Resp Care
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In patients with permanent tracheostomies, the clinician can encounter difficulty in creating a satisfactory seal between the patient and pulmonary function testing (PFT) equipment. We have developed a simple apparatus and procedure for effecting a tight seal during testing. ⋯ This equipment is simple, inexpensive, and readily available. Further, it permits pulmonary function testing whether or not a tracheostomy tube is in place, an advantage if variable extrathoracic upper airway obstruction is a consideration. If the patient has a cuffed tracheostomy tube in place, the PFT equipment can be connected directly to the tube. We have found that this apparatus and technique are well tolerated and that test results are reproducible.
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Comparative Study
Contamination of a multiple-use suction catheter in a closed-circuit system compared to contamination of a disposable, single-use suction catheter.
Multiple-use (M-U) closed-system endotracheal suction catheters are effective in preventing arterial oxygen desaturation in patients on positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) and may lessen the frequency of bradycardia and hypotension in unstable patients who are prone to these complications of suctioning. However, because M-U catheters remain attached to the ventilator circuit and are reintroduced repeatedly into the patient's airway over 24 hours or longer, they could become heavily contaminated with pathogens. We hypothesized a risk of autocontamination to the patient by re-inoculation of the respiratory tract with organisms that flourished on the M-U catheter while it was isolated from the patient's immune defenses or antibiotic therapy. ⋯ Fourteen different pathogens or potential pathogens were recovered, in numbers of 2 x 10(1) to 2 x 10(7)colony-forming units. The greatest number of colonies was most often recovered from the sputum specimen, and statistical analysis showed no differences in rate or magnitude of contamination between M-U and S-U catheters.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)