American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 1997
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialInhaled salmeterol or oral theophylline in nocturnal asthma?
Nocturnal cough and wheeze are common in asthma and often treated with beta2 agonists or theophyllines. As nocturnal asthma and these therapies may affect sleep and cognition, we compared 50 microg salmeterol inhaled every 12 h with individually dose-titrated sustained-release oral theophylline on sleep quality and cognitive performance in 15 patients with stable nocturnal asthma (overnight peak expiratory flow rate [PEFR] fall > or = 15%, > or = 1 asthmatic awakening/week) using a double-blind, double-dummy, crossover design with 14-d therapy limbs. Cognitive testing and polysomnography were performed on Nights 13 and 14. ⋯ Visual vigilance improved on salmetrol (p < 0.05), but otherwise daytime cognition was unaffected. There was no patient preference for either therapy. Hence in patients with nocturnal asthma, we demonstrate no major clinical advantage, but a small benefit in sleep quality, quality of life, and daytime cognitive function with salmeterol.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 1997
Multicenter StudyIntensive care of patients with HIV infection: utilization, critical illnesses, and outcomes. Pulmonary Complications of HIV Infection Study Group.
To examine intensive care unit (ICU) admission rates and diagnoses of patients with HIV infection, and to determine the outcomes of different critical illnesses, we analyzed data derived from the 63 patients who were admitted to an ICU from among the 1,130 adults with HIV infection who did not have AIDS at the time of enrollment in a multicenter prospective study. Patients were admitted and treated according to the judgment of their physicians. During 4,298 patient-years of follow-up for the entire cohort, there were 1,320 hospital admissions, of which 68 (5%) included admission to an ICU. ⋯ In conclusion, the range of indications for critical care in patients with HIV infection is diverse. PCP accounted for only 16% of the ICU admissions, and mechanical ventilation for PCP and other pulmonary disorders was associated with a high mortality rate. In contrast, mechanical ventilation for nonpulmonary disorders, and admission to the ICU for nonpulmonary diagnoses was associated with a more favorable outcome.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 1997
Comparative StudyNoninvasive monitoring of cardiac output in critically ill patients with thoracocardiography.
Thoracocardiography noninvasively estimates changes in cardiac output by recording ventricular volume curves from an inductive plethysmographic transducer placed around the chest near the xiphoid process. We evaluated performance of thoracocardiography for estimation of cardiac output in 21 critically ill patients in comparison to thermodilution. A total of 201 paired cardiac output measurements were obtained over periods of 35 to 254 min. ⋯ The mean difference (bias) of cardiac output (thoracocardiography - thermodilution) was 0.0 L/min, the limits of agreement (bias +/- 2 SD) included a range from -1.5 to +1.6 L/min. For estimations of relative changes in cardiac output by thoracocardiography and thermodilution the bias was 0%, and the limits of agreement -21 and +22%. We conclude that thoracocardiography is a promising noninvasive technique for monitoring cardiac output in critically ill patients.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 1997
Review Case ReportsBronchial casts in children: a proposed classification based on nine cases and a review of the literature.
Bronchial casts are characterized by the formation of obstructive airway plugs that may be large enough to fill the branching pattern of an entire lung. The condition is rare but can occur at any age. Casts may be secondary to underlying diseases such as asthma and cystic fibrosis, but there are often no predisposing factors. ⋯ Survivors of Type 1 casts seem to be well controlled with inhaled steroids. Optimal therapy for patients with Type 2 casts is not clear; the prognosis probably depends on underlying cardiac status. We hope that this simple classification will provide a framework for further study of this obscure condition.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 1997
Nosocomial pneumonia and tracheitis in a pediatric intensive care unit: a prospective study.
We conducted a prospective study in the multidisciplinary pediatric intensive care unit (pediatric ICU) of a tertiary-care university hospital in order to determine the incidence, risk markers, risk factors, and complications related to bacterial nosocomial pneumonia (BNP) and tracheitis (BNT) in children. A cohort of 1,114 consecutive admissions to the pediatric ICU was enrolled over a 56-wk period; 154 cases were excluded mostly (75%) because they already had a respiratory infection at entry. The final sample included 960 admissions (831 patients). ⋯ In BNT, the reintubation rate was 24%. Nosocomial bacterial respiratory infections are rare in critically ill children. However, BNP causes significant complications, and more attention should be focused on BNT in the critically ill child.