Articles: respiratory-distress-syndrome.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Feb 1986
ReviewExtracorporeal CO2 Removal in severe adult respiratory distress syndrome.
Sixty-five per cent survival has been achieved in a group of patients with severe ARDS and a predicted mortality of 92%, by the use of Gattinoni's technique of extracorporeal CO2 removal. In patients and animals the technique has usually resulted in rapid improvement in the radiographic appearance and lung function. There are several possible mechanisms by which the technique may facilitate lung repair, including improvement of lung tissue oxygenation, the avoidance of high airway pressures and regional alkalosis in the lung, a reduction in oxygen toxicity, and the frequency observed reduction in pulmonary artery pressure. The apparent effectiveness of the technique and other associated evidence have implications which should lead us to reconsider some aspects of our conventional management of patients with severe ARDS.
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Two patients with the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) were placed on pressure-controlled inverse-ratio ventilation (IRV) when their condition deteriorated despite optimal treatment with intermittent mandatory ventilation and positive end-expiratory pressure. In the first case, high peak airway pressure was reduced by 50 percent with the institution of IRV. In the second, refractory hypoxemia was eliminated by using an inspiratory-to-expiratory ratio of 4:1. These cases show that IRV may offer certain advantages in the treatment of severe ARDS.
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Hydrogen peroxide levels were measured in the breath condensate of 43 patients receiving mechanical ventilation. In 16 patients the mean breath condensate peroxide level was 1.68 +/- 0.35 mumol/l on the day they met diagnostic criteria for adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). ⋯ Plasma lysozyme, a measure of in-vivo neutrophil turnover, was significantly higher in ARDS than in non-ARDS patients (9.2 +/- 2.2 U/ml v 3.4 +/- 1.1 U/ml). These findings support the hypothesis that neutrophil activation and oxidant production are involved in the pathogenesis of ARDS.
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Intensive care medicine · Jan 1986
An index to predict outcome in adult respiratory distress syndrome.
Thirty patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome required intermittent positive pressure ventilation; 15 survived. In 25 the syndrome followed bacterial infection or multiple injuries. From the peak upper airway pressure, the oxygen gradient and the age of the patient, an index was obtained which discriminated between the survivors and those who died from the pulmonary lesion of the syndrome.