The American review of respiratory disease
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · May 1992
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialImproved outcome based on fluid management in critically ill patients requiring pulmonary artery catheterization.
We performed a randomized, prospective trial to evaluate whether fluid management that emphasized diuresis and fluid restriction in patients with pulmonary edema could affect the development or resolution of extravascular lung water (EVLW), as well as time on mechanical ventilation and time in the intensive care unit (ICU), in critically ill patients requiring pulmonary artery catheterization (PAC). PAC was performed on 101 patients. A total of 52 patients were randomized to an EVLW management group using a protocol based on bedside indicator-dilution measurements of EVLW. ⋯ EVLW decreased significantly, and ventilator-days and ICU days were significantly shorter only in patients from the EVLW group. No clinically significant adverse effect occurred as a result of following the EVLW group algorithm. Thus, a lower positive fluid balance, especially in patients with pulmonary edema regardless of cause, is associated with reduced EVLW, ventilator-days, and ICU days.
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · May 1992
Comparative StudySpecificity and sensitivity of the assay for elastin-derived peptides in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
One prediction of the protease-antiprotease hypothesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) pathogenesis is the appearance of elastin-derived degradation products in the plasmas of affected patients that are due to the breakdown of alveolar interstitial elastin by an excess of elastolytic activity in the lung. We previously demonstrated a significant elevation of plasma elastin-derived peptides (EDP) in subjects with COPD in comparison with asymptomatic smokers with normal spirometry or normal nonsmokers. To better determine the selectivity of the assay for EDP as a marker of COPD, we measured plasma EDP levels in different patient populations. ⋯ The prospective analyses of specificity and sensitivity of plasma EDP levels as markers of COPD gave values of 91 and 65%, respectively. Utilizing receiver operating characteristic curve analysis to assess the diagnostic and screening performance of plasma EDP as a test for COPD (perfect test equals an area under the curve of 1.0), the area under the curve was 0.87, which compares favorably with many widely used clinical tests. These data demonstrate that the assay for plasma EDP is a quantitative, easily measured, and highly specific marker for subjects with COPD.
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · May 1992
Comparative StudyNebulizer function during mechanical ventilation.
In the setting of mechanical ventilation, recent studies have cast doubt on the ability of nebulizer systems to deliver adequate amounts of medication. We therefore studied ventilator-related and nebulizer-related factors that could potentially affect the amount of aerosol inhaled by an intubated subject. Utilizing two separate protocols, we used a bench model of a ventilator circuit, radiolabeled (technetium pertechnetate, 99mTc) saline droplets and a filter technique to measure the percentage of radioaerosol delivered. ⋯ Two nebulizers (AeroTech II and Twin Jet) and pentamidine as the test drug were studied with fixed ventilator settings, treatment time, endotracheal tube size, and volume fill. No humidification was used. The nebulizer solution was labeled with 99mTc, which was bound to either human serum albumin (HSA) or sulfur colloid (SC).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · May 1992
Oxygen delivery-independent effect of blood flow on diaphragm fatigue.
To determine the effect of blood flow on diaphragm fatigue independent of oxygen delivery, the left hemidiaphragm was vascularly isolated in 14 pentobarbital-anesthetized, mechanically ventilated dogs. Fatigue (decline in tension generation) of the left diaphragm was induced by phrenic nerve stimulation at 10 Hz, 12/min, duty cycle of 0.5 for 8 min. Two stimulation periods separated by 30 min of rest were performed in each animal. ⋯ In Group 2 (n = 6), stimulation performed while perfusing the diaphragm in the first period with diluted arterial blood at a flow rate twice that recorded during autoperfusion (low O2-high flow) produced a decline in tension to 70% of the initial values. In the second period, the diaphragm was perfused with undiluted arterial blood at a flow rate equal to 50% of that of the first period (high O2-low flow). Tension during this period declined to 56% of initial values (p less than 0.05 compared with low O2-high flow).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)