Resp Care
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The ARDS (acute respiratory distress syndrome) Network study found 22% lower mortality in acute lung injury and ARDS patients ventilated with low tidal volumes (V(T)) than in those ventilated with traditional V(T) ventilation. Several points should be considered when using the low V(T) protocol for clinical practice. Prior to implementation, hemodynamic and acid-base status, minute ventilation, and adequacy of sedation should be assessed to minimize the potential for intolerance. ⋯ Evaluation for weaning should occur when adequate oxygenation can be maintained on 40% oxygen and a positive end-expiratory pressure of 8 cm H(2)O. Pressure support levels between 5 and 20 cm H(2)O (above 5 cm H(2)O positive end-expiratory pressure) are used for weaning and titrated to keep the respiratory rate < 35 breaths/min. Pressure support levels should be weaned aggressively, as long as the protocol's weaning tolerance criteria can be maintained.
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A patient with extensive burns was intubated with an 8.0 mm internal diameter endotracheal tube (ETT) equipped with a subglottic suction port (Mallinckrodt HiLo Evac). The ETT was secured to a left upper molar with wire sutures throughout the hospitalization course to ensure airway stability. On the 40th day of intubation, the patient exsanguinated and died from a tracheo-innominate artery fistula. Postmortem examination revealed a 1 cm lesion of the left anterior tracheal wall at the position of the ETT tip. The prolonged stationary position of the ETT was considered the primary factor responsible for the fistula. Yet tracheo-innominate artery fistula normally is associated with high cuff pressures rather than with the tube tip. The special ETT construction required for the subglottic suction feature was suspected to have increased tube rigidity and may have played a contributory role. ⋯ This case of fatal tracheo-innominate artery fistula formation associated with an ETT tip was unusual because of the extended duration of endotracheal intubation and the complexity of the patient's airway management problems. Our data suggest that the higher rigidity of the HiLo Evac ETT may have contributed to fistula development at the tube tip. However, we do not believe that the higher rigidity of the HiLo Evac ETT necessarily poses any greater risk than other ETTs under normal circumstances, in which the tube tip is not fixed in a stationary position for an extended period.
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Case Reports
Airway pressure release ventilation with a short release time in a child with acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Airway pressure release ventilation (APRV) allows ventilation and oxygenation to occur at lower peak and mean airway pressures than conventional positive pressure ventilation. The use of APRV in adults is an effective method of ventilation for patients with acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome. However, the use of APRV in children is less established. We report the use of APRV with a short release time of 0.2 s in a child with acute respiratory distress syndrome secondary to respiratory syncytial virus pneumonia.