Bronchoconstriction ,Premedication ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Placebo ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Double-Blind Method ,Internal medicine ,Bronchodilator ,Administration, Inhalation ,Ventilation-Perfusion Ratio ,medicine ,Humans ,Albuterol ,Leukocytosis ,Platelet Activating Factor ,Respiratory system ,Cross-Over Studies ,Platelet-activating factor ,Inhalation ,Pulmonary Gas Exchange ,business.industry ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Acute severe asthma ,Salbutamol ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Inhaled platelet-activating factor (PAF) provokes considerable pulmonary gas exchange disturbances in normal man and in patients with mild asthma, similar to those observed in acute severe asthma. To further examine the mechanisms involved in PAF-induced ventilation-perfusion (VA/Q) mismatch, eight healthy, non-atopic, nonsmoking subjects were studied after administration of PAF aerosol (24 micrograms). They had been previously treated with inhaled salbutamol (300 micrograms) in a randomized, double-blind, cross-over, placebo-controlled design. After placebo, PAF provoked a fall in total arterial white cell count with a rebound leukocytosis. As shown in a previous study, an overall index of VA/Q inequality (DISP R-E*, 1.64 +/- 0.10) showed a threefold increase (P0.006) that accounted for the increase (79%) in AaPO2 (p0.04) after PAF, while the respiratory system resistance (Rrs) rose by 16% (p0.02). In contrast, after pretreatment with salbutamol inhaled PAF had no effects on pulmonary gas exchange, Rrs, or white cell count; facial flushing and cough were also hindered. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that salbutamol inhibits PAF-induced venoconstriction in both the airway and pulmonary microcirculation.
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- 1995
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28. Gas exchange response to intravenous aminophylline in patients with a severe exacerbation of asthma
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R Rodriguez-Roisin, Josep Roca, Joan Albert Barberà, Jose M. Montserrat, and Carlos A. Viegas
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Spirometry ,Exacerbation ,medicine.drug_class ,Vital Capacity ,FEV1/FVC ratio ,Double-Blind Method ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Bronchodilator ,medicine ,Humans ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Asthma ,Multiple inert gas elimination technique ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Pulmonary Gas Exchange ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Aminophylline ,respiratory tract diseases ,Anesthesia ,Acute Disease ,Salbutamol ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In patients with acute exacerbations of asthma, the intravenous administration of bronchodilators, such as salbutamol, entails the potential risk of worsening pulmonary gas exchange, despite an amelioration of airflow obstruction. The present study was designed to investigate the effect of intravenous aminophylline on pulmonary gas exchange in patients hospitalized with a severe exacerbation of asthma. We studied 12 patients (aged 41 +/- 13 yrs) admitted to the hospital because of an exacerbation of asthma. The study was of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled design. Six patients were treated with intravenous aminophylline and six received placebo, in addition to standard treatment with inhaled salbutamol and intravenous corticosteroids. Forced spirometry, respiratory gas exchange, ventilation-perfusion relationships assessed with the multiple inert gas elimination technique, and systemic haemodynamics were measured at baseline and 60 min after treatment started. In the aminophylline-treated group, mean theophylline plasma levels increased to 15.2 +/- 3.6 micrograms.ml-1, forced expiratory volume (FEV1) increased by 17 +/- 12%, and forced vital capacity (FVC) by 16 +/- 10%. The mean changes in FEV1 and FVC in the aminophylline-treated group were significantly higher than in the placebo-treated group. Likewise, minute ventilation increased by 23 +/- 14% and arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) decreased by 0.4 +/- 0.3 kPa (3 +/- 2 mmHg) during aminophylline infusion. No significant changes in arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) or in ventilation-perfusion distributions were shown in aminophylline-treated patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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- 1995
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29. Use of elastin fibre detection in the diagnosis of ventilator associated pneumonia
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A. Torres, A. Martos, Julia Valls González, J. Puig de la Bellacasa, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Mustafa El-Ebiary, and Miquel Ferrer
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Artificial ventilation ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Microbiological culture ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine.disease_cause ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Pneumonia, Bacterial ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pseudomonas Infections ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Cross Infection ,biology ,Respiratory distress ,business.industry ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa ,Respiratory disease ,Ventilator-associated pneumonia ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Respiration, Artificial ,Elastin ,Trachea ,Pneumonia ,biology.protein ,Female ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
BACKGROUND--Elastin fibre detection could be a simple and reliable marker of ventilator associated pneumonia. To confirm this, a prospective study was undertaken to evaluate the diagnostic yield of elastin fibre detection in the diagnosis of ventilator associated pneumonia. METHODS--Seventy eight mechanically ventilated patients were evaluated by examining endotracheal aspirates for the presence of elastin fibres. All patients were previously treated with antibiotics. Quantitative bacterial cultures of endotracheal aspirates and protected specimen brush samples were also performed. Patients were classified into three diagnostic categories: group 1, definite pneumonia (n = 25); group 2, probable pneumonia (n = 35); and group 3, controls (n = 18). RESULTS--Patients with definite and probable pneumonia were grouped together. The presence of elastin fibres in endotracheal aspirate samples was more frequent in groups 1 and 2, being found in 19 of the 60 patients compared with five of the control group. Although the presence of elastin fibres had a low sensitivity (32%), it was a reasonably specific marker (72%) of pneumonia. This specificity increased to 86% and 81% respectively when only Gram negative bacilli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa pneumonia were considered. Again, calculated sensitivity was 43% and 44% when analysing cases infected by Gram negative bacilli and Ps aeruginosa, respectively. The negative predictive value of the detection of elastin fibres in pneumonia caused by Ps aeruginosa was 81%. Detection was more frequent with infection by Gram negative bacilli (14/19), particularly with Ps aeruginosa (8/14). By contrast, pneumonia due to Gram positive cocci or non-bacterial agents uncommonly resulted in positive elastin fibre preparations (4/19, 21%). When analysing patients with and without chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, the diagnostic value of elastin fibre detection did not change. CONCLUSIONS--Potassium hydroxide preparation of elastin fibres is a rapid and simple specific marker of ventilator associated pneumonia and may be a useful technique to help diagnose pulmonary infections in mechanically ventilated patients, although this assessment is at present limited to patients without adult respiratory distress syndrome.
