Anaesthesia and intensive care
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Nov 1981
Respiratory and cardiovascular responses to PEEP in artificially ventilated patients after cardiopulmonary bypass surgery.
The respiratory and haemodynamic effects of incremental levels of positive and expiratory pressure (PEEP) to 9 cm H2O were studied in ten adult patients 3--6 hours after uneventful cardiopulmonary bypass surgery. Functional residual capacity was increased and deadspace-tidal volume ratio tended to fall, the latter approaching significance at +6 and +9 cm PEEP. ⋯ Cardiac index, and left ventricular strokework index were marginally depressed at 6 cm PEEP and further at 9 cm, while right atrial pressure and pulmonary artery occlusion pressure were raised at 9 cm PEEP. It would appear that low levels (3--6 cm) of PEEP do not improve gas exchange in the lungs to any worthwhile degree, and levels (6--9 cm) may impair cardiac performance.
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A thirty-year-old female presented with a high fever, conjunctivitis, confusion, vomiting, watery diarrhoea, diffuse erythroderma, shock and oliguric renal failure. Staphylococcus aureus phage 29/52 (Group 1) was isolated from a high vaginal swab. In addition to all the previously reported features which defined toxic shock syndrome, there were pustular skin vesicles, altered red cell morphology, and severe myocardial involvement. Treatment with fluid replacement, cloxacillin, haemodialysis, positive inotropic agents, and supportive measures resulted in a full recovery.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Nov 1981
Intradermal drug testing following anaphylactoid reactions during anaesthesia.
Intradermal testing of intravenous anaesthetic drugs was performed on 34 patients following acute anaphylactoid reactions during anaesthesia. Twenty-three patients had positive skin tests and 18 of these were positive for a single drug. Muscle relaxants were the drugs implicated most commonly. Intradermal testing is safe and provides useful and often specific positive information, but false-negative results probably occur.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Nov 1981
Letter Case ReportsVentilator malfunction detected by O2 analyser.