Chest
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The effect of positional change (right vs left lateral decubitus) on the distribution of ventilation and perfusion ratios was determined in four patients with respiratory failure and chest roentgenographic findings of unilateral pulmonary disease. In these patients with a unilateral interstitial pattern, improvement in oxygenation which occurred when the "good" side was dependent (down) was associated with changes in the patterns of ventilation-perfusion distribution; two patients showed a predominant decrease in right-to-left intrapulmonary shunt, and two showed an improvement in ventilation-perfusion equality. Therefore, when unilateral interstitial pulmonary disease was present, positional change resulted in changes in right-to-left intrapulmonary shunt or low ventilation-perfusion ratios or both. Variability between patients can be explained by the nonhomogeneity of pulmonary disease in patients with respiratory failure.
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In five patients with aortic dissection, signs and/or symptoms of pericarditis were part of the early manifestations of the aortic disease. Signs of inflammatory pericarditis were noted clinically in four patients and were found at autopsy in one. In the three nonoperated patients who died of aortic rupture leading to fatal hemopericardium, symptoms of pericarditis preceded fatal rupture of the aorta by four to five days. ⋯ In each of two cases, there was a congenital bicuspid aortic valve. The phenomenon observed represents acute aortic dissection in which slow penetration of blood into the pericardial space caused inflammatory pericarditis. The interval between the onset of pericarditis and rupture of the aorta may allow sufficient time for appropriate diagnosis and potentially lifesaving treatment of the aortic disease.