Respiratory care
-
Review
Late Diagnosis of Foreign Body Aspiration in Adults: Case Series and Review of the Literature.
Tracheobronchial foreign body (FB) aspiration (FBA) is a life-threatening emergency mostly observed in childhood and advanced age. With early diagnosis, the FB can be removed using bronchoscopic methods without causing irreversible damage. ⋯ The findings of the present study demonstrate that subjects tended to forget the FBA, leading to insidious respiratory system symptoms, with recurrent infections. In cases with an endobronchial mass lesion image on thorax CT, clinicians should consider the possibility of FBA. Delayed diagnosis of both organic and inorganic FB may cause granulation tissue.
-
Infants with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy are often treated with therapeutic hypothermia and high-frequency ventilation. Fluctuations in PaCO2 during therapeutic hypothermia are associated with poor neurodevelopmental outcomes. Transcutaneous CO2 monitors offer a noninvasive estimate of PaCO2 represented by transcutaneously measured partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PtcCO2 ). We aimed to assess the precision between PtcCO2 and PaCO2 values in neonates undergoing therapeutic hypothermia. ⋯ The neonates' PtcCO2 was as much as 18 mm Hg higher to 13 mm Hg lower than the PaCO2 95% of the time. Transcutaneous CO2 monitoring may not be a good trending tool, nor is it appropriate for estimating PaCO2 in patients undergoing therapeutic hypothermia.
-
In the first months of the pandemic, prior to the introduction of proven-effective treatments, 15-37% of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 were discharged on home oxygen. After proven-effective treatments for acute COVID-19 were established by evidence-based guidelines, little remains known about home oxygen requirements following hospitalization for COVID-19. ⋯ About one in 4 subjects were prescribed home oxygen after hospitalization for COVID-19, even after guidelines established proven-effective treatments for acute illness. Evidence-based strategies to reduce the requirement for home oxygen in patients hospitalized for COVID-19 are needed.