Respiratory care
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Prolonged chest tube duration is less well studied in patients who are supported by mechanical ventilation and have acquired pneumothorax. We investigated the impact of prolonged chest tube duration on patient outcomes and the risk factors associated with prolonged chest tube duration. ⋯ High peak inspiratory pressure and surgical emphysema are independent predictors of prolonged chest tube duration and negatively impact clinical outcomes in this patient group. These findings may provide information for better chest tube management.
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Individuals with bronchiectasis exhibit colonization and infection of the respiratory system, with a consequent alteration of the macroscopic appearance of secretions, which ranges from mucoid to purulent. Purulence is related to the structural conformation, rheological profile, and transport indexes of mucus. We analyzed and compared the transport properties of respiratory secretions with mucoid appearance versus those with purulent appearance in patients with bronchiectasis and in subjects without lung disease. ⋯ Respiratory secretions in individuals with bronchiectasis have poor transport properties, which manifest as reduced mucociliary transport, reduced mucus transport by cough, and higher contact angle. These features were more accentuated in the purulent samples. This simple classification can be used by therapists to plan treatments, and by researchers to obtain more homogeneity between groups of subjects.
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Many pediatric patients need positive airway pressure (PAP) for treatment of obstructive sleep-disordered breathing. Adherence to PAP (defined as percent of nights with PAP use of > 4 h) is often poor and not sustained long-term. With any chronic disease, education has been shown to help with patient outcomes. Education of patients and parents regarding PAP can be provided by different healthcare professionals. There is no published literature assessing the role of respiratory therapists (RTs) in improving adherence to PAP in children. We hypothesized that the addition of RT visits to a PAP clinic would improve PAP adherence. ⋯ Utilization at clinic visits of an RT trained in the use of PAP improved adherence in pediatric subjects with obstructive sleep-disordered breathing when their baseline PAP adherence was < 50%.
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Bronchoscopy technology is a desirable method for detecting lung cancers arising in the central airways. Most early cancers and precancerous lesions are not visible on conventional white-light bronchoscopy (WLB). Autofluorescence bronchoscopy (AFB) is a newly developed technology that exploits the difference in autofluorescence intensity between normal and tumorous tissues to detect bronchial cancers and precancerous lesions. ⋯ In most of the studies on AFB other than AFI, AFB has provided a much higher sensitivity but a lower specificity than WLB. Regarding AFI, recent studies have reported controversial results on the sensitivity and specificity for detecting cancers and precancerous lesions, compared with WLB. In this paper we describe the working mechanisms and characteristics of AFBs, mainly AFI, and the diagnostic performance of AFI, compared with WLB, other AFBs, and narrow-band imaging, for detecting lung cancers and precancerous lesions.