[PDF] Yellow nail syndrome chylous pleural effusions: defective lymph valves involved? | Semantic Scholar Skip to search formSkip to main content> Semantic Scholar's Logo Search Sign InCreate Free Account You are currently offline. Some features of the site may not work correctly. DOI:10.1378/chest.08-2181 Corpus ID: 49313853Yellow nail syndrome chylous pleural effusions: defective lymph valves involved? @article{Maldonado2008YellowNS, title={Yellow nail syndrome chylous pleural effusions: defective lymph valves involved?}, author={F. Maldonado and J. Ryu}, journal={Chest}, year={2008}, volume={134 6}, pages={ 1353-1354 } } F. Maldonado, J. Ryu Published 2008 Medicine Chest We believe that dynamic parameters such as stroke volume variation are currently the best markers of volume responsiveness.1 While the models of Guyton and Starling are magnificent in their simplicity, therapeutic interventions based on these principles may lead to therapeutic errors in complex critically ill patients. This is demonstrated by the fact that no clinical study (of which we are aware) has shown central venous pressure to be a reliable tool in the fluid management of critically ill… Expand View on PubMed journal.publications.chestnet.org Save to Library Create Alert Cite Launch Research Feed Share This Paper 1 Citations View All Topics from this paper Pleural effusion disorder Critical Illness Venous Blood Pressure Sepsis Central venous pressure CD244 protein, human Cerebrovascular accident Stroke Volume One Citation Citation Type Citation Type All Types Cites Results Cites Methods Cites Background Has PDF Publication Type Author More Filters More Filters Filters Sort by Relevance Sort by Most Influenced Papers Sort by Citation Count Sort by Recency Yellow nails, lymphedema and chronic cough: yellow nail syndrome in an eight-year-old girl. I. Siddiq, D. M. Hughes Medicine Canadian respiratory journal 2012 5 PDF Save Alert Research Feed References SHOWING 1-10 OF 10 REFERENCES Mutations in FOXC2 Are Strongly Associated With Primary Valve Failure in Veins of the Lower Limb R. Mellor, G. Brice, +6 authors P. Mortimer Medicine Circulation 2007 152 Save Alert Research Feed Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock: 2008 R. Dellinger, M. Levy, +21 authors J. Vincent Medicine Critical care medicine 2008 3,622 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Yellow nail syndrome or diffuse lymphatic network disease. K. Christu, C. Pastaka, D. Papadopoulos, E. Klimi, K. Gourgoulianis Medicine Acta medica 2002 9 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Endothelial/Pericyte Interactions A. Armulik, A. Abramsson, C. Betsholtz Biology, Medicine Circulation research 2005 1,593 Save Alert Research Feed Noninvasive hemodynamic monitoring in the intensive care unit. P. Marik, Michael S. Baram Medicine Critical care clinics 2007 52 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Yellow Nail Syndrome: Analysis of 41 Consecutive Patients B. Thiers Medicine 2009 43 Save Alert Research Feed New therapy for sepsis infection raises hope but many questions Wall Street Journal 2008 Early goal-directed therapy in the treatment of severe sepsis and septic shock S. Dzik Medicine 2002 2,399 Save Alert Research Feed The major route for absorption of fluid from the pleural space. K. Gourgoulianis, C. Hatzoglou, P. A. Molyvdas Medicine Lymphology 2002 11 Save Alert Research Feed Goal directed therapy for sepsis [ letter ] Related Papers Abstract Topics 1 Citations 10 References Related Papers Stay Connected With Semantic Scholar Sign Up About Semantic Scholar Semantic Scholar is a free, AI-powered research tool for scientific literature, based at the Allen Institute for AI. Learn More → Resources DatasetsSupp.aiAPIOpen Corpus Organization About UsResearchPublishing PartnersData Partners   FAQContact Proudly built by AI2 with the help of our Collaborators Terms of Service•Privacy Policy The Allen Institute for AI By clicking accept or continuing to use the site, you agree to the terms outlined in our Privacy Policy, Terms of Service, and Dataset License ACCEPT & CONTINUE