The European respiratory journal : official journal of the European Society for Clinical Respiratory Physiology
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Lung volume reduction surgery has become an accepted therapeutic option to relieve the symptoms of selected patients with severe emphysema. In a majority of these patients, it causes objective as well as subjective functional improvement. A proper understanding of the physiological determinants underlying these beneficial effects appears very important in order to better select patients for the procedure that is currently largely carried out on an empirical basis. ⋯ The exact mechanisms underlying the improvement in lung recoil, lung mechanics, and respiratory muscle function remain incompletely understood. Moreover, the effects of lung volume reduction surgery on gas exchange and pulmonary haemodynamics still need to be more fully investigated. An analysis of the characteristics of patients who do not benefit from the procedure and the development of an animal model for lung volume reduction surgery would probably help address these important issues.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Empirical treatment with fibrinolysis and early surgery reduces the duration of hospitalization in pleural sepsis.
The efficacy of three different treatment protocols was compared: 1) simple chest tube drainage (Drain); 2) adjunctive intrapleural streptokinase (IP-SK); and 3) an aggressive empirical approach incorporating SK and early surgical drainage (SK+early OP) in patients with pleural empyema and high-risk parapneumonic effusions. This was a nonrandomized, prospective, controlled time series study of 82 consecutive patients with community-acquired empyema (n=68) and high-risk parapneumonic effusions (n=14). ⋯ The mortality rate was also significantly lower in the SK+early OP than the Drain groups (3 versus 24%). It was concluded that an empirical treatment strategy which combines adjunctive intrapleural fibrinolysis with early surgical intervention results in shorter hospital stays and may reduce mortality in patients with pleural sepsis.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial
The presence and sequence of endotracheal tube colonization in patients undergoing mechanical ventilation.
Endotracheal tube colonization in patients undergoing mechanical ventilation was investigated. In the first part of this prospective study, the airway access tube was examined for the presence of secretions, airway obstruction and bacterial colonization, in cases undergoing extubation or tube change. In the second part of the study, the sequence of oropharyngeal, gastric, respiratory tract and endotracheal tube colonization was investigated by sequential swabbing at each site twice daily for 5 days in consecutive noninfected patients. ⋯ In the second part, it was noted that the sequence of colonization in patients undergoing mechanical ventilation was the oropharynx (36 h), the stomach (3660 h), the lower respiratory tract (60-84 h), and thereafter the endotracheal tube (60-96 h). Nosocomial pneumonia occurred in 13 patients and in eight cases identical organisms were noted in lower respiratory tract secretions and in secretions lining the interior of the endotracheal tube. The endotracheal tube of patients undergoing mechanical ventilation becomes colonized rapidly with micro-organisms commonly associated with nosocomial pneumonia, and which may represent a persistent source of organisms causing such infections.
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Pulmonary oedema has been described in swimmers and self-contained underwater breathing apparatus (Scuba) divers. This study reports three cases of haemoptysis secondary to alveolar haemorrhage in breath-hold divers. Contributory factors, such as haemodynamic modifications secondary to immersion, cold exposure, exercise and exposure to an increase in ambient pressure, could explain this type of accident. Furthermore, these divers had taken aspirin, which may have aggravated the bleeding.
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Multicenter Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Cardiorespiratory efficacy of thrombolytic therapy in acute massive pulmonary embolism: identification of predictive factors.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the contribution of clinical, angiographic and haemodynamic findings in predicting the cardiorespiratory efficacy of thrombolytic therapy in acute massive pulmonary embolism. Haemodynamic measurements and pulmonary angiography were performed before (H0) and 12 h after (H12) initiating thrombolytic therapy in 23 patients with acute massive pulmonary embolism (Miller index > or =20/34), and free of prior cardiopulmonary disease. Patients were divided into two groups according to the variation in oxygen delivery (deltaDO2) between H0 and H12: deltaDO2 >20% (responders, n=10) and deltaDO2 < or =20% (nonresponders, n=13). ⋯ Eight out of the 10 responders and two out of the 13 nonresponders had an Sv,O2 <55%, while nine of the responders and two of the nonresponders had a DO2 <350 mL x min(-1) x m(-2). In conclusion, the initial oxygen delivery and mixed venous oxygen saturation may predict the cardiorespiratory efficacy of thrombolytic therapy in acute massive pulmonary embolism. When pulmonary angiography is performed, measurement of mixed venous oxygen saturation may be a simple method by which to select patients for thrombolytic therapy.