Respiratory care
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Case Reports
Pneumothorax caused by aggressive use of an incentive spirometer in a patient with emphysema.
A 68-year-old man presented to the emergency department with a small pneumothorax following aggressive use of an incentive spirometer. The patient had a baseline chest radiograph consistent with emphysema. He was initially treated with oxygen in the emergency department, with resolution of his symptoms. ⋯ Inspiratory resistive breathing can cause large negative swings in intrathoracic pressure, which may result in mechanical stress of lung tissue. This is the first report of a secondary pneumothorax associated with use of an incentive spirometer. Patients with bullous emphysema should be counseled to avoid frequent high intensity maneuvers with an incentive spirometer if the potential benefits of the procedure are marginal.
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Current literature has been inconsistent in demonstrating that minimizing the duration of mechanical ventilation in very-low-birth-weight (VLBW) newborns reduces lung damage. ⋯ A combined BnCPAP strategy may contribute to a reduction of BPD, after adjusting for concurrent treatments.
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Editorial Comment
Physiologic dead space assessment: field of dreams or clinical paradigm?