- Published
- 1995
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30. Clinical and functional characteristics of patients two years after being affected by the soybean asthma epidemic in Barcelona
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Josep Roca, Josep M. Antó, R Rodriguez-Roisin, M J Rodrigo, Rosa Codina, Jordi Sunyer, J Sabrià, and Ferran Morell
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Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Spirometry ,Allergy ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Àrea metropolitana) [Barcelona (Catalunya] ,Epidemiology ,Metropolitan area) [Barcelona (Catalonia] ,Bronchial Provocation Tests ,Disease Outbreaks ,Atopy ,Hypersensitivity ,Humans ,Medicine ,Epidemiologia ,Lung ,Asma ,Methacholine Chloride ,Asthma ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Inhalation ,Soia ,business.industry ,Case-control study ,Dust ,Immunoglobulin E ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,El Niño ,Spain ,Case-Control Studies ,Immunology ,Female ,Methacholine ,Soybeans ,Soybean ,business ,Research Article ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Patients affected during the asthma outbreaks caused by soybean dust inhalation in Barcelona presented with sudden onset of severe asthma followed by the rapid relief of symptoms after treatment. Two years after the epidemics ended, a case-control study was conducted in which the clinical, functional, and immunological characteristics of these asthma patients (a randomised sample of asthmatic patients admitted as emergency cases on epidemic days, n = 213) were compared with those of a control group (a random sample of asthmatic patients admitted as emergency cases for attacks of asthma on non-epidemic days, n = 170). METHODS--The study included the administration of the ATS-DLD78 standardised respiratory questionnaire, the measurement of atopy, and performance of spirometric tests and a methacholine inhalation test. Results: Patients with epidemic asthma reported fewer symptoms of asthma, had attended emergency departments less frequently during the previous year for acute attacks of asthma, were taking fewer inhaled corticosteroids at the time of the study, and attended medical follow up less frequently than did the patients with non-epidemic asthma. However, the cases and controls showed no differences in ventilatory capacity or reactivity to the methacholine bronchoprovocation test. Conclusions: Two years after the end of the soybean epidemics, people affected by epidemic asthma had a favourable prognosis. This finding contrasts with a higher risk of life threatening asthma and death during the epidemics. This paradox could be the result of a complex interaction between host and conditions of exposure.
- Published
- 1994
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31. Is severe arterial hypoxaemia due to hepatic disease an indication for liver transplantation? A new therapeutic approach
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R Rodriguez-Roisin and MJ Krowka
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine - Abstract
Severe arterial hypoxaemia or deteriorating pulmonary oxygenation due to HPS appears to be reversible within months of orthotopic liver transplantation. Due to the apparently poor prognosis in these patients, such abnormal oxygenation may, indeed, be considered an indication for liver transplantation in selected clinical situations. The pretransplant distinction between HPS and pulmonary hypertension as a reason for arterial hypoxaemia is essential, however, in that different outcomes appear to exist. Further prospective studies of patients with pulmonary vascular complications of liver disease are desperately needed.
- Published
- 1994
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32. Effect of pulmonary hypertension on gas exchange
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AG Agusti and R Rodriguez-Roisin
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine - Abstract
This paper reviews the effects of pulmonary artery hypertension on gas exchange by exploring three different issues, namely: 1) how does gas exchange behave in diseases characterized by increased vascular tone (primary pulmonary hypertension (PPH), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and interstitial pulmonary fibrosis (IPF)) or decreased vascular tone ("hepatopulmonary syndrome"); 2) how does exercise, as a non-pharmacological tool of increasing pulmonary blood flow, modify gas exchange in these diseases; and 3) how do several drugs that lower (vasodilators) or increase (almitrine) the active component of pulmonary hypertension interact with gas exchange. Available data show that: 1) in PPH a high pulmonary vascular tone enhances gas exchange and when it is lowered, either by oxygen or vasodilators, ventilation perfusion (VA/Q) distributions deteriorate; 2) in COPD a lowered (vasodilators) or augmented (almitrine) active vascular tone is almost invariably paralleled by a deterioration or enhancement of ventilation-perfusion matching, respectively; 3) in IPF an adequate active response of the pulmonary vasculature is essential to maintain gas exchange, both at rest and during exercise; and 4) in patients with liver cirrhosis a low pulmonary vascular tone induces an abnormal VA/Q distribution. In summary, these data show that any situation and/or therapeutic intervention that lowers the active vascular tone deteriorates VA/Q relationships and vice versa. The final effect of pulmonary vascular tone on arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) is less predictable. The reason for this uncertainty is that the actual PaO2 value depends on the interplay of the intra- and extrapulmonary factors that control gas exchange in humans, and not only on the degree of VA/Q mismatching.
