Chest
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Mortality of the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) remains high and could be increased by pulmonary barotrauma induced by positive-pressure mechanical ventilation. Extracorporeal CO2 removal combined with low-frequency positive-pressure ventilation (ECCO2R-LFPPV) has been proposed to reduce lung injury while supporting respiratory failure. ⋯ Bleeding was the only complication related to the technique and was the cause of death in four patients. This method allowed improvement in gas exchange along with reduction of the risk of barotrauma caused by the ventilator.
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Recent studies have used preoperative cardiopulmonary exercise testing to improve risk assessment of pulmonary resection for lung cancer. These studies have demonstrated inconsistent correlation between peak oxygen uptake (VO2) and postoperative complications but have not systematically examined other methods of risk stratification. We analyzed the findings in 42 patients who had cardiopulmonary exercise testing prior to lung cancer resection. ⋯ We conclude that both the peak VO2 during cardiopulmonary exercise testing and a multifactorial CPRI are highly predictive of complications after lung resection. Adding the peak VO2 did not enhance the risk estimation generated by the CPRI. The association between postoperative complications and peak VO2 may be explained by the correlation between identifiable cardiopulmonary disease (CPRI) and reduced oxygen uptake with exercise.
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Cardiopulmonary failure resulting from progression of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is treated with endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation. This study was conducted to determine whether the use of nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) would rapidly reverse changes in mental status and hypercapnic acidosis in such patients with decompensated hypercapnic respiratory failure resulting from OSA. Six morbidly obese patients (mean weight, 159 +/- 19 kg) were treated with nasal CPAP and supplemental oxygen. ⋯ None of the patients required intubation and mechanical ventilation. There were no complications attributable to the CPAP delivered by nasal mask. We conclude that CPAP delivered by nasal mask can be safe and effective in rapidly reversing changes in mental status and hypercapnic acidosis in this group of patients with severe respiratory failure, and nasal CPAP obviates the need for endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation.
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The incidence, degree, and duration of acute hypoxemia were evaluated with continuous arterial hemoglobin oxygen saturation monitoring by pulse oximetry in 100 postoperative patients during 40 percent oxygen administration by aerosol face tent from postanesthetic recovery room admission to discharge. Saturations were recorded by pulse oximeters (Nellcor-N 200) with desaturations of < or = 92 percent for > or = 30 s considered significant. On recovery room admission, 15 percent of patients were experiencing episodes of desaturation. ⋯ Later desaturations to 86.7 +/- 4.6 percent (72 to 91 percent) at 32 +/- 54 min after admission for 5.2 +/- 12.6 min occurred in 25 percent of patients and correlated positively with peripheral surgical procedures, low oxygen saturation on admission, duration of anesthesia, and volume of intraoperative intravenous fluids. Desaturation durations were longer for female subjects and correlated positively with body weight and intravenous fluid volume. Significant arterial hemoglobin oxygen desaturations occurred despite prophylactic oxygen administration by aerosol face tent during short-term postoperative recovery room care.