Pediatric cardiology
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Pediatric cardiology · May 2001
Comparative Study Clinical TrialPressure-regulated volume control vs volume control ventilation in infants after surgery for congenital heart disease.
The objective of this investigation was to compare how two modes of positive pressure ventilation affect cardiac output, airway pressures, oxygenation, and carbon dioxide removal in children with congenital heart disease in the immediate postoperative period. The investigation used a one group pretest-post-test study design and was performed in the pediatric cardiac intensive care unit in a university-affiliated children's hospital. Nine infants were enrolled immediately after repair of tetralogy of Fallot (2) or atrioventricular septal defects (7) with mean weight = 5.5 kg (4.2-7.3 kg). ⋯ Measurements were repeated after 30 minutes. Patients were then returned to volume control mode (VCV2) and final measurements made after 30 minutes. The measurements and results are as follows: After correction of congenital heart defects in infants, mechanical ventilation using a decelerating flow wave pattern resulted in a 19% decrease in peak inspiratory pressure without affecting hemodynamics, arterial oxygenation, or carbon dioxide removal.