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Pediatrics 1977-May

Pulmonary edema associated with croup and epiglottitis.

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K W Travis
I D Todres
D C Shannon

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Abstract

Two children, ages 9 and 2 1/2 years, with clinical diagnoses of laryngotracheitis (croup) and epiglottis, respectively, developed florid pulmonary edema without evidence of cardiac enlargement. Both children responded to vigorous therapy, which included endotracheal intubation, mechanical ventilation with high oxygen concentrations and positive end expiratory pressure, diuretics, and support of the intravascular volume with colloid infusions. Swan-Ganz catheterization was performed in the child with epiglottitis to elucidate any hemodynamic malfunction. Pulmonary artery occluded pressure was found to be normal. We postulate that pulmonary edema may be the result of any of three major physiologic alterations: alveolar hypoxia, increased alveolar-capillary transmural pressure gradient, and a catechol-mediated shift of blood volume from the systemic to the pulmonary circulation. These alterations acting in concert would increase the volume of blood presented to the pulmonary capillaries, the pore size in those capillaries, and the hydrostatic pressure gradient promoting transduation. Failure of pulmonary lymphatics to effectively clear this fluid would result in pulmonary edema. Although pulmonary edema associated with acute upper airway obstruction is unusual, physicians should be altered to its possible appearance and the need for early and vigorous therapeutic measures.

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