Publications by authors named "Petty T"

Twenty-eight patients with advanced emphysema and/or chronic bronchitis and severe airflow obstruction were randomly assigned to receive either bitolterol or isoproterenol aerosol delivered by a metered dose device which was administered three times daily. Randomization resulted in similar patients with like degrees of airflow obstruction and responsiveness to a test dose of inhaled bronchodilator. Significantly greater improvement in airflow was achieved by administration of bitolterol compared to isoproterenol.

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Autopsy findings and a morphometric study of the lungs were compared in 18 subjects receiving nocturnal oxygen and 15 receiving continuous oxygen in the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy Trial (about half of those who died). The emphysema score, average interalveolar wall distance, central airway lesions, peripheral airway lesions, and the ratio of weights of left ventricle plus septum to right ventricle were similar in the two groups. The causes of death in the two groups were also similar.

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We studied 54 excised human lungs, 15 with no emphysema and 39 with varying degrees of emphysema, to examine the relationship of small airway disease and elastic recoil. We found a negative correlation between the total small airway pathology score and the mean internal bronchiolar diameter (r = -0.309, p = less than 0.

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We retrospectively studied 11 instances of patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation. Their spontaneous ventilatory measurements were not useful in judging their ability to wean, since these measurements did not change from the period of unsuccessful weaning to the period of progressive weaning from the ventilator. An adverse factor score and a ventilator score were created to evaluate underlying medical and respiratory problems related to ability to wean.

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The Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy Trial (NOTT) showed previously that patients with hypoxemic chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) frequently suffered from neuropsychologic deficit and experienced disturbed mood, personality, and life quality. The present study has followed up 150 NOTT patients six months after they were randomized to continuous oxygen treatment (COT) or nocturnal oxygen treatment (NOT). Tested off oxygen, 42% showed modest neuropsychologic improvement after six months of therapy, and the rates for COT and NOT were comparable.

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Early investigators of oxygen therapy reported an overall clinical improvement in persons with chronic lung disease who received oxygen. Later American and British studies showed that oxygen therapy could decrease pulmonary vascular pressures and red cell mass in some patients with pulmonary hypertension and polycythemia secondary to severe hypoxemia. The British Research Council Study showed that survival rates were significantly higher in patients receiving 15 hours of oxygen than in those receiving no oxygen.

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A 1-year survey of patients in three hospitals identified 936 patients who had one predisposition and 57 who had several predispositions to the adult respiratory distress syndrome. From the total predisposed population of 993 patients, 68 subsequently developed the syndrome. An additional 20 patients developed the syndrome from causes other than eight identified predispositions, to bring the total of patients studied to 88.

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ARDA is a common clinical problem resulting in acute respiratory failure in many and death in the majority of patients with a wide variety of direct and indirect pulmonary insults. ARDS is widely recognized and appropriately treated by empiric supportive care. Pharmacologic approaches to support the circulation are established.

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Pulmonary function tests were obtained in 7 emphysema-free and 27 emphysematous lungs with minimal small airway disease. The lungs were divided into 2 groups on the basis of whether they had a small or large, i.e.

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The morphologic and morphometric characteristics of the small airways of the lung and their relationship to airflow as measured by forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) were determined in 37 excised human lungs. After fixation the lungs were graded as to the degree of emphysema and the degree of small airway pathology. The internal diameters of the small airways were measured and corrected for shrinkage during processing.

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The adult respiratory distress syndrome is a reaction of the lung to a variety of severe direct or indirect pulmonary insults. It is characterized by acute respiratory distress, severe hypoxemia requiring high oxygen fractions, and "stiff lungs" requiring approaches to ventilatory management cited elsewhere in this issue of Clinics in Chest Medicine. Increased shunt fraction and dead space ventilation and airless lungs with debris and hyaline membranes are hallmarks of the syndrome, even though the final common pathway, i.

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