Critical care medicine
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Critical care medicine · Jan 1990
Continuous positive airway pressure by face mask in Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia.
We used continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) by face mask to treat 18 AIDS patients with Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) who were in hypoxic respiratory failure. Candidates for mask CPAP were conscious, not hypercarbic, and able to protect their airway on ICU admission. Treatment was effective and well tolerated. ⋯ Hospital mortality was 55%. CPAP by face mask allows speech and permits discussion of therapeutic limits. We present our protocol for using CPAP by face mask and conclude that CPAP is effective supportive therapy in hypoxic respiratory failure complicating PCP and AIDS.
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Critical care medicine · Jan 1990
ReviewHeart failure in septic shock: effects of inotropic support.
Many animal studies have attempted to simulate the circulatory responses to Gram-negative septicemia (iv infusion of live bacteria, fecal inoculation into body cavities, and administration of purified endotoxins by various routes), but the contribution of the heart to the adverse hemodynamic derangements and thus to the pathogenesis of shock is difficult to determine because of peripheral vascular events that influence cardiac performance. When blood pools in the periphery, venous return decreases and cardiac output can decrease without a primary myocardial defect being present. However, early heart dysfunction has been recognized in sepsis. Hemodynamic monitoring has not reduced overall mortality, but it has been helpful in guiding fluid administration and evaluating response to vasopressor therapy.
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Critical care medicine · Jan 1990
Correct positioning of an endotracheal tube using a flexible lighted stylet.
Endotracheal intubation is not without complications, among the most serious of these being misplacement of the endotracheal (ET) tube. Unrecognized esophageal placement is a lethal complication, but even when placed in the trachea, ET tubes can be displaced distally and enter a mainstem bronchus. Correct positioning of an ET tube is usually defined as the placement of the tube within the trachea approximately 5 cm above the carina. ⋯ A chest x-ray was taken and the distance of the tube tip from the carina was calculated. In each case the tube tip could be placed consistently at a level 5 +/- 1 cm from the carina by observing the maximal transilluminated glow at the sternal notch. We conclude that transillumination of the neck using a flexible lighted stylet can accurately and consistently position an ET tube at an appropriate distance above the carina.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)