lung-machine - translation to English
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lung-machine - translation to English

TECHNIQUE THAT TEMPORARILY TAKES OVER THE FUNCTION OF THE HEART AND LUNGS DURING SURGERY
Heart-lung machines; Lung machine; Cardiac pump; Artificial perfusion; Heart-lung machine; Heart lung machine; Heart-Lung Machine; Heart bypass machine; Heart–lung machine; Total cardiopulmonary bypass; Cardiopulmonary bypass surgery; Cardiopulmonary bypass technique; Cardiopulmonary bypass machine
  • A heart lung machine used in London's [[Middlesex Hospital]] in 1958. [[Science Museum, London]] (2008)
  • Illustration of one typical way that a heart-lung machine may be connected to the veins and arteries near the heart. The three implements on the left represent (''from top to bottom'') the pump, the oxygenator, and the reservoir.
  • Cardiopulmonary bypass machine used at the University of Michigan in the 1960s.
  • Brukhonenko's ''Autojektor''
  • Perfusionist operating a modern heart lung machine

lung-machine      
(n.) = pulmón artificial
Ex: In Poland this sort of civil behaviour is perhaps not dead, but is breathing on a lung-machine and has a bad case of tuberculosis.
lung         
  • high-resolution CT scan]] of the [[thorax]]. The anterior thoracic wall, the airways and the pulmonary vessels anterior to the [[root of the lung]] have been digitally removed in order to visualize the different levels of the [[pulmonary circulation]].
  • 3D Medical illustration showing different terminating ends of bronchioles
  • Alveoli and their capillary networks
  • The [[axolotl]] (''Ambystoma mexicanum'') retains its larval form with gills into adulthood.
  • On inhalation, air travels to air sacs near the back of a bird. The air then passes through the lungs to air sacs near the front of the bird, from where the air is exhaled.
  • doi-access=free}}</ref> Blood or air with a high oxygen content is shown in red; oxygen-poor air or blood is shown in various shades of purple-blue.
  • Lung tissue affected by emphysema using [[H&E stain]]
  • TEM]] image of [[collagen fibres]] in a cross sectional slice of mammalian lung tissue
  • Lungs during development, showing the early branching of the primitive bronchial buds
  • right
  • Tissue death]] of the lung due to a [[pulmonary embolism]]
  • Cross-sectional detail of the lung
  • Thick [[elastic fibres]] from the [[visceral pleura]] (outer lining) of lung
  • A lobule of the lung enclosed in septa and supplied by a terminal bronchiole that branches into the respiratory bronchioles. Each respiratory bronchiole supplies the alveoli held in each acinus accompanied by a pulmonary artery branch.
  • Book lungs of spider (shown in pink)
ESSENTIAL RESPIRATION ORGAN IN MANY AIR-BREATHING ANIMALS
Pulmo; Nonrespiratory functions of the lungs; Pulmonary; Human lung; Pulmones; Human right lung; Human left lung; Middle lobe; Lingula (lung); Cardiac notch of left lung; Bellows lung; Circulatory lung; Pulmonary surgical procedures; Inferior border of lung; Anterior border of lung; Posterior border of lung; Cardiac impression on lung; Costal surface of lung; Borders of the lung; Lingula of left lung; Oblique fissure; Diaphragmatic surface of lung; Mediastinal surface of lung; Mediastinal surface; Apex of lung; Apex pulmonis; Horizontal fissure of right lung; Posterior border of the lung; Mediastinal surface of the lung; Apex of the lung; Inferior lobe of left lung; Superior lobe of left lung; Middle lobe of right lung; Oblique Fissure; Borders of Lung; Development of human lung; Lungs; Pulmo dexter; Pulmo sinister; Lung function; Human lungs; Minor fissure of the right lung; Lungs of humans; Pulmonary lobe; Saccular stage; Bird lung; Minor fissure; Superior lobe; Inferior lobe; Middle lung lobe; Lung lobes; Lobes of the lung; Oblique lung fissure; Right lung; Left lung; Pulmanary; Avian lungs; Alveolar sacs; Impressio cardiaca pulmonis; Impressio cardiaca pulmonis sinistri; Facies costalis pulmonis; Facies diaphragmatica pulmonis; Facies mediastinalis pulmonis; Fissura horizontalis pulmonis dextri; Lingula pulmonis sinistri; Fissura obliqua pulmonis; Development of the human lung; Fissura obliqua; Horizontal fissure of the right lung; Inferior border of lungs; Lingula of the left lung; Lingula pulmonis; Oblique fissures; Border of lungs; Border of lung; Pneumon; Lung artery; Lung arteries; Lung lobe; Pulmonary lobule; Pulmonary ionocyte; Lung fissure; Pulmonary acinus; Primary pulmonary lobule; Secondary pulmonary lobule; Respiratory lobule; Lung lobule; 🫁; Base of lung; Evolution of lungs; Lung fissures; Pulmonary lobules; Evolutionary history of lungs; Diaphragmaticus
(n.) = pulmón
Ex: All the phenomena within this facet, -- heart, liver, lungs, brain, kidneys etc -- share this characteristic in common.
----
* lung-machine = pulmón artificial
* lung cancer = cáncer de pulmón
* lung metastasis = metástasis del pulmón
* lung transplantation = transplante de pulmón
heart-lung machine         
Máquina de circulación extracorpórea

Definition

heart-lung machine
¦ noun a machine that temporarily takes over the functions of the heart and lungs, especially during heart surgery.

Wikipedia

Cardiopulmonary bypass

Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is a technique in which a machine temporarily takes over the function of the heart and lungs during surgery, maintaining the circulation of blood and oxygen to the body. The CPB pump itself is often referred to as a heart–lung machine or "the pump". Cardiopulmonary bypass pumps are operated by perfusionists. CPB is a form of extracorporeal circulation. Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation is generally used for longer-term treatment.

CPB mechanically circulates and oxygenates blood for the body while bypassing the heart and lungs. It uses a heart–lung machine to maintain perfusion to other body organs and tissues while the surgeon works in a bloodless surgical field. The surgeon places a cannula in the right atrium, vena cava, or femoral vein to withdraw blood from the body. Venous blood is removed from the body by the cannula and then filtered, cooled or warmed, and oxygenated before it is returned to the body by a mechanical pump. The cannula used to return oxygenated blood is usually inserted in the ascending aorta, but it may be inserted in the femoral artery, axillary artery, or brachiocephalic artery (among others).

The patient is administered heparin to prevent clotting, and protamine sulfate is given after to reverse effects of heparin. During the procedure, hypothermia may be maintained; body temperature is usually kept at 28 °C to 32 °C (82.4–89.6 °F). The blood is cooled during CPB and returned to the body. The cooled blood slows the body's basal metabolic rate, decreasing its demand for oxygen. Cooled blood usually has a higher viscosity, but the crystalloid solution used to prime the bypass tubing dilutes the blood.

Examples of use of lung-machine
1. But she clamped the line before Barnard issued the order to switch off the heart–lung machine.
2. In 1'47, armed with a heart–lung machine made from items including a vacuum cleaner blower, he announced he was ready to experiment on a human.
3. He was then taken to an operating theatre and put on a heart–lung machine to relieve pressure on his heart and circulate his blood during surgery.
4. "These new minimally–invasive procedures could potentially revolutionise treatment for patients who suffer from this condition." Traditionally, open heart surgery involves using a heart–lung machine but the new procedures sweep away this requirement.
5. Girotto said the surgeon "has improved the human condition and touched the lives of generations to come." While still in medical school in 1'32, he invented the roller pump, which became the major component of the heart–lung machine, beginning the era of open–heart surgery.