- Published
- 1993
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33. BAL lymphocyte activation antigens and diffusing capacity are related in mild to moderate pulmonary sarcoidosis
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A Xaubet, C Agusti, J Roca, C Picado, and R Rodriguez-Roisin
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine - Abstract
To investigate the relationship [corrected] between immunocytological features of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and clinical indices in sarcoidosis, we studied the lymphocyte subsets, as well as the expression of human leucocyte antigen-DR (HLA-DR) and interleukin 2 receptor (IL-2R) antigens in BAL lymphocytes. We studied 16 patients with untreated sarcoidosis and 12 control subjects. We found significantly higher absolute numbers of lymphocytes bearing the IL-2R antigen in sarcoidosis. A stronger difference between groups was observed in both the percentage and absolute numbers of HLA-DR+ lymphocytes. We also found a moderate but significant correlation between the number of lymphocytes expressing the activation antigens and single breath carbon monoxide diffusing capacity in patients with sarcoidosis: DLCO vs HLA-DR+ lymphocytes (r = -0.60); DLCO vs IL-2R+ lymphocytes (r = -0.62); carbon monoxide transfer coefficient (KCO vs HLA-DR+ lymphocytes (r = -0.53); and KCO vs IL-2R+ lymphocytes (r = -0.58). Our results suggest that the reduction in diffusing capacity, expressed as either DLCO or KCO, results from the severity of alveolitis in mild to moderate sarcoidosis.
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- 1993
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34. Infections II
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C. Guillaume, J. Godard, I. Mohammedi, J. M. Vedrinne, B. Bui-Xuan, M. E. Reverdy, J. Motin, M. Bonten, F. Van Tiel, C. Gaillard, E. Stobberingh, S. Van Der Geest, F. Faurisson, G. Peytavin, B. Allaouchiche, A. Torres, M. Ferrer, E. Aznar, J. M. Gatell, M. El-Biary, J. Puig, J. Gonzalez, R. Rodriguez-Roisin, P. Gratadour, N. Mardiquian, C. Di Roio, T. J. J. Inglis, M. J. Sherratt, L. J. Sproat, J. S. Gibson, P. M. Hawkey, J. M. Sirvent, R. Verdaguer, M. J. Ferrer, J. Carratalá, J. Armengol, A. Bonet, S. Nouira, S. Elatrous, A. Bchir, M. Jaafoura, F. Abroug, S. Bouchoucha, L. Holzapfel, Cl. Chastang, P. L. Blanc, M. J. Carton, A. Legras, P. Schoch, G. Moret, R. Boiteau, J. F. Timsit, V. Garrait, B. Misset, F. W. Goldstein, M. F. Dumay, J. Carlet, G. Seller, J. M. Sánchez Nieto, A. Carrillo, J. A. Gómez Rubí, C. Climent, J. Ruiz Gómez, J. Sola, F. W. G. Ph. Vaury, S. Francoual, Ch. -H. Marquette, F. Hérengt, F. Saulnier, D. Mathieu, R. Nevierre, R. Courcol, Ph. Ramon, G. Meunier, P. Gaussorgues, J. M. Sab, A. Nageotte, P. Doré, R. Robert, G. Grollier, J. Rouffineau, H. Lanquetot, J. M. Charrière, B. H. P. Elsman, D. A. Legemate, M. S. van Leeuwen, M. A. H. Feldberg, H. Obertop, P. Carducci, M. G. Annetta, V. Mignani, C. Rumi, A. Clemente, K. Wrenger, J. Baier, B. Mortion, E. Torwesten, W. Finke, H. Neumann, C. Puchstein, M. Nys, P. Damas, R. Kleinschmidt, C. Wolf, H. Möller, N. Spannbrucker, C. Madl, R. Koppensteiner, L. Kramer, A. Kranz, K. Lenz, H. Ehringer, M. Antonelli, J. J. Lanore, G. M. Raponis, J. F. Dhainaut, P. Martino, G. Rosa, C. Mancinis, M. Segneri, R. R. D’Errico, A. Gaaparetto, G. Capellier, P. Balvay, A. Boillot, M. Tissot, E. Raccado, M. J. Dupont, F. Barale, J. A. H. Davidson, P. Zhang, S. J. Boom, A. Blyth, G. Ramsay, M. Sanchez, J. A. Cambronero, J. Lopez, E. Cerda, J. M. Rodriguez, J. Rubio, S. Rogero, A. Nunez Reiz, E. De La Fuente O’Connor, M. Daguerre Talou, M. Sánchez García, J. A. Cambronero Galache, S. Rogero Marin, A. Nuñez Reiz, B. Alvarez, F. Muñoz, F. Alvarez, M. J. Lopez, E. Maravi, F. Alvarez-Lerma, V. Tapia, G. Masdeu, S. Garrido, A. Vázquez-Sánchez, J. Nolla, J. F. Solsona, E. Gallet, P. Le Cacheux, A. Beck, B. Her, X. Lecoutour, and P. Charbonneau
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Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine - Published
- 1992
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35. Acute/Chronic respiratory failure III
