Articles: function.
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Asthma is a common chronic disease characterized by variable respiratory distress with underlying airway inflammation and airflow obstruction. The incidence of asthma has risen inexorably over the past 50 years, suggesting that environmental factors are important in its etiology. All inhaled environmental stimuli interact with the lung at the respiratory epithelium, and it is a testament to the effectiveness of the airway innate defenses that the majority of inhaled substances are cleared without the need to elicit an inflammatory response. ⋯ The potential of a susceptible epithelium and the underlying mesenchyme to create a microenvironment that enables deviation of immune and inflammatory responses to external stimuli may be crucial in the development and progression of asthma. In this review, we consider three important groups of environmental stimuli on the epithelium in asthma: oxidants, such as environmental pollution and acetaminophen; viruses, including rhinovirus; and agents that cause barrier disruption, such as house dust mite allergens. The pathology associated with each stimulus is considered, and potential future treatments arising from research on their effects are presented.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Dec 2013
ReviewAnesthesia for the young child undergoing ambulatory procedures: current concerns regarding harm to the developing brain.
Retrospective studies show that a single anesthesia exposure before age 3 may undermine language acquisition and abstract reasoning, and exposure to two or more anesthetics before age 2 almost doubles the risk of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, although in both cases causality has not yet been established.
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Curr Opin Crit Care · Dec 2013
ReviewCauses and consequences of disproportionate care in intensive care medicine.
Increased use of advanced life-sustaining measures in patients with poor long-term expectations secondary to more chronic organ dysfunctions, comorbidities and/or a poor quality of life has become a worrying trend over the last decade. This can lead to futile, disproportionate or inappropriate care in the ICU. This review summarizes the causes and consequences of disproportionate care in the ICU. ⋯ Disproportionate care is common in western ICUs. It can lead to violation of basic bioethical principles, suffering of patients and relatives and compassion fatigue and moral distress in healthcare providers. Avoiding inappropriate use of ICU resources and disproportionate care in the ICU should have high priority for ICU managers but also for every healthcare provider taking care of patients at the bedside.
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Oct 2013
Review[Monitoring of the respiratory muscle function during weaning from mechanical ventilation].
Early weaning and discontinuation of mechanical ventilation can help prevent respiratory muscle dysfunction in critically ill patients. Prolonged mechanical ventilation and failure to use adequate strategies to discontinue mechanical ventilation can even enhance and perpetuate respiratory muscle dysfunction. ⋯ Therefore, accurate monitoring of the respiratory muscle function is a valuable tool for the clinician at the bedside to assess to optimal weaning strategy and, ideally, would predict either weaning failure or success. In this review, we briefly summarize the available techniques, measurements and equipment required for the monitoring of respiratory muscle function in the intensive care unit.
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The World Health Organization (WHO) can be considered the primary agency of the United Nations that promotes global public health. This article provides a general overview of WHO by exploring the history, current, and future practices of the organization, and by addressing its major roles and functions in the present day. ⋯ Srimathy Vijayan is a fourth-year medical student at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, United Kingdom. She interned at the WHO headquarters in Geneva during the summer of 2007.