Chest
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Case Reports
Upper airway obstruction due to inhalation of a tracheal T-tube resulting in pulmonary edema.
Acute upper airway obstruction may present with pulmonary edema. Following is a report of pulmonary edema secondary to acute upper airway obstruction due to inhalation of a Montgomery tracheal T-tube. The principal factor causing pulmonary edema is the generation of large negative transpulmonary pressures. This may be enhanced by changes in the cardiovascular function due to the Müller maneuver.
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Low-flow continuous oxygen can lead to significant improvement in exercise capacity in selected patients with stable hypoxemic pulmonary disease. Although the mechanisms of improvement are incompletely understood, two tenable hypotheses are (1) the relief of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction and (2) improved peripheral oxygen delivery. This prospective study was performed to examine these two hypotheses. ⋯ Increased exercise capacity in response to long-term O2 therapy is associated with increased O2 delivery not relief of hypoxic vasoconstriction (in terms of pressure or resistance or arterial elastance). Increased O2 delivery can accrue from both increased cardiac output and increased arterial O2 content. Increase in arterial O2 content is unique to O2 relative to all vasodilator drugs.
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We have developed novel implantable Doppler microprobes to monitor beat-by-beat stroke volume and cardiac output (CO) after cardiac surgery. In 11 adults undergoing either coronary artery bypass grafting (n = 6) or valve replacement (n = 5), Doppler microprobes were implanted on the ascending aorta or the main pulmonary artery to measure aortic blood flow (ABF) or pulmonary artery blood flow (PBF). The diameters of both vessels were determined before surgery using two-dimensional echocardiography. ⋯ We found the following: ABF = 1.03 TDCO - 0.22 L/min (r = 0.89); while PBF = 0.69 TDCO - 1.24 L/min (r = 0.75). Furthermore, peak flow velocity and maximum acceleration of blood in the ascending aorta were measured after inotropic stimulation with dobutamine; both values increased significantly from control values (25.2 +/- 6.1 percent and 44.6 +/- 8.6 percent, respectively, at 7.5 micrograms/kg/min). We conclude that implanted aortic Doppler microprobes provide a sensitive and reliable method to measure aortic blood flow velocity after surgery and then allow monitoring of stroke volume and CO and analysis of left ventricular function after cardiac surgery.
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Comparative Study
Evaluation of cardiac output by thoracic electrical bioimpedance during exercise in normal subjects.
We compared cardiac output determined simultaneously by two methods, the CO2 rebreathing technique and the thoracic electrical bioimpedance method (Bomed NCCOM-3 equipment). The studies were performed in duplicate in 11 healthy male subjects at rest and during three levels of steady-state exercise on a cycle ergometer at 60, 120, and 180 W. Cardiac output at 60 and 120 W was slightly lower (p less than 0.01) by the thoracic impedance method (12.2 +/- SE 2.2 and 15.7 +/- SE 3.5 L/min, respectively) than by the CO2 rebreathing method (14.0 +/- SE 2.1 and 17.9 +/- SE 3.0 L/min, respectively), suggesting a systematic bias between the two methods of measurement. ⋯ Although the results were not significantly different between the two methods at rest and at 180 W, there was no acceptable agreement between the two methods probably because the CO2 rebreathing method at rest was more liable to show error due to the small arteriovenous CO2 difference, while the impedance method was less reliable at 180 W. Cardiac output by both methods correlated with O2 consumption, with the correlation being higher for cardiac output by the rebreathing method (r = 0.94) than for thoracic impedance (r = 0.88). The results suggest that the thoracic electrical bioimpedance method can be used for determination of cardiac output during mild or moderate levels of exercise in normal subjects.
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The incidence of mediastinal emphysema (ME) and pneumothorax (PTX) was analyzed to determine the roentgenographic patterns and risk factors for the development of barotrauma in a population of mechanically ventilated patients. The roentgenograms of 139 intubated patients admitted to our medical intensive care unit over a ten-month period were evaluated for the presence of ME and PTX. Barotrauma was diagnosed in 34 of these patients, and ME was the initial manifestation in 24 patients. ⋯ The adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) patient population was at highest risk for barotrauma, with an intermediate risk seen in those admitted with COPD or pneumonia. Values of peak inspiratory pressure, positive end-expiratory pressure level, respiratory rate, tidal volume, and minute ventilation were significantly elevated in patients who developed barotrauma as compared with patients who did not develop barotrauma. However, these elevations in part reflect the high incidence of barotrauma in the ARDS population, a patient group in which all of the above parameters were elevated.