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E. Fernàndez Mondèjar, G. Vazquez Mata, F. Ferròn, P. Navarrete, J. M. Torres Ruiz, P. Lestavel, L. Tronchon, M. C. Chambrin, J. Mangalaboyi, A. Rime, C. Chopin, P. Valta, R. Campodonico, C. Corbeil, M. Chassè, A. Châtillon, J. Braidy, N. Matar, J. Milic-Emili, J. Lòpez-Messa, L. Penas, A. Valverde, M. Dambrosio, E. Roupie, A. Carneiro, M. C. Anglade, N. Vasile, L. Brochard, F. Lemaire, J. Rubio, M. S. Carrasco, I. Mateo, R. Sierra, A. Escolar, J. Cozar, K. Bastin, R. Knapen, J. J. Moraine, C. Melot, R. Sergysels, R. J. Kahn, P. Pelosi, M. Cereda, G. Foti, L. D’Andrea, B. Manetti, A. Lissoni, A. Pesenti, J. M. Allegue Gallego, J. A. Gòmez Rubi, C. Palazòn Sànchez, A. Melgarejo Moreno, T. Lherm, R. Boiteau, E. Valente, M. Beaussier, F. Chamieh, A. Tenaillon, E. R. Righini, R. Alvisi, R. Ragazzi, C. A. Volta, M. Capuzzo, G. Gritti, M. Sydow, H. Burchardi, J. Zinserling, T. A. Crozier, J. Guttmann, L. Eberhard, W. Bertschmann, B. Fabry, G. Wolff, A. Rubini, D. D. DelMonte, V. Catena, I. Attar, G. Rattazzi, G. L. Alati, M. Arias Diaz, G. Vàzquez Mata, P. Navarrete Navarro, F. Guerrero Lòpez, A. Mèrida Morales, J. Isenegger, L. Picazo, A. Sanchez, B. Hernandez, A. Pons, G. Conti, L. Di Chiara, R. A. De Blasi, D. Dell’Utri, A. Cogliati, P. Pelaia, A. Ferretti, F. Bernasconi, G. Banfi, C. Putensen, G. Putensen-Himmer, M. Leon, P. E. M. Huygen, I. Gültuna, A. Zwart, C. Ince, H. A. Bruining, J. C. Pompe, J. Kesecioĝlu, A. Rabbat, J. P. Laaban, E. Orvoen-Frija, A. Achkar, J. Rochemaure, V. Frigo, M. Solca, G. Melloni, C. Gerbsa, A. Ornaghi, S. Mancini, R. Cavagnoli, W. Fasano, C. Santos, J. Roca, A. Torres, J. Cardùs, J. A. Barberà, M. A. Felez, R. Rodriguez-Roisin, R. Oviedo-Moreira, L. Beydon, G. Nakos, A. Precates, C. Mathas, N. Bassilakis, K. Chagianagnostou, L. Massoura, S. Labropoulos, M. Devroey, P. Vansnick, C. Mèlot, R. Naeije, V. Nagy, R. Kiiski, S. Kaitainen, R. Karppi, J. Takala, J. Kesecioglu, W. Erdmann, J. Marin, A. Arnau, M. Tejeda, D. Olivares, E. Servera, J. H. Boix, F. Alvarez, F. Peydro, J. P. Mira, M. Belghith, B. Renaud, E. Deland, F. Brunet, A. Brusset, J. J. Lanore, I. Hamy, J. L. Termignon, O. Soubrane, F. Pochard, J. F. Dhainaut, P. S. Sidhu, J. F. Cockburn, D. A. Nicholson, A. Kennedy, P. Dawson, and F. E. Servera
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Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine - Published
- 1992
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36. Sildenafil in Pulmonary Hypertension Associated with COPD
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Joan Albert Barberà, Sandra Pizarro, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Federico P. Gómez, Elena Gimeno, Concepción Gistau, Isabel Blanco, J. Roca, and Phillip A. Munoz
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,COPD ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,business.industry ,Sildenafil ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary hypertension - Published
- 2009
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37. The Physiology of Gas Exchange
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Stephen I. Rennard, Andrés L. Echazarreta, Joan Albert Barberà, Klaus F. Rabe, Bartolome R. Celli, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Federico P. Gómez, and Robert A. Stockley
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business.industry ,Ecology ,Medicine ,Physiology ,business - Published
- 2008
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38. Mitochondrial dysfunction in COPD patients with low body mass index
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R. A. Rabinovich, R. Bastos, E. Ardite, L. Llinas, M. Orozco-Levi, J. Gea, J. Vilaro, J. A. Barbera, R. Rodriguez-Roisin, J. C. Fernandez-Checa, and J. Roca
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Biopsy ,Body Mass Index ,Quadriceps Muscle ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,Endurance training ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Uncoupling protein ,Humans ,Respiratory function ,RNA, Messenger ,Exercise ,UCP3 ,Aged ,COPD ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,Skeletal muscle ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Glutathione ,Mitochondria, Muscle ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Body Composition ,Physical Endurance ,business ,Body mass index ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Muscle dysfunction ,Mitochondrial respiration - Abstract
Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) show abnormal adaptations of skeletal muscle redox status after exercise training. Increased skeletal muscle oxidative stress in COPD patients may prompt mitochondrial dysfunction. The present study explores the association between body composition and mitochondrial respiration in seven COPD patients with low body mass index (BMIL), eight COPD patients with normal body mass index (BMIN) and seven healthy controls. All of them underwent a vastus lateralis biopsy in which muscle structure, in vitro mitochondrial respiratory function, uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3) mRNA expression and glutathione levels in both isolated mitochondria and the whole muscle were determined. Mitochondrial respiratory function (assessed by acceptor control ratio (ACR)) was impaired in BMIL (2.2±0.6) compared with both BMIN (5.3±1.3) and controls (8.2±1.3). ACR significantly correlated with arterial oxygen tension and with muscle endurance but it showed a negative association with exercise-induced increase in blood lactate levels. UCP3 mRNA expression was reduced in BMIL patients. In conclusion, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients with low body mass index show electron transport chain dysfunction, which may contribute to low muscle endurance in the current subgroup of patients. Copyright © ERS Journals Ltd 2007.
- Published
- 2006
39. Pathophysiology of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- Author
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W. MacNee and R. Rodriguez-Roisin
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Pulmonary disease ,business ,Pathophysiology - Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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40. Leukotriene D4-induced hypoxaemia in asthma is mediated by the cys-leukotriene1 receptor
- Author
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S. E. Dahlen, Barbro Dahlén, Alejandro Casas, Federico P. Gómez, Josep Roca, Joan Albert Barberà, and R Rodriguez-Roisin
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Adult ,Cyclopropanes ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Leukotriene D4 ,medicine.drug_class ,Acetates ,Sulfides ,Severity of Illness Index ,Bronchial Provocation Tests ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Double-Blind Method ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Ventilation-Perfusion Ratio ,Humans ,Hypoxia ,Montelukast ,Asthma ,Receptors, Leukotriene ,Leukotriene ,Cross-Over Studies ,Inhalation ,Leukotriene receptor ,business.industry ,Membrane Proteins ,Receptor antagonist ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Quinolines ,Leukotriene Antagonists ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Bronchoconstriction ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Bronchoprovocation with cysteinyl-leukotrienes (LTs) induces airflow obstruction and gas exchange abnormalities, namely ventilation-perfusion ratio (V'(A)/Q') imbalance. However, it is unknown which of the two different receptors for cysteinyl-LTs mediate these V'(A)/Q' disturbances. In a double-blinded, crossover design, 10 patients with mild asthma were randomised to receive an oral single dose of the selective cysteinyl-LT1 receptor antagonist montelukast (40 mg) or placebo before leukotriene (LT)D4 inhalation challenge. Gas exchange, including V'(A)/Q' descriptors were measured at baseline, 3 h after montelukast/placebo pretreatment and 5, 15 and 45 min after the LTD4 challenge. Compared with montelukast, inhalation of LTD(4) induced a marked fall in forced expiratory volume in one second (mean+/-se 33+/-2%) and profound V'(A)/Q' mismatching, reflected by a decreased arterial oxygen tension (from 100+/-4 to 75+/-3 mmHg) and an increased overall index of V'(A)/Q' heterogeneity dispersion of retention minus excretion inert gases corrected for dead space (from 4.9+/-1.2 to 8.4+/-1.1; normal< or =3.0; dimensionless), 5 min after placebo. Following montelukast, LTD4 produced no significant changes in any of the variables. In conclusion, these findings point to the view that leukotriene D4)-induced gas exchange disturbances and bronchoconstriction are both mediated by the cysteinyl-leukotriene1 receptor.
