Chest
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To investigate the safety of total intravenous anesthesia and spontaneous assisted ventilation during interventional rigid bronchoscopy (IRB). ⋯ Total intravenous anesthesia and spontaneous assisted ventilation is a well-suited technique for IRB. Severe hypoxemia, however, may occur in approximately 15 percent of patients. This complication is usually related to the procedure itself and is easy to reverse. Propofol is well tolerated in the majority of patients but it must be used with care in patients with poor functional or cardiovascular status.
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We studied the acute hemodynamic effects of increasing nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in 13 patients with acute decompensation of congestive heart failure. Heart rate, respiratory rate, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, right atrial pressure, systemic blood pressure, and thermodilution cardiac outputs were measured at baseline, during, and after application of nasal CPAP at increasing pressures of 5, 10, and 15 cm H2O. Cardiac index, stroke volume, and oxygen delivery were calculated. ⋯ Improvement in cardiac output could not be predicted by any of the baseline hemodynamic or clinical variables, nor was it related to random variations since all variables returned to baseline after cessation of CPAP. Increase in stroke volume without a change in pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (preload) suggests either improved inotropic function of the left ventricle or reduced left ventricular afterload with CPAP. Thus, CPAP may offer a new noninvasive adjunct to improving left ventricular function and augmenting cardiac performance in a subset of patients with congestive heart failure.
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Rhodotorula rubra was recovered in 18 bronchoscopic specimens from 15 patients from May to November 1987. One hundred and twenty-one bronchoscopies were performed during that period by two bronchoscopists (W. W.; R. ⋯ We discovered that replacement of the suction valve and the rubber biopsy valve on the biopsy channel immediately after cleaning allowed moisture to accumulate in these areas. Removal of both the suction valve and biopsy valve during periods of nonuse resulted in adequate drying of the biopsy channel and eradication of contamination from December 1987 to May 1990 (350 bronchoscopies). Epidemiologic and infection control surveillance is critical for bronchoscopy, especially when possible pathogens are recovered by BAL in the immunocompromised patient.
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Inverse ratio ventilation, with prolonged inspiratory times, appears to improve gas exchange and arterial oxygenation in patients with severe respiratory failure; however, in previous studies, pressure-controlled inverse ratio ventilation (PC-IRV), which uses a rapidly decelerating inspiratory flow pattern, was compared to conventional volume-controlled ventilation, which uses a constant inspiratory flow rate. Pressure-controlled ventilation (PCV), with a decelerating inspiratory flow pattern and conventional inspiratory-to-expiratory (I/E) ratios, also has been shown to produce improvement in PaO2 when compared to volume-controlled ventilation. It therefore is unknown if the potentially beneficial effects of PC-IRV are due to the reversal of I/E ratios or to the use of the rapidly decelerating inspiratory flow pattern. ⋯ No significant changes in tissue oxygen delivery or consumption occurred with either PCV or PC-IRV. These results demonstrate that inversion of conventional I/E ratios produces no significant improvement in the overall cardiorespiratory profile of critically ill patients. This study also suggests that the clinical utility of PC-IRV is limited except in the setting of the adult respiratory distress syndrome with hypoxemia or hypercapnia refractory to other therapeutic options.