The American review of respiratory disease
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · Apr 1992
Comparative StudyNasal cannula and transtracheal oxygen delivery. A comparison of patient response after 6 months of each technique.
The purpose of this study was to compare the efficacy of transtracheal (TT) oxygen delivery to that of nasal cannula delivery in subjects with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Twenty subjects (14 men, 6 women) were followed for 6 months during nasal cannula delivery. A TT catheter was then inserted, and measurements were repeated during TT use. ⋯ Also, no change was seen in Profile of Mood States, Sickness Impact Profile or Katz Adjustment Scale scores. Some problems were encountered relating to use of the catheter (displacement, mucus balls), but they were minor, and most were confined to the initial 2 months of TT use when the tract was immature. Our experience suggests that, in addition to decreasing oxygen flow rate, use of TT delivery may confer benefits that result in improved exercise tolerance and decreased hospitalization in patients with COPD.
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · Apr 1992
Contamination of flexible fiberoptic bronchoscopes with Mycobacterium chelonae linked to an automated bronchoscope disinfection machine.
Between December 5, 1989, and September 25, 1990, Mycobacterium chelonae was isolated from endoscopic or bronchial washings in 14 patients on a single clinical service. A phenotypically unique strain of M. chelonae subspecies abscessus that was highly resistant to cefoxitin (MIC greater than 256 micrograms/ml) and different from 13 control isolates of M. chelonae recovered elsewhere in the hospital was identified in all these patients and the rinse water from the bronchoscope disinfecting machine. ⋯ Rinsing the scopes with 70% alcohol after automated disinfection eliminated the outbreak strain. This study demonstrates that automated bronchoscope disinfecting machines may become heavily contaminated with mycobacteria that resist usual disinfection, resulting in a source of bronchoscope contamination.