- Published
- 2005
41. Adequacy of prescribing nasal continuous positive airway pressure therapy for the sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome on the basis of night time respiratory recording variables
- Author
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A. Alarcón, J.M. Montserrat, Patricia Lloberes, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Eugeni Ballester, and C Fornas
- Subjects
Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Polysomnography ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Positive pressure ,Positive-Pressure Respiration ,Sleep Apnea Syndromes ,Humans ,Medicine ,Oximetry ,Continuous positive airway pressure ,Respiratory system ,Nose ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Titrimetry ,Apnea ,Middle Aged ,nervous system diseases ,respiratory tract diseases ,Pulse oximetry ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,Respiratory Mechanics ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Body mass index ,Research Article - Abstract
BACKGROUND--The increased demand of full polysomnographic studies, not only for diagnostic purposes but also for continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) titration, has produced long waiting lists. Simpler methods are therefore needed to avoid having to refer all patients for full polysomnography. The hypothesis that CPAP therapy for the sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome (SAHS) can be performed exclusively on the basis of recording night time respiratory variables was tested. METHODS--The level of CPAP in a group of 41 patients (three women) of mean (SD) age 52 (10) years, body mass index 31.5 (4.4) kg/m2, and apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI) 53(16) events/hour was measured. During a two week period CPAP titration was performed in a random order in two settings: (1) in the sleep laboratory using full polysomnography; and (2) in the respiratory ward using equipment which continuously recorded and displayed pulse oximetry, airflow, chest and abdominal motion, and body position. The level of CPAP was increased progressively until apnoea, hypopnoea, snoring, and thoraco-abdominal paradox disappeared. RESULTS--No differences in CPAP levels (9.34(2.2) versus 9.68 (2.1) cm H2O) were found between full polysomnography and night time respiratory recordings. The accuracy of the measurement of both procedures showed good agreement. Only one patient showed a significant difference in CPAP level requirements between the two methods. CONCLUSIONS--Night time respiratory recording is sufficient to permit a reasonable choice of CPAP levels to abolish all the respiratory disturbances in most of the patients studied.
- Published
- 1995
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42. Neutrophil airway influx by platelet-activating factor in asthma: role of adhesion molecules and LTB4 expression
- Author
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J Gabrijelcic, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Kian Fan Chung, A.A. Acuña, Antonio M. Vignola, Alessandra Paternò, and M Profita
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Adult ,Male ,Leukotriene B4 ,Neutrophils ,Neutrophile ,Lymphocyte ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Antigen ,Double-Blind Method ,Medicine ,Humans ,Platelet Activating Factor ,Cross-Over Studies ,Platelet-activating factor ,Receptors, Leukocyte-Adhesion ,business.industry ,Cell adhesion molecule ,Sputum ,respiratory system ,Asthma ,respiratory tract diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Immunology ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Inflammation Mediators ,business ,Respiratory tract - Abstract
Platelet-activating factor (PAF)-induced neutrophil lung sequestration may require cell surface adhesion molecules (macrophage-1 antigen (MAC-1) and lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1 (LFA-1)). In this randomised, double-blinded, crossover study, the neutrophil kinetics after PAF and Lyso-PAF (L-PAF) airway challenge were investigated in nine mild-intermittent asthmatics. Neutrophils were measured in peripheral blood (PB) before and at 5, 15, 45 and 240 min after bronchoprovocation, and in induced sputum before and at 240 min after challenge. MAC-1 and LFA-1 expression were assessed by immunocytochemistry, and leukotriene B4 (LTB4) was measured by enzyme-immunoassay in induced-sputum supernatants. Compared with baseline, neutrophils in PB decreased 5 min after PAF, while at 240 min neutrophils in induced sputum increased. Compared with baseline and L-PAF, PAF decreased the percentages of MAC-1- and LFA-1-positive neutrophils in PB at 5 min, but increased the percentages of MAC-1 and LFA-1 in neutrophil-induced sputum. Moreover, compared with baseline and L-PAF, PAF-induced sputum revealed higher LTB4 levels, a finding that correlated with the elevated number of neutrophils in induced sputum. These findings suggest that macrophage-1 antigen and lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1 are involved in platelet-activating factor-induced neutrophil lung traffic, and that this process is modulated by enhanced leukotriene B4 release within the airways.
- Published
- 2003
43. Cardiopulmonary Interactions and Gas Exchange During Weaning from Mechanical Ventilation
- Author
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R Rodriguez-Roisin, Miquel Ferrer, and Josep Roca
- Subjects
Mechanical ventilation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,respiratory system ,respiratory tract diseases ,Hypoxemia ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Respiratory failure ,Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Arterial blood ,medicine.symptom ,Respiratory system ,business ,Hypercapnia ,circulatory and respiratory physiology - Abstract
The major function of the lung is to exchange physiological (respiratory) gases, namely, oxygen (O2) and carbon dioxide (CO2). In normal conditions, an equilibrium between oxygen uptake (VO2) and carbon dioxide elimination (VCO2) in the lungs, and the metabolic demands regarding oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production, must be attained with whatever partial pressures of both gases in arterial blood are necessary to achieve this equilibrium. Only when the lungs fail as a gas exchanger do arterial hypoxemia and hypercapnia or both appear, and respiratory failure ensues. Arterial oxygen (PaO2) and carbon dioxide (PaCO2) tensions are the directly measurable end-point variables used routinely by clinicians to properly manage patients with acute respiratory failure. When this is severe, mechanical ventilation is then considered the best strategy for treating patients. Traditionally, the mechanisms of hypoxemia are alveolar hypoventilation, limitation of alveolar to end-capillary O2 diffusion, shunt, and ventilation-perfusion (VA/Q) mismatching; major causes of hypercapnia are alveolar hypoventilation and VA/Q inequalities [1].
