Swiss medical weekly
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Quality medical care during transport of critically ill pediatric and neonatal patients is only possible if the referring hospital and the regional center cooperate closely. The experience of physicians and nurses involved is of great importance, and the choice of the transporting team should depend on the medical status of the patient and the skills of the physicians and nurses or paramedics. Critically ill children and neonates should be transported by specialized teams. Our statistics from the last 12 years show an increasing number of transports, with the majority of patients being referred from peripheral hospitals.
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Swiss medical weekly · Feb 1990
[Weaning using continuous-flow CPAP: hemodynamics and gas exchange].
The present study was designed to investigate hemodynamics and gas exchange during weaning from mechanical ventilation (assist/control mode) to spontaneous breathing with continuous high flow (chf)-CPAP, and to study the predictive value of these parameters in respect of longterm success or failure of weaning. Hemodynamic and gas exchange parameters were obtained in 10 patients without severe pulmonary and cerebral dysfunction at -240, -60, -30, and -15 min before, and at +15, +30, +45, +60, +120, +180, +240 min after chf-CPAP. During chf-CPAP significant increases in heart rate/min (92 +/- 17 to 103 +/- 20), cardiac index (3.9 +/- 0.7 to 4.4 +/- 1.0 1/min.m2), respiratory rate/min (15 +/- 1 to 28 +/- 7), PaCO2 (36.7 +/- 3.0 to 41.2 +/- 5.9 torr) and oxygen delivery (12.2 +/- 2.7 to 13.9 +/- 2.3 ml/min.kg) were found. ⋯ In the 4 patients who required mechanical ventilation 12 to 34 hours after the end of the study we found a significantly more pronounced increase in heart rate than in those who where weaned successfully (114 +/- 19 vs 89 +/- 9). Increases in heart rate, respiratory rate, cardiac index, PaCO2 and oxygen delivery can therefore be expected during weaning from mechanical ventilation to spontaneous breathing with CPAP. A pronounced increase in heart rate may suggest a weaning failure.
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Swiss medical weekly · Feb 1990
[Transportation of patients in the prehospital phase: education of physicians].
Pre-hospital emergency medicine is developing in Switzerland. At present, however, there is no training standard for this specific and sometimes confusing aspect of extra-hospital activity. ⋯ The training programs of fourteen Swiss hospitals which cooperate with ambulance or helicopter rescue services are then presented. An enquiry by the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV) among 46 physicians participating regularly in Swiss Air Rescue (REGA) helicopter operations shows the very varied pathology involved and the problems encountered in creating a training program of this kind.