Chest
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Transtracheal high-flow insufflation supports spontaneous respiration in chronic respiratory failure.
Transtracheal insufflation of oxygen-enriched air at a high flow rate has been proposed to support ventilation. The purpose of this study was to investigate the physiologic effects of high-flow insufflation unobtrusively with a respiratory inductive plethysmograph in patients with chronic respiratory failure. Using a respiratory inductive plethysmograph also permitted monitoring of end-expiratory lung volume, and respiratory variables could be quantified independently of the tracheal bias flow. ⋯ High-flow transtracheal insufflation of oxygen-enriched air assists ventilation by reducing Ve without compromising gas exchange and by reducing end-expiratory lung volume, possibly through the reversal of dynamic hyperinflation.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Thromboembolic and bleeding complications following St. Jude Medical valve replacement: results of the German Experience With Low-Intensity Anticoagulation Study.
Due to their inherent thrombogenicity, mechanical cardiac valves necessitate lifelong oral anticoagulation. Less intensive oral anticoagulation than recommended earlier might result in a lower incidence of bleeding complications without increasing the embolic hazard significantly. ⋯ The intention-to-treat analysis of the results of the German Experience With Low Intensity Anticoagulation study leads to the unexpected result that despite a sophisticated reporting system, the incidence of moderate and severe TE and bleeding complications was comparably low in all INR strata and more or less within the so-called background incidence reported for an age-related "normal" population. This study supports reexamination of the intensity of anticoagulation in patients with the SJM valve.