• Respiratory care · Oct 2019

    Review Historical Article

    Oxygen Use in Critical Illness.

    • O'Driscoll B Ronan BR Department of Respiratory Medicine, Salford Royal University Hospital, Salford, United Kingdom. ronan.o.driscoll@srft.nhs.uk. and Rachel Smith.
    • Department of Respiratory Medicine, Salford Royal University Hospital, Salford, United Kingdom. ronan.o.driscoll@srft.nhs.uk.
    • Respir Care. 2019 Oct 1; 64 (10): 1293-1307.

    AbstractOxygen is the most commonly used drug in critical care. However, because it is a gas, most clinicians and most patients do not regard it as a drug. For this reason, the use of medical oxygen over the past century has been driven by custom, practice, and "precautionary principles" rather than by scientific principles. Oxygen is a life-saving drug for patients with severe hypoxemia, but, as with all other drugs, too much can be harmful. It has been known for many decades that the administration of supplemental oxygen is hazardous for some patients with COPD and other patients who are vulnerable to retention of carbon dioxide (ie, hypercapnia). It has been recognized more recently that excessive oxygen therapy is associated with significantly increased mortality in critically ill patients, even in the absence of risk factors for hypercapnia. This paper provides a critical overview of past and present oxygen use for critically ill patients and will provide guidance for safer oxygen use in the future.Copyright © 2019 by Daedalus Enterprises.

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