Critical care clinics
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Pain and its treatment are known to have adverse effects on the organism, including deterioration in myocardial, diaphragmatic, and small bowel function. The provision of adequate intravenous analgesia, and the choice of agent, can ameliorate or exacerbate these manifestations of the stress response. The choice of agent, opioid or non-opioid, has in some respects become more difficult as more information has become available regarding the merits and adverse effects of each. ⋯ Ketamine provides intense analgesia at subanesthetic doses. Its centrally mediated sympathomimetic action encourages hemodynamic stability, and it is relatively devoid of respiratory depressant activity. Increasing experience with ketamine outside the operating room has resulted in its successful use in cases of severe bronchospasm and status epilepticus.
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This article examines the extent to which pain contributes to pulmonary dysfunction in burns, trauma, a variety of acute abdominal diseases, and postoperatively. Also discussed are the options available to attenuate the extent of this contribution.
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For the ventilator-dependent patient, weaning should be accomplished by withdrawing support safely, efficaciously, and efficiently. Success depends largely on physiologic determinants of respiratory system function, avoidance of ventilator-associated complications, and attention to patient readiness. Recent clinical trials, predictors of weaning, current techniques of weaning, the concept of reloading the respiratory pump, and determinants of ventilator dependency are all discussed.
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Critical care clinics · Oct 1998
ReviewVentilation of patients with asthma and obstructive lung disease.
Mechanical ventilation in a patient with obstructive airway disease may be a lifesaving measure; however, it may also be associated with significant morbidity and mortality. It is important for a physician to be familiar with the potential complications of mechanical ventilation in this group of patients and to know how to avoid them by carefully applying safe ventilator strategies. The cornerstone of such strategies is to minimize minute ventilation, maximize time for expiration, and avoid hyperinflation of the lung. ⋯ In the event controlled hypoventilation is necessary, sedation with or without the use of muscle relaxants may be required. Unconventional therapies such as the use of Heliox, magnesium sulfate, ketamine, and inhalational anesthetics may be attempted in severe cases that do not respond to conventional management. With appropriate use of ventilator strategies, a reduction in the mortality and morbidity of patients with obstructive airway disease requiring mechanical ventilation has recently been noted.
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Ventilatory management of patients with acute lung injury (ALI), particularly its most severe subset, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), is complex. Newer lung protective strategies emphasize measures to enhance alveolar recruitment and avoid alveolar overdistention, thus minimizing the risk of ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). ⋯ Novel techniques, including prone positioning, inverse ratio ventilation, tracheal gas insufflation, and high frequency ventilation, are considerations in severe ARDS. No single approach is best for all patients; adjustment of ventilatory parameters to individual characteristics, such as lung mechanics and gas exchange, is required.