prednisone has been researched along with Persistent Fetal Circulation Syndrome in 1 studies
Prednisone: A synthetic anti-inflammatory glucocorticoid derived from CORTISONE. It is biologically inert and converted to PREDNISOLONE in the liver.
prednisone : A synthetic glucocorticoid drug that is particularly effective as an immunosuppressant, and affects virtually all of the immune system. Prednisone is a prodrug that is converted by the liver into prednisolone (a beta-hydroxy group instead of the oxo group at position 11), which is the active drug and also a steroid.
Persistent Fetal Circulation Syndrome: A syndrome of persistent PULMONARY HYPERTENSION in the newborn infant (INFANT, NEWBORN) without demonstrable HEART DISEASES. This neonatal condition can be caused by severe pulmonary vasoconstriction (reactive type), hypertrophy of pulmonary arterial muscle (hypertrophic type), or abnormally developed pulmonary arterioles (hypoplastic type). The newborn patient exhibits CYANOSIS and ACIDOSIS due to the persistence of fetal circulatory pattern of right-to-left shunting of blood through a patent ductus arteriosus (DUCTUS ARTERIOSUS, PATENT) and at times a patent foramen ovale (FORAMEN OVALE, PATENT).
Timeframe | Studies, this research(%) | All Research% |
---|---|---|
pre-1990 | 1 (100.00) | 18.7374 |
1990's | 0 (0.00) | 18.2507 |
2000's | 0 (0.00) | 29.6817 |
2010's | 0 (0.00) | 24.3611 |
2020's | 0 (0.00) | 2.80 |
Authors | Studies |
---|---|
Cech, P | 1 |
Testa, U | 1 |
Dubart, A | 1 |
Schneider, P | 1 |
Bachmann, F | 1 |
Guerrasio, A | 1 |
Beuzard, Y | 1 |
Schmidt, PM | 1 |
Clément, F | 1 |
Rosa, J | 1 |
1 other study available for prednisone and Persistent Fetal Circulation Syndrome
Article | Year |
---|---|
Lasting Hb F reactivation and Hb A2 reduction induced by the treatment of Hodgkin's disease in a woman heterozygous for beta-thalassemia and the Swiss type of the heterocellular hereditary persistence of Hb F.
Topics: Adult; Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols; Female; Fetal Hemoglobin; Globins; Hemoglobin | 1982 |