CLINICAL PRESENTATION AND DIAGNOSIS
As with any clinically defined syndrome, the diagnosis of ARDS is made by finding the appropriate signs and symptoms in the proper clinical setting . Some predisposing conditions are more likely to result in ARDS than others, such as lung injury secondary to aspiration of gastric contents, pneumonias and sepsis requiring admission to the intensive care unit, and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy.
Clinical presentation is relatively uniform regardless of etiology. Initially signs and symptoms are limited to those of the primary disorder. However, within the first 12 to 24 hours early accumulation of lung water causes dyspnea, hyperventilation, and the appearance of a fine diffuse reticular infiltrate on chest x-ray. Unless the underlying disease can be rapidly reversed, as in sepsis, the patient quickly progresses to the fullblown syndrome with the development of progressive bilateral pulmonary infiltrates, severe hypoxemia, and a dramatic fall in lung compliance. Most patients manifest respiratory failure within 24 hours of the onset of the predisposing event, and almost 90 per cent of those who eventually develop ARDS will do so by 72 hours. Treatment is generally supportive and directed at maintaining an adequate delivery of Oz to the tissues while minimizing iatrogenic complications. Therapy directed at the predisposing condition, when known, is imperative, since its continued presence leads to the persistence of the ARDS.
- APPROACH TO THE PATIENT WITH ACUTE ABDOMINAL PAIN
- DIFFUSE LUNG DISEASE OF UNKNOWN ETIOLOGY
- HHSC Legislative Appropriations Request (LAR)
- The Use of Diuretics
- MYOCARDIAL METABOLISM
- Proteinuria
- Verapamil
- RESPIRATORY SENSORS
- GENERAL SURGERY IN THE PATIENT WITH HEART DISEASE
- VARIATiT ANGINA
- Alterations in Drug Doses in Patients with Renal Failure
- CONSTRICTIVE PERICARDITIS
- Clinical Course, Pathogenesis, and Anatomy of Acute Tubular Necrosis
- THE FAMILIAL POLYPOSIS SYNDROMES
- Indications for Dialysis and Adequacy of Dialysis
- THE SLEEP APNEA SYNDROME
- GENERAL MANAGEMENT OF MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
- Pathogenic Mechanisms
- CAUSES OF PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
- CARDIOVASCULAR PHYSIOLOGY DURING PREGNANCY - ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY
- Conjugated Hyperbilirubinemia
- GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CARDIAC SURGERY
- Treatment
- PERIPHERAL ANEURYSMS AMD FISTULAE
- CLINICAL PRESENTATION
- TESTS OF HEPATIC FUNCTION
- LABORATORY TESTS OF LIVER FUNCTION AND DISEASE
- Endoscopic “Retrograde” Cholangiopancreatography (ERCP)
- Resuscitation
- PERIPHERAL VENOUS DISEASE
- VENTILATION
- CLINICAL APPROACH TO LIVER DISEASE
- Tocainide
- DISORDERS OF THE GALLBLADDER AND BILIARY TRACT
- Other Clearly Extrinsic Causes of Diffuse Infiltrative Lung Disease