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- B P Kavanagh and J G Laffey.
- Department of Critical Care Medicine, Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada. brian.kavanagh@sickkids.ca
- Minerva Anestesiol. 2006 Jun 1;72(6):567-76.
AbstractHypercapnia has traditionally been avoided in the quest to keep parameters normal. Recent understanding of the role of excessive tidal stretch has prompted clinicians to avoid high tidal volumes or plateau pressures, and the resulting permissive hypercapnia has been increasingly tolerated by clinicians. Newer data point to the potential for elevated CO2 to be protective, and in some experimental situations, to cause harm. The protective effects of so called therapeutic hypercapnia' remain experimental at present, but promising laboratory studies suggest potential roles for the eventual selective application at the bedside.
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