Chest
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The use of the histamine challenge test (HCT) for the diagnosis of asthma has so far been limited to older children who can perform spirometry consistently. Recently, wheeze detection by tracheal auscultation with analog recording into a tape recorder has been utilized in young children in place of spirometry. Wheezing can also be identified using computerized lung sounds analysis (LSA) by a typical pattern on spectral analysis. ⋯ Six age- and sex-matched nonasthmatic children (control subjects) did not show this pattern on LSA and had no symptoms or tracheal wheeze with HCT. We describe a sensitive method enabling application of HCT to young children who are unable to perform spirometry. This method is as sensitive as, and often more sensitive than, conventional PC20 with spirometry or tracheal auscultation.
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Comparative Study
Relationship of oxygen consumption and oxygen delivery in surgical patients with ARDS.
Previous studies have described oxygen delivery (DO2) and oxygen consumption (VO2) relationships in patients with ARDS and other acute diseases that suggest occasions when VO2 may be dependent on the supply of oxygen, ie, DO2. We studied 127 postoperative patients who developed ARDS to evaluate the relationship of DO2 to VO2. We found a weak correlation between DO2 and VO2 in the total series (r = 0.49) as well as in several clinical subgroups of patients with ARDS. ⋯ We also examined the DO2/VO2 data of individual patients with ARDS to identify instances where flow-dependent VO2 patterns developed into flow-independent VO2 patterns. We were able to identify an apparent plateau in the DO2/VO2 relationships in 29/50 (58 percent) patients where multiple measurements were obtained over a short period of time. Our data are consistent with the concept that the DO2/VO2 relationship in acutely ill early postoperative patients with and without ARDS is affected by antecedent circulatory problems that may lead to tissue hypoxia and tissue oxygen deficiencies that are manifest by flow dependency.
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Comparative Study
Evaluation of a reservoir device for metered-dose bronchodilator delivery to intubated adults. An in vitro study.
We investigated the use of a reservoir device for delivery of a MDI bronchodilator aerosol using a lung model of an intubated, mechanically ventilated adult. ⋯ Use of the AeroVent reservoir chamber significantly increased bronchodilator delivery by aerosol with an MDI in an adult lung model of an intubated patient on ventilatory support.
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Severely ill ARDS patients present major supportive challenges when conventional ventilatory support is failing. A patient is described who was treated with venovenous extracorporeal lung support for 28 days, using surface-heparinized circuitry. Her recovery illustrates the potential for salvage of near-terminal ARDS patients when complications of support can be minimized.
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Nasal mask ventilation (NMV) has been used successfully in chronic restrictive respiratory failure and more recently in acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). This study aimed to evaluate the possible role of NMV in acute respiratory failure (ARF) episodes when mechanical ventilation with endotracheal intubation is questionable. Thirty patients (age, 76 +/- 8.1 years) were treated by NMV during ARF episodes (COPD, 20; other chronic respiratory failure [CRF], 5; chronic heart failure [CHF], 4). ⋯ A return to the respiratory condition was observed in the surviving patients with subsequent discharge from hospital. NMV therefore successfully treated respiratory distress initially in 60 percent of the 30 patients. These results suggest that NMV could be a possible alternative in the treatment of ARF, even in very ill patients, when endotracheal ventilation is controversial or not immediately required.