Chest
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Nasal mask ventilation (NMV) has been used successfully in chronic restrictive respiratory failure and more recently in acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). This study aimed to evaluate the possible role of NMV in acute respiratory failure (ARF) episodes when mechanical ventilation with endotracheal intubation is questionable. Thirty patients (age, 76 +/- 8.1 years) were treated by NMV during ARF episodes (COPD, 20; other chronic respiratory failure [CRF], 5; chronic heart failure [CHF], 4). ⋯ A return to the respiratory condition was observed in the surviving patients with subsequent discharge from hospital. NMV therefore successfully treated respiratory distress initially in 60 percent of the 30 patients. These results suggest that NMV could be a possible alternative in the treatment of ARF, even in very ill patients, when endotracheal ventilation is controversial or not immediately required.
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Cures of Candida pericarditis reported in the literature uniformly involved surgical drainage of the pericardial space. We report a patient with purulent pericarditis caused by Candida albicans who was treated successfully with antifungal chemotherapy combined with a single pericardiocentesis that did not completely evacuate the pericardial space. This case indicates that thoracotomy with surgical drainage of the pericardium is not mandatory for successful therapy of Candida pericarditis.
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Drug-resistant tuberculosis was found in 21 percent of homeless individuals in New York City between 1982 and 1987. To see if this relationship existed in south Texas, we evaluated all admissions to a Texas Health Department facility with culture-proven tuberculosis. Four hundred forty-three patients were admitted between September 1987 and October 1990. ⋯ The female patient had resistance to streptomycin, isoniazid, and rifampin. These findings illustrate that drug-resistant tuberculosis exists among homeless individuals in south Texas. As the number of homeless people increases, physicians need to recognize that pulmonary tuberculosis is a frequent infection in this population and that the causal mycobacteria may well be resistant to one or more antituberculosis agents.
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Case Reports
Upper airway obstruction due to inhalation of a tracheal T-tube resulting in pulmonary edema.
Acute upper airway obstruction may present with pulmonary edema. Following is a report of pulmonary edema secondary to acute upper airway obstruction due to inhalation of a Montgomery tracheal T-tube. The principal factor causing pulmonary edema is the generation of large negative transpulmonary pressures. This may be enhanced by changes in the cardiovascular function due to the Müller maneuver.
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Comparative Study
Evaluation of cardiac output by thoracic electrical bioimpedance during exercise in normal subjects.
We compared cardiac output determined simultaneously by two methods, the CO2 rebreathing technique and the thoracic electrical bioimpedance method (Bomed NCCOM-3 equipment). The studies were performed in duplicate in 11 healthy male subjects at rest and during three levels of steady-state exercise on a cycle ergometer at 60, 120, and 180 W. Cardiac output at 60 and 120 W was slightly lower (p less than 0.01) by the thoracic impedance method (12.2 +/- SE 2.2 and 15.7 +/- SE 3.5 L/min, respectively) than by the CO2 rebreathing method (14.0 +/- SE 2.1 and 17.9 +/- SE 3.0 L/min, respectively), suggesting a systematic bias between the two methods of measurement. ⋯ Although the results were not significantly different between the two methods at rest and at 180 W, there was no acceptable agreement between the two methods probably because the CO2 rebreathing method at rest was more liable to show error due to the small arteriovenous CO2 difference, while the impedance method was less reliable at 180 W. Cardiac output by both methods correlated with O2 consumption, with the correlation being higher for cardiac output by the rebreathing method (r = 0.94) than for thoracic impedance (r = 0.88). The results suggest that the thoracic electrical bioimpedance method can be used for determination of cardiac output during mild or moderate levels of exercise in normal subjects.