Preoperative use of GLP-1 receptor agonists was not significantly associated with short-term postoperative aspiration ...
No significant difference seen in odds of postoperative pneumonia between adult GLP-1 receptor agonist users and nonusers.
This cohort study found no significant association between the preoperative use of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) and short-term postoperative aspiration pneumonia despite ...
The occurrence of respiratory failure in the postpartum period should always introduce a high index of clinical suspicion of aspiration ... all aspirations lead to pneumonia.
such as viral pneumonia, which is caused by a virus, such as Covid-19, and aspiration pneumonia, which can be caused by breathing in vomit, a foreign object, such as a peanut, or a harmful ...
However, pneumonia is not contagious when it is caused by a foreign substance, like when food, drink, or saliva enters the lungs and causes inflammation. This is called aspiration pneumonia ...
(Pneumonia can also sometimes arise when food or drinks are inhaled into the lungs, causing "aspiration pneumonia.") Bacterial pneumonia is more common and usually more severe than viral pneumonia ...
This cohort study found no significant association between the preoperative use of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 ...
Opens in a new tab or window Patients using GLP-1 drugs had no difference in the odds of postoperative aspiration pneumonia versus non-users. There was also no significant difference in the odds ...