Chest
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Comparative Study
Active compression-decompression CPR improves vital organ perfusion in a dog model of ventricular fibrillation.
This study was designed to assess whether a new method of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), termed active compression-decompression CPR, or ACD-CPR, improves organ perfusion when compared with standard (S) CPR in a dog model of ventricular fibrillation. ⋯ We conclude that ACD-CPR improves tissue perfusion and systemic hemodynamics compared with standard CPR.
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To assess blood pressure (BP) response to continuous maximal arm ergometry in patients with spinal cord injury (SCI). ⋯ These data describe, for the first time to our knowledge, that exertional hypotension is present in all individuals with SCI during continuous arm ergometry. Further studies are needed to clarify the mechanisms responsible for this phenomenon and to evaluate the long-term consequences for individuals with SCI.
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Little information exists regarding the proportion of patients treated with mechanical ventilation in intensive care units (ICUs), their underlying disease states, the modes of ventilation used, duration of ventilator support, methods and time required for weaning, and mortality in these patients. We carried out a cross-sectional multicenter study in 47 medical-surgical ICUs in Spain to investigate these issues in 290 patients who required mechanical ventilation for at least 24 hs. Relative frequency of different modes was as follows: assist-control ventilation (AC), 55%; synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation (SIMV), 26%; pressure support ventilation (PSV), 8%; SIMV plus PSV, 8%; pressure-controlled ventilation (PCV), 1%; and continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), 2%. ⋯ Overall mortality rate was 34%, and it was higher in patients who were ventilated for 1 to 10 days than in those ventilated for a longer time. Despite the availability of several new modes of ventilator support, older modes such as AC and SIMV were more commonly used. Weaning constitutes a large portion of total ventilator time, and thus, measures that expedite the weaning process should markedly decrease the duration of mechanical ventilation.
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The use of electret microphones to measure lung sounds is widespread because of their small size, high fidelity, and low cost. Typically, an air cavity is placed between the skin surface and the microphone to convert the chest wall vibrations into a measurable sound pressure. ⋯ Model predictions are in general agreement with both in vitro and in situ measurements and indicate that the overall high-frequency response of the transduction diminishes with increasing cavity depth. This finding suggests that smaller cavity depths are more appropriate for detection of lung sounds over a wide band width and stresses the importance of coupler size on microphone measurements.
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We describe a 27-year-old patient who was admitted to our hospital for a tracheal stenosis caused by an adenocystic carcinoma. A tracheal resection procedure was performed and the head was fixed to the anterior chest wall by two sutures. Postoperatively he became tetraplegic, from which he completely recovered after the sutures were removed. We think that the decreased blood flow in the arterial spinal artery with flexion of the neck in combination with hypotension was the direct cause of this major complication.