Articles: respiratory-distress-syndrome.
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Critical care medicine · Jan 1992
Increased morbidity with increased pulmonary albumin flux in sepsis-related adult respiratory distress syndrome.
To determine the feasibility of utilizing a scintigraphic technique to differentiate patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome due to sepsis syndrome from control volunteers and patients with congestive heart failure. Gamma scintigraphy was compared with chest roentgenograms to predict mortality rate and morbidity in adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) patients. ⋯ Gamma scintigraphy successfully differentiated between control volunteers and patients with congestive heart failure with PAOP less than 30 mm Hg from patients with sepsis-induced ARDS. Although all of the patients with a clinical diagnosis of septic ARDS had similar impairments in oxygenation and chest roentgenograms, those patients with a significantly increased pulmonary albumin flux (greater than 2 SD above control mean) had a markedly increased morbidity.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Comparison of pressure support ventilation (PSV) and intermittent mandatory ventilation (IMV) during weaning in patients with acute respiratory failure.
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The influence of postnatal age on spontaneous respiratory time, measured both on and off continuous positive airways pressure (CPAP), and the occurrence of the Hering Breuer reflex has been investigated. Consecutive ventilated infants were recruited and only studied when making respiratory efforts during mechanical ventilation. Fifty-three infants were studied on 119 occasions, their median gestational age was 29 weeks and birthweight 1142 gms. ⋯ No influence of postnatal age was demonstrated on the proportion of infants in whom the Hering Breuer reflex was demonstrated. Our results suggest that, during the neonatal period, there is no influence of postnatal age on respiratory timings or reflex activity amongst ventilated infants who make spontaneous respiratory efforts during ventilation. These results have important implications regarding the optimum rate at which such infants should be ventilated.
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One of the aspects of prematurity in neonates is the respiratory distress syndrome. Although treatment with mechanical ventilation reduced the mortality rate, bronchopulmonary dysplasia still develops in many neonates. We have attempted to reduce intubation and mechanical ventilation by using, in the delivery room, humidified and warmed gas with fractional inspired oxygen as low as possible to obtain SaO2 between 85 and 95%. ⋯ Seven out of 26 infants (27%) born between 30 and 32 weeks required mechanical ventilation. In contrast, ventilation was necessary for eight out of 16 premature neonates born before the 29th week of gestation. Mortality rate was 6% (4/66) in the latter group (< 29 weeks), and only one neonate developed bronchopulmonary dysplasia.