Chest
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To determine the value of tonometrically measured gastric intramucosal pH (pHi) and accepted indices of systemic oxygenation in predicting multiorgan dysfunction syndrome (MODS) and death in critically ill patients with sepsis. ⋯ In patients with sepsis, indices of tissue oxygenation are better predictors of outcome than the hemodynamic and oxygen-derived variables obtained by invasive hemodynamic monitoring. These indices should be used to direct therapy.
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Twelve patients with the adult respiratory distress syndrome were included in this study and evaluated by transesophageal echocardiography and Doppler, assessing right and left ventricular intracardiac blood flow alterations with progressive increase of inspiration-to-expiration (I-E) ratios. Whereas midpulmonary artery flow parameters did not show any change, early left ventricular filling demonstrated a significant increase after switching the ventilatory mode from volume to pressure-controlled ventilation with 2:1 I-E ratio (end-inspiration: 39 +/- 26 cm with positive end-expiratory pressure [PEEP]-ventilation to 68 +/- 56 cm with pressure-controlled inverse-ratio ventilation, 2:1; p < 0.01; at end-expiration, from 67 +/- 21 cm with PEEP-ventilation to 83 +/- 36 cm with pressure-controlled ventilation 1:1; p < or = 0.05), resulting probably from different ventilatory flow and pressure curves. In the meanwhile, cardiac index demonstrated a significant augmentation (from 4.73 +/- 1.71 L/min.m2 to 5.56 +/- 1.66 L/min.m2; p < 0.05). Pressure-controlled inverse ratio ventilation results in both respiratory and hemodynamic advantages as is demonstrated by this study.
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In order to assess the role of a staging fiberoptic bronchoscopy in the preoperative assessment of an indeterminate solitary pulmonary nodule (SPN), we reviewed our experience in 33 SPNs identified among 1,269 bronchoscopies performed at the Albert Einstein Medical Center between 1985 and 1989. All lesions were less than 4 cm in greatest diameter and were not associated with symptoms of weight loss, chest pain, hemoptysis, localized wheezing, or hoarseness. ⋯ We recommend the abandonment of a staging bronchoscopy in the evaluation of a patient with an indeterminant SPN in whom history, physical examination, laboratory, and imaging studies fail to document contraindications to surgery. No additional useful information is derived and a substantial cost savings to the patient can be realized if the procedure is eliminated.
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Case Reports
Worsening tricuspid regurgitation following pericardiectomy for constrictive pericarditis.
We describe two cases of worsening tricuspid regurgitation following surgical pericardiectomy for constrictive pericarditis. Both patients demonstrated hemodynamic profiles characteristic of constrictive pericarditis on cardiac catheterization. ⋯ The worsening tricuspid regurgitation observed was a result of postoperative right ventricular dilatation. These cases demonstrate the importance of determining tricuspid valvular function in patients with constrictive pericarditis prior to pericardiectomy; however, the hemodynamic changes that result in worsening tricuspid regurgitation may not be present for weeks.
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To define normal profiles of cardiac structure, function, and hemodynamics postcardiac transplantation using Doppler echocardiography. ⋯ Cardiac transplantation recipients commonly display the following: (1) trivial or mild degrees of mitral regurgitation; (2) as much as moderate tricuspid regurgitation; (3) septal hypokinesis; and (4) small pericardial effusions. There is an association between the presence of right ventricular enlargement and moderate tricuspid regurgitation.