Respiratory care
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The time and conditions may not be suitable for performing polysomnography (PSG) before urgent or emergent surgeries, for example, a coronary artery bypass graft. Unavailability in many centers, critical clinical situation, and inability to arrange a timely scheduled appointment are other limitations for PSG. In this study, we aimed to investigate if the STOP-BANG Questionnaire may predict obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) related postoperative pulmonary alterations during coronary artery surgery. ⋯ The STOP-BANG Questionnaire may predict the OSAS risk and OSAS-related pulmonary complications for patients who are candidates for a coronary artery bypass graft and unable to be evaluated with PSG before surgery due to technical or time-related limitations.
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Neuromuscular diseases (NMD) are a group of rare heterogeneous disorders that may be accompanied by respiratory muscle weakness. The simplest measurements of respiratory muscle strength are maximum inspiratory pressure (PImax) and maximum expiratory pressure (PEmax) of the mouth. Inspiratory muscle weakness can also be evaluated by the sniff test (sniff nasal inspiratory pressure method). This study tested the agreements in PImax and PEmax (measured by using a plethysmograph and portable equipment) as well as the correlations of PImax and PEmax by using the sniff nasal inspiratory pressure method, lung function, and arterial blood gas parameters in subjects with NMD. ⋯ Measurements of PImax and PEmax by using portable equipment were equivalent to those performed by using the accepted standard, plethysmography, in the subjects with NMD. Noninvasive evaluation of the sniff test with the portable equipment correlates with PImax, which makes this approach a good method for measuring the maximum strength of inspiratory muscles in patients with NMD.
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Standard mechanical insufflation-exsufflation (MI-E) therapy is applied with fast insufflation-exsufflation pressures to achieve high peak expiratory flows (PEF) and assist airway clearance. No attention is given to the resultant high peak inspiratory flows (PIF), although it may impair secretion removal. It has been proposed that an expiratory flow bias (ie, PEF higher than PIF) might be the key determinant for mucus clearance instead of the PEF alone. We examined the effects of 2 MI-E maneuvers, standard versus optimized, with fast and slow insufflation, respectively, along with different MI-E pressure settings on secretion displacement in 3 lung-impedance scenarios that simulated a patient on mechanical ventilation. ⋯ The optimized MI-E maneuver, applied with slow insufflation, resulted in a higher expiratory flow bias, which made the therapy more effective at moving mucus outward, compared with the standard MI-E maneuver, typically applied with fast insufflation.
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Common among patients with COPD is declining health-related quality of life (HRQOL). Although results of research identified some factors associated with HRQOL, resilience factors are yet to be fully investigated. ⋯ Resilience and confounding factors were of importance in the HRQOL of subjects with COPD. Thus, consultation with a medical professional, especially at discharge, who identifies, encourages, and approves of the patient's disease management abilities will enhance both resilience and HRQOL.
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Inspiratory muscle strength has been considered an important marker of ventilatory capacity and a predictor of global performance. A new tool has become available for dynamically evaluating the maximum inspiratory pressure (the S-Index). However, the proper assessment of this parameter needs to be determined. Thus, the aim of the present study was to investigate the number of inspiratory maneuvers necessary to reach a maximum and reliable S-Index and the influence of inspiratory muscle warm-up on this assessment. ⋯ Eight maneuvers were necessary to reach maximum and reliable values of the S-Index preceding inspiratory muscle warm-up or sham. Moreover, inspiratory muscle warm-up preceding S-Index assessment improved inspiratory muscle performance.