Klinische Pädiatrie
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Klinische Pädiatrie · Sep 1992
[The anion gap--screening for hyperlactatemia in critically ill children?].
Serum lactate provides important information about tissue perfusion in critically ill patients. Aim of this study is to evaluate anion gap as a screening method to detect hyperlactatemia at a pediatric intensive care unit. In infants and children of different ages and diagnosis we determined blood gases, electrolytes and lactate. ⋯ For the total population the test exhibited a sensitivity of 64% and a specificity of 76%, respectively. The power of anion gap as a screening method to detect hyperlactatemia was similarly fair for all age groups. Therefore hyperlactatemia has also to be included in the differential diagnosis of non-anion gap metabolic acidosis.
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The effect of dead space reduction was studied in 10 VLBW infants (GA 26-31 wks, mean BW 1100 grms) on mechanical ventilation using a constant flow ventilator with a flow sensor device (Draeger Babylog 8000, Lubeck, Germany). Shortening of the endotracheal tube and removal of the flow sensor resulted in a calculated 50% reduction of dead space (-2.3 ml) and in a fall of tcpCO2 from (mean and range) 45 (40-49) to 35 (31-36) mmHG. ⋯ Besides a routinely performed shortening of the ET tube this means of ventilation was used with success in two VLBW infants with desperate respiratory situations who both survived, in an older infant with high-grade tracheal stenosis to wean him from the respirator and in three neonates with congenital diaphragmatic hernia in conjunction with delayed operative repair who could be weaned from respiratory support 4, 13 and 20 days post surgery. We conclude that dead space reduction is a means to achieve gentle ventilation and to reduce lung damage from artificial ventilation.
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Klinische Pädiatrie · Sep 1992
[The incidental heart sound. Study of clinical diagnostic certainty and possible causes].
The diagnosis "innocent murmur" is made when there is no evidence for a heart disease either by history nor by examination, auscultation, electrocardiogram or echocardiography. The purpose of the present study was to determine the usefulness of echocardiography for diagnosing of an innocent heart murmur and further to compare the findings of ultrasound with those of the clinical examination. Children were accepted for the study after clinical examination and evaluation of the electrocardiogram (but before echocardiography) only when two independent pediatricians did not realize any symptoms of a heart disease. ⋯ The echocardiographic findings were not different of those children without a murmur or heart disease. The average peak velocity in the ascending aorta was 143,1 +/- 23,6 cm/s (87-215 cm/s), the shortening fraction 36,2 +/- 6,3%. We could not find a correlation between velocity, shortening fraction and aortic diameter.