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oxygen toxicity
(redirected from hyperoxia)

   Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.03 sec.

oxygen toxicity

In medicine, the ability of excess oxygen to cause cell and organ damage. The concentration and length of administration of oxygen for medical reasons must be controlled to avoid this. In adults, an excess of oxygen results in the accumulation of fluid in the lungs (oedema) and pulmonary hypertension. In neonates, it can cause convulsions that result in damage to the central nervous system. Free radical formation appears to be responsible for this damage.



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Also, only a comparison of HH to ambient air was made in this study and not HH to hyperoxia.
BOLD MRI response to hypercapnic hyperoxia in patients with meningiomas: Correlation with Gadolinium-DTPA uptake rate.
The manuscript published in Pediatric Research is: Surfaxin (KL-4 surfactant) Protects Human Airway Epithelium from Hyperoxia (Zhu et al.
 
 
 
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