- Published
- 2003
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44. Response to hypoxia of pulmonary arteries in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: an in vitro study
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R Rodriguez-Roisin, Josep Roca, Victor I. Peinado, Joan Albert Barberà, Josep Ramírez, and Salud Santos
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Vasodilation ,In Vitro Techniques ,Pulmonary Artery ,Nitric Oxide ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,Internal medicine ,Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Endothelial dysfunction ,Hypoxia ,Aged ,COPD ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,Hemodynamics ,Hypoxia (medical) ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Bronchodilator Agents ,Vasoconstriction ,Anesthesia ,Pulmonary artery ,Cardiology ,Female ,Endothelium, Vascular ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) show impaired hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction that might contribute to abnormal gas exchange and could be related to endothelial dysfunction in pulmonary arteries. The aim of the study was to investigate the response of PA to hypoxic stimulus in vitro in COPD, and the role of endothelium-derived nitric oxide (NO) in this response. The pulmonary arteries of 25 patients who underwent lung resection were studied. Patients were divided into controls, COPD+normoxaemia (COPDN) and COPD+ hypoxaemia (COPDH). Hypoxic vasoconstriction (HV) was evaluated before and after stimulation or inhibition of the endothelial release of NO, and in the presence of exogenous NO. Compared with the other groups, HV was reduced in COPDH. The magnitude of HV correlated with the oxygen tension in arterial blood. The hypoxic stimulus induced greater contraction after stimulating endothelial release of NO, whereas its inhibition practically abolished HV. Exogenous NO completely inhibited HV. Maximal relaxation induced by endothelium-dependent vasodilators correlated with the magnitude of HV. In conclusion, pulmonary arteries of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and hypoxaemia have an impaired response to hypoxic stimulus, and the endothelial release of nitric oxide modulates hypoxic vasoconstriction. The depressed response of pulmonary arteries to hypoxia may contribute to abnormal gas exchange in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
- Published
- 2002
45. CEASE (Collaborative European Anti-Smoking Evaluation): a challenging multicentre trail organized by the European Respiratory Society
- Author
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P Paoletti, P Tonnesen, and R Rodriguez-Roisin
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine - Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Gas exchange and pulmonary hemodynamics during lung resection in patients at increased risk: relationship with preoperative exercise testing
- Author
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J, Ribas, M J, Jiménez, J A, Barberà, J, Roca, C, Gomar, E, Canalís, and R, Rodriguez-Roisin
- Subjects
Male ,Lung Neoplasms ,Pulmonary Gas Exchange ,Contraindications ,Hemodynamics ,Middle Aged ,Risk Assessment ,Thoracotomy ,Exercise Test ,Respiratory Mechanics ,Humans ,Female ,Lung Diseases, Obstructive ,Prospective Studies ,Pneumonectomy ,Lung ,Aged - Abstract
To evaluate the intraoperative evolution of patients with COPD during lung resection and to test whether exercise testing could be helpful in the prediction of the intraoperative course.Prospective study.University teaching hospital.Forty patients (mean [+/- SD] age, 65 +/- 9 years) with COPD (ie, FEV(1), 55 +/- 11% of predicted) and resectable lung neoplasms.Preoperatively, pulmonary function testing, quantitative lung perfusion scanning, and exercise performance testing were administered. Intraoperatively, pulmonary, hemodynamic, and blood gas measurements were performed at five stages, including periods of two-lung ventilation (TLV) and periods of one-lung ventilation (OLV).During OLV, compared with TLV, the PaO(2)/fraction of inspired oxygen (FIO(2)) ratio decreased from 458 +/- 120 to 248 +/- 131 mm Hg (p0.05), whereas pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) increased from 18 +/- 5 to 23 +/- 5 mm Hg (p0.05). Cardiac output (t) also increased from 4.0 +/- 1.2 to 5.1 +/- 1.9 L/min (p0.05), yielding to a higher mixed venous PO(2). Both PaO(2) and t during OLV were significantly lower in patients who had undergone right thoracotomies compared with those who had undergone left thoracotomies. The PaO(2)/FIO(2) ratio during OLV correlated with the PaO(2) during exercise (r = 0.39; p = 0.01) and with the perfusion of the non-neoplastic lung (r = 0.44; p = 0.005).In COPD patients, OLV leads to a significant derangement of gas exchange, which is more pronounced in right thoracotomies. Preoperative measurement of PaO(2) during exercise and the distribution of perfusion by lung scan might be useful to identify those patients who are at the greatest risk of abnormal gas exchange during lung resections.
