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Pulmonary edema is swelling and/or fluid accumulation in the lungs. It leads to impaired gas exchange and may cause respiratory failure.

Signs and symptoms


Symptoms of pulmonary edema include difficulty breathing, coughing up blood, excessive sweating, anxiety and pale skin. If left untreated, it can lead to death, generally due to its main complication of hypoxia.

Diagnosis


Pulmonary edema is generally suspected due to findings in the medical history and physical examination: end-inspiratory crackles during auscultation (listening to the breathing through a stethoscope) can be due to pulmonary edema. The diagnosis is confirmed on X-ray of the lungs, which shows increased vascular filling and fluid in the alveolar walls.

Low oxygen saturation and disturbed arterial blood gas readings may strengthen the diagnosis and provide grounds for various forms of treatment.

Causes


Pulmonary edema is either due to direct damage to the tissue or as a result of inadequate functioning of the heart or circulatory system.

Cardiogenic causes:

Non-cardiogenic causes, or ARDS (acute respiratory distress syndrome):

Therapy


When circulatory causes have led to pulmonary edema, treatment with nitrates (glyceryl trinitrate), positive pressure oxygen, and loop diuretics, such as furosemide or bumetanide, is the mainstay of therapy. Secondly, one can start with noninvasive ventilation. Other useful treatments include CPAP and oxygen.

There are no causal therapies for direct tissue damage; removal of the causes (e.g. treating an infection) is the most important measure.

See also


Reference


Pulmonology | Emergency medicine | Mountaineering

Höhenlungenödem | בצקת ריאות | 肺水腫 | 폐부종 | Longoedeem | Lungödem

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Pulmonary edema".

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