Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Fluid In Lungs More Condition_symptoms What Are Some Reasons Why A Person Might Have Fluid In Lungs When They Die?

What are some reasons why a person might have fluid in lungs when they die? - fluid in lungs more condition_symptoms

Once again, I have a project for my course of biomedical studies. The woman died and his autopsy report, there were in the lung fluid.

6 comments:

flika said...

1. Heart failure
2. Pulmonary edema
3. Valvular
4. Endocarditis
5. Cardiomyopathy
6. Pulmonary embolism
7. Pneumonia
8. Renal

and there are others ...

RAZNA said...

Depending on the type of fluid. For example, if a person is drowned, and the liquid is salt water, would be the person to breathe in the ocean water. If the water is treated with chlorine, not salt water, the person drowned in a swimming pool. Or maybe some alcohol. The person who is too much beer or wine, drank, for example, and then after a few years broke out, some of which are inhaled into the lungs and back, drowned in essence, that the person is doing - a terrible way. There are also diseases that cause fluid to accumulate in the lungs that comes from the body, including pleurisy, pneumonia, asthma, bronchitis, and not a very serious genetic disease, the name is me at the moment. Children born with this condition often repeated over the age of 20 and 21 live-infection in the lungs, because they have to grow, as they. I think it is (a form of encephalitis, although this is not true - this is the name of something to do with the brain, is not it?), But I do not remember the full form of the name. Perhaps you have

Ivan L said...

Many, many things ... not all of which must be the direct cause of death, too!

1. Pulmonary edema (heart failure, ARDS, toxins, etc.)
- Contains heart failure, for whatever reason (valve disease, MI, etc.)
- Contains a fluid overload for other reasons - kidney or liver disease
2. Pneumonia (fluid in the lungs that ultimately - Consolidation)
3. Pulmonary embolism (mostly by ischemic lesions)
4. Aspiration (various causes, including stroke, alcohol, head injury)
- Drowning can perhaps be described as massive extraction of water
5. Certain chronic lung diseases
- Chronic bronchitis
- Bronchiectasis (including CF)
6. Chest trauma (abnormal capillary)

Asthma is usually not as fluid in the lungs. Also, I'm sure my list is not exhaustive but provides a useful framework, hopefully.

Leona W said...

Congestive heart failure
Congestion - may have been bronchitus / pneumonia after death
Drowning (obvious I know)

Paul R said...

Razna May Think I tried to think of cystic fibrosis.
If the actual cause has been omitted from the autopsy, which is still there. We can only assume you should already have the answer mate.

Sarina said...

CHF (congestive heart failure)

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