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Indian J Crit Care Med · Dec 2020
ReviewAwake Proning: Current Evidence and Practical Considerations.
- Kanwalpreet Sodhi and Gunjan Chanchalani.
- Department of Critical Care, Deep Hospital, Ludhiana, India.
- Indian J Crit Care Med. 2020 Dec 1; 24 (12): 1236-1241.
AbstractProne positioning has been shown to improve oxygenation for decades. However, proning in awake, non-intubated patients gained acceptance in the last few months since the onset of coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. To overcome the shortage of ventilators, to decrease the overwhelming burden on intensive care beds in the pandemic era, and also as invasive ventilation was associated with poor outcomes, proning of awake, spontaneously breathing patients gathered momentum. Being an intervention with minimal risk and requiring minimum assistance, it is now a globally accepted therapy to improve oxygenation in acute hypoxemic respiratory failure in COVID-19 patients. We thus reviewed the literature of awake proning in non-intubated patients and described a safe protocol to practice the same. How to cite this article: Sodhi K, Chanchalani G. Awake Proning: Current Evidence and Practical Considerations. Indian J Crit Care Med 2020;24(12):1236-1241.Copyright © 2020; Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers (P) Ltd.
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