The American review of respiratory disease
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · Dec 1993
Transcutaneous and end-tidal carbon dioxide pressures should be measured during pediatric polysomnography.
Pediatric obstructive sleep apnea (OSAS) is characterized by partial airway obstruction, alveolar hypoventilation, and elevated arterial CO2 (PaCO2). Thus, a reliable, practical method of estimating CO2 is needed for pediatric polysomnography. Therefore, we measured both transcutaneous CO2 (PtcCO2) and end-tidal CO2 (PETCO2) in 15 pediatric polysomnographic evaluations. ⋯ The results of this study indicate that PtcCO2, as well as PETCO2, should be measured during pediatric polysomnography. By utilizing both PtcCO2 and PETCO2 there was a 70% reduction in the number of epochs that could not be assessed for hypoventilation. For an individual subject or electrode application there was a constant, and usually close, relationship, between PtcCO2 and PETCO2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · Dec 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialEarly bactericidal and sterilizing activities of ciprofloxacin in pulmonary tuberculosis.
The early bactericidal and sterilizing activities of ciprofloxacin were evaluated in the treatment of adult patients with smear positive pulmonary tuberculosis. Two randomized prospective studies were performed in Northern Tanzania. In study 1, ten patients received either 750 mg ciprofloxacin or 300 ng isoniazid daily for 7 days. ⋯ When HRZE and HRC regimens were compared, the HRC regimen appeared to be inferior in its sterilizing ability, with a culture conversion rate of 67% at 2 months compared with 100% for HRZE. The difference in outcome was most marked in HIV-1 positive patients. The role of ciprofloxacin in combination regimens may be as a bactericidal rather than a sterilizing agent.
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · Nov 1993
Role of tidal volume, FRC, and end-inspiratory volume in the development of pulmonary edema following mechanical ventilation.
Mechanical ventilation with high peak inspiratory pressure and large tidal volume (VT) produces permeability pulmonary edema. Whether it is mean or peak inspiratory pressure (i.e., mean or end-inspiratory volume) that is the major determinant of ventilation-induced lung injury is unsettled. Rats were ventilated with increasing tidal volumes starting from different degrees of FRC that were set by increasing end-expiratory pressure during positive-pressure ventilation. ⋯ In conclusion, rather than VT or FRC value, the end-inspiratory volume is probably the main determinant of ventilation-induced edema. Hemodynamic status plays an important role in modulating the amount of edema during lung overinflation but does not fundamentally modify the characteristics of this edema which is consistently associated with major permeability alterations. These results may be relevant for ventilatory strategies during acute respiratory failure.
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · Oct 1993
Airway occlusion pressure and breathing pattern as predictors of weaning outcome.
Airway occlusion pressure (P0.1) and the ratio of breathing frequency (f) to tidal volume (VT) (f/Vt) are good predictors of weaning outcome. However, the specificity of f/VT in predicting weaning success is relatively low. We postulated that the product of P0.1 and f/VT (P0.1*f/VT) would better predict weaning outcome than either variable alone. ⋯ The areas under the ROC curves for P0.1*f/VT, P0.1, and f/VT were not significantly different. We conclude that P0.1*f/VT has equivalent sensitivity as P0.1 and f/VT. P0.1 slightly improves the specificity of f/VT in predicting weaning success.