Intensive care medicine
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Intensive care medicine · Jan 1992
Case ReportsThe effect of sedation with propofol on postoperative bronchoconstriction in patients with hyperreactive airway disease.
Two patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease developed postoperatively bronchospasm after insertion of a prostetic aortic valve. Continuous sedation with propofol infusion was associated with a significant decline in peak inspiratory pressure suggesting that propofol may have bronchodilating properties.
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Intensive care medicine · Jan 1992
Case ReportsDifferential lung ventilation with a double-lumen tracheostomy tube in unilateral refractory atelectasis.
Two patients with refractory hypoxemia due to unilateral lung atelectasis were treated with differential lung ventilation (DLV) through a Robertshaw-type, double-lumen tracheostomy tube. DLV was applied using two non-synchronized ventilators and maintained for 6 and 3 days, respectively. Ventilator settings were chosen in accord to the clinical, laboratory and chest X-rays results. ⋯ We also observed an improvement of SvO2, O2AVI, PVRI and Qva/Qt values (Case 1). The tracheostomy tube used to apply DLV was very reliable, allowing easy nursing care and selective bronchial aspirations. We conclude that DLV is a very useful technique in unilateral lung pathology, and it can be a life saving procedure in selected patients, by supplying volume and PEEP more efficiently to the affected lung.
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Intensive care medicine · Jan 1992
Intrathoracic blood volume accurately reflects circulatory volume status in critically ill patients with mechanical ventilation.
Positive pressure ventilation in patients with acute respiratory failure (ARF) may render the interpretation of central venous pressure (CVP) or pulmonary wedge pressure (PCWP) difficult as indicators of circulating volume. The preload component of cardiac (CI) and stroke index (SI) is also influenced by the increased intrathoracic pressures of positive pressure ventilation. Moreover CI and SI do not indicate volume status exclusively but also contractility and afterload. ⋯ All data were collected in intervals of 6 h. There were 224 data sets obtained. Linear regression analysis was performed between absolute values as well as between the 6 changes (prefix delta).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Intensive care medicine · Jan 1992
Reestimation of the effects of inorganic phosphates on the equilibrium between oxygen and hemoglobin.
In a previous paper, published in this journal, we showed that the data obtained in patients with severe ketoacidosis suggest that inorganic phosphates (K2HPO4) can increase their P50 and therefore enhance tissue oxygenation without concomitant alteration of the 2,3 diphosphoglycerate (DPG). In order to test the hypothesis that K2HPO4 could influence the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve (ODC) by a mecanism which was not DPG mediated we have measured the total ODC on whole blood with and without addition of 13-80 mmol/l of inorganic phosphates. On average, the level of DPG remained unchanged when the P50 with K2HPO4 was significantly higher (p greater than 0.001) (P50 = 29.9 +/- 3.7 mmHg) than when phosphates were not administered (P50 = 25.5 +/- 2.8 mmHg). ⋯ Our data are important in two points. First it is useful to add inorganic phosphates to the treatment of patients with severe ketoacidosis in order to enhance their tissue oxygenation. Second they recall that the ODC is not only determined by the classical effects of temperature, pH and DPG but also by inorganic anions, like phosphates as described by Benesh and Benesh in their pioneering work.