Chest
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ICUs are experiencing an epidemic of patients with acute brain dysfunction (delirium) and weakness, both associated with increased mortality and long-term disability. These conditions are commonly acquired in the ICU and are often initiated or exacerbated by sedation and ventilation decisions and management. Despite > 10 years of evidence revealing the hazards of delirium, the quality chasm between current and ideal processes of care continues to exist. ⋯ Individual components of this bundle are evidence based and can help standardize communication, improve interdisciplinary care, reduce mortality, and improve cognitive and functional outcomes. We refer to this as the "ABCDE bundle," for awakening and breathing coordination, delirium monitoring, and exercise/early mobility. This evidence-based bundle of practices will build a bridge across the current quality chasm from the "front end" to the "back end" of critical care and toward improved cognitive and functional outcomes for ICU survivors.
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Pleuroscopy, also known as medical thoracoscopy, is a minimally invasive procedure to inspect and perform a biopsy of the pleural space as well as to perform therapeutic interventions. It differs from conventional video-assisted thoracic surgery in that it may be performed under moderate sedation in the endoscopy suite without the need for intubation or single-lung ventilation. ⋯ Therapeutic interventions, such as chemical pleurodesis, may be performed during pleuroscopy for recurrent, symptomatic malignant pleural effusions, with success rates approaching 90%. In trained hands, pleuroscopy is a safe and well-tolerated procedure with high diagnostic accuracy and therapeutic efficacy.
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The mechanisms and pathways of the sensation of dyspnea are incompletely understood, but recent studies have provided some clarification. Studies of patients with cord transection or polio, induced spinal anesthesia, or induced respiratory muscle paralysis indicate that activation of the respiratory muscles is not essential for the perception of dyspnea. Similarly, reflex chemostimulation by CO₂ causes dyspnea, even in the presence of respiratory muscle paralysis or cord transection, indicating that reflex chemoreceptor stimulation per se is dyspnogenic. ⋯ Brain imaging studies have provided information on central pathways subserving dyspnea: Dyspnea is associated with activation of the limbic system, especially the insular area. These findings permit a clearer understanding of the mechanisms of dyspnea: Afferent information from reflex stimulation of the peripheral sensors (chemoreceptors and/or vagal C fibers) is processed centrally in the limbic system and sensorimotor cortex and results in increased neural output to the respiratory muscles. A perturbation in the ventilatory response due to weakness, paralysis, or increased mechanical load generates afferent information from vagal receptors in the lungs (and possibly mechanoreceptors in the respiratory muscles) to the sensorimotor cortex and results in the sensation of dyspnea.
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Vocal cord dysfunction (VCD) is a syndrome characterized by paroxysms of glottic obstruction due to true vocal cord adduction resulting in symptoms such as dyspnea and noisy breathing. Since first described as a distinct clinical entity in 1983, VCD has inadvertently become a collective term for a variety of clinical presentations due to glottic disorders. Despite an increased understanding of laryngeal function over the past 25 years, VCD remains a poorly understood and characterized entity. ⋯ VCD has been repeatedly misdiagnosed as asthma; however, the relationship between asthma and VCD is elusive. There are numerous case reports on VCD, but there is a paucity of prospective studies. Following an in-depth review of the medical literature, this article examines the available retrospective and prospective evidence to present an approach for evaluation of VCD including: (1) evaluation of factors associated with VCD, (2) differential diagnosis of movement disorders of the upper airway, and (3) clinical, spirometric, and endoscopic criteria for the diagnosis.
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Long-term therapy with the macrolide antibiotic erythromycin was shown to alter the clinical course of diffuse panbronchiolitis in the late 1980s. Since that time, macrolides have been found to have a large number of antiinflammatory properties in addition to being antimicrobials. These observations provided the rationale for many studies performed over the last decade to assess the usefulness of macrolides in other inflammatory airways diseases, such as cystic fibrosis, asthma, COPD, and bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome. This review summarizes the immunomodulatory properties of macrolides and the results of these recent studies demonstrating their potential for being disease-modifying agents.