Chest
-
Review Case Reports
Resuscitation from severe acute hypercapnia. Determinants of tolerance and survival.
A 46-year-old man underwent cosmetic facial surgery under general anesthesia. He was ventilated by mask with an oxygen-enriched gas mixture for 4 to 6 h and monitored by pulse oximetry. Despite adequate arterial saturation (SaO2 > 90 percent) throughout the procedure, he remained in a deep coma after termination of anesthesia. ⋯ This case of record extreme hypercapnia and review of the literature demonstrates that survival is possible in acute severe respiratory acidosis as long as tissue anoxia and ischemia are prevented. We discuss the tissue effects of acute hypercapnia and newer aspects of the nature of intracellular pH regulation in critical tissues that afford considerable tolerance to acidosis. The dependence of these mechanisms upon active ion transport underscores the importance of adequate tissue oxygenation and perfusion.
-
To evaluate the ability of a variety of scoring systems to predict mortality of patients admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU) with acute respiratory failure (ARF) secondary to AIDS-related Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP). ⋯ The modified MSOF score and the serum LDH level are the best predictors of mortality of patients admitted to ICU with ARF secondary to AIDS-related PCP. The performance of the MSOF score was enhanced when the LDH level was added. The AIDS score, APACHE II, and the acute lung injury score were not found to be useful in this group of critically ill patients.
-
Comparative Study
Can portable chest x-ray examination accurately diagnose lung consolidation after major abdominal surgery? A comparison with computed tomography scan.
To prospectively quantify the degree of accuracy of portable chest x-ray film examination in the detection of postoperative lung consolidations. ⋯ In postoperative conditions, x-ray film examination is a method which presents good specificity but poor sensitivity in the diagnosis of lung consolidations.
-
To assess the effects of long-term nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in occlusive sleep apnea syndrome (OSA), 17 patients with severe symptomatic OSA had repeated spirometry, arterial blood gases, and nocturnal polysomnograms off nasal CPAP after 3 to 46 months of treatment with nasal CPAP. Without loss of weight or change in respiratory mechanics, the ventilatory disturbance index fell from a mean of 87 events per hour to 57 events per hour (p < 0.0001), correlating with an improvement in mean nocturnal desaturation with sleep-disordered breathing events (r = 0.54, p = 0.03). ⋯ The improvement in PaO2 correlated significantly with the number of months of CPAP therapy, suggesting a continuing effect over time (r = 0.58, p = 0.015). These results indicate that there is a reversible element of the severity of OSA and suggest a result of nasal CPAP therapy may be to reverse the adverse and time-dependent effects of hypoxemia and sleep fragmentation on ventilatory control in severe OSA.