Revue des maladies respiratoires
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Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA), Obesity-Linked Hypoventilation (OLH)--a hypoventilation which is independent of apneas and increased by sleep--, and COPD are mechanisms for respiratory failure in obese patients. We thought nasal bi-level positive airway pressure to be a suitable treatment: EPAP is useful to maintain upper airway patency and IPAP-EPAP difference to correct OLH and COPD hypoventilation. Our purpose is to report the results of such a therapeutic approach. ⋯ Thirty-nine out of 41 patients returned home without need for tracheal intubation. At 7 days of treatment, PaCO2 was 50 +/- 6 mmHg. Thus, nasal bi-level position airway pressure appears to be an efficient treatment in these patients.
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Thiamine deficiency is one of the classical causes of high out put for heart failure. Deficiency of this vitamin may be nutritional or secondary to alcoholic intoxication. We felt it would be interesting to describe a typical case of cardiac beriberi in order to recall the clinical presentation and the pathophysiology.
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Round atelectasis (AE) is a benign form of respiratory problem which develops due to fixing of the visceral pleura. This lesion for which the principal cause is exposure to asbestos may pose problems of differential diagnosis with bronchopulmonary cancer. In a cohort of 286 patients suffering from benign asbestos related pleural disease the diagnosis of round atelectasis was made on computerized tomography in 26 patients (31 AE) on the following criteria: rounded opacities of less than 7 cm in diameter situated at the periphery of the lung in contact with a thickened pleura with an acute angle linking the pleura and the opacity, a reduction of lung volume on the side of the atelectasis and the presence of a "comet tail sign". ⋯ Intense exposure to asbestos either continuous or discontinuous was found in 19 patients; 20 patients presented with some respiratory symptoms (dyspnoea 15/26, cough 11/26 and chest pain 9/26) but the reduction in lung function was moderate (7 had restrictive ventilatory trouble, 4 obstructive problems and a mixed problem in 1). The preferred localisation for round atelectasis was in the inferior lobes in the posterior basal lateral vertebral area (26/31) which may explain their being frequently missed on the standard radiograph (only one case of round atelectasis was visible on the straight chest radiograph in our study). An understanding of the pathology and the computered tomographic characteristics are now well defined and should enable an unnecessary diagnostic thoracotomy to be avoided which besides has no justification from the functional point of view.