- Published
- 2001
47. Invasive exercise testing in the evaluation of patients at high-risk for lung resection
- Author
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Emili Canalis, Josep Roca, R Rodriguez-Roisin, Lluís Jover, Joan Albert Barberà, M Mateu, Orlando Díaz, and Jesús Ribas
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Adult ,Male ,Lung Neoplasms ,Physical exercise ,Postoperative Complications ,Risk Factors ,medicine.artery ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,medicine ,Humans ,Lung volumes ,Lung cancer ,Pneumonectomy ,Survival rate ,Aged ,Lung ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,Hemodynamics ,Carbon Dioxide ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Oxygen ,Survival Rate ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,ROC Curve ,Anesthesia ,Catheterization, Swan-Ganz ,Pulmonary artery ,Exercise Test ,Arterial blood ,Pulmonary Diffusing Capacity ,Female ,business - Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate whether invasive exercise testing with gas exchange and pulmonary haemodynamic measurements could contribute to the preoperative assessment of patients with lung cancer at a high-risk for lung resection. Sixty-five patients scheduled for thoracotomy (aged 66+/-8 yrs (mean+/-SD), 64 males, forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) 54+/-13% predicted) were studied prospectively. High risk was defined on the basis of predicted postpneumonectomy (PPN) FEV1 and/or carbon monoxide diffusing capacity of the lung (DL,CO)
- Published
- 1999
48. From the authors
- Author
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R. A. Rabinovich, R. Bastos, E. Ardite, L. Llinas, M. Orozco-Levi, J. Gea, J. Vilaro, J. A. Barbera, R. Rodriguez-Roisin, J. C. Fernandez-Checa, and J. Roca
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine - Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Assessment of ventilation-perfusion mismatching in mechanically ventilated patients
- Author
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R Rodriguez-Roisin, Miquel Ferrer, Elizabeth Zavala, Josep Roca, Peter D. Wagner, and Orlando Díaz
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Mechanical ventilation ,Artificial ventilation ,Ventilator circuit ,Multiple inert gas elimination technique ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Carbon Dioxide ,Middle Aged ,Ventilation/perfusion ratio ,Respiration, Artificial ,Oxygen ,Positive-Pressure Respiration ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Tidal Volume ,Ventilation-Perfusion Ratio ,Humans ,business ,Inert gas ,Tidal volume ,Aged - Abstract
The multiple inert gas elimination technique (MIGET) is a robust tool to assess both ventilation-perfusion (V'A/Q') distributions and the role of extrapulmonary factors determining arterial oxygenation during spontaneous breathing and in mechanically ventilated patients. Mixed expired gas sampling used in the MIGET is most often obtained from a 10-L mixing box (10L-MB) placed in the expiratory side of the ventilator circuit. Consequently, a considerable increase in the compression volume (Vc) would be expected which, in turn, can give rise to potential errors in the estimation of the effective tidal volume delivered to the patient. The effects of the 10L-MB on the Vc were compared with those produced by a newly designed 1-L, mixing box (IL-MB). At a given peak pressure (Ppeak) within the ventilator circuit, the Vc generated by the 10L-MB was about six-times higher than that produced by the 1L-MB. At a Ppeak =50 cmH2O, the Vc were 377 mL (10L-MB) and 67 mL (1L-MB) (p
- Published
- 1998
50. Effect of nitric oxide synthesis inhibition with nebulized L-NAME on ventilation-perfusion distributions in bronchial asthma
- Author
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P. J. Barnes, Raquel Iglesia, Josep Roca, Joan Albert Barberà, Jesús Ribas, R Rodriguez-Roisin, and Federico P. Gómez
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nitric Oxide ,Ventilation/perfusion ratio ,Nitric oxide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Airway resistance ,Reference Values ,Internal medicine ,Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction ,Administration, Inhalation ,medicine ,Ventilation-Perfusion Ratio ,Humans ,Respiratory system ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Asthma ,Cross-Over Studies ,Inhalation ,business.industry ,Pulmonary Gas Exchange ,Airway Resistance ,medicine.disease ,NG-Nitroarginine Methyl Ester ,chemistry ,Anesthesia ,Cardiology ,Arterial blood ,Female ,business - Abstract
Patients with clinically stable asthma may show ventilation-perfusion (V'A/Q') mismatch. Nitric oxide (NO), a potent endogenous vasodilator, is increased in exhaled air of asthmatics. Such an increased NO production may be detrimental for optimal V'A/Q' balance owing to the potential inhibition of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction. This study was undertaken to investigate the relationship between the concentration of NO in exhaled air and the degree of gas-exchange impairment and to assess the effect of nebulized N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), a competitive inhibitor of NO synthesis, on gas exchange in patients with asthma. Twelve patients (four females and eight males, aged 31+/-5 yrs) with clinically stable asthma (forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) 80+/-5%) not treated with glucocorticoids and increased exhaled NO (58+/-9 parts per billion (ppb)) were studied. Exhaled NO, respiratory system resistance (Rrs), arterial blood gases and V'A/Q' distributions were measured before and 30, 60, 90 and 120 min after placebo or L-NAME (10(-1) M) nebulization; in eight patients pulmonary haemodynamics were also measured. At baseline no relationships between exhaled NO and gas-exchange measurements were shown. Nebulized L-NAME induced a significant decrease in exhaled NO (p< 0.001), which was maximal at 90 min (-55+/-5%). However, after L-NAME no changes in Rrs, arterial oxygen tension, the alveolar-arterial pressure difference in oxygen or V'A/Q' distributions were shown and nebulized L-NAME did not modify pulmonary artery pressure. In conclusion, the degree of gas-exchange impairment in stable asthma is not related to nitric oxide concentration in exhaled air and nitric oxide synthesis inhibition with N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester does not alter gas exchange or pulmonary haemodynamics, such that ventilation-perfusion disturbances do not appear to be related to an increased synthesis of nitric oxide in the airways.
- Published
- 1998
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