Respiratory care
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Subjects with thoracic scoliosis were an important group in early studies of noninvasive ventilation (NIV). The aim of this study was to describe current rates of initiation of NIV and survival after initiation in this population. ⋯ Small numbers of subjects with scoliosis continued to present with respiratory failure. Once established on home NIV, around 40% survived ≥ 25 y. Long-term care will be needed for many years to come for this patient population.
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The assessment of diaphragmatic kinetics through tissue Doppler imaging (dTDI) was recently proposed as a means to describe diaphragmatic activity in both healthy individuals and intubated patients undergoing weaning from mechanical ventilation. Our primary aim was to investigate whether the diaphragmatic excursion velocity measured with dTDI at the end of a spontaneous breathing trial (SBT) was different in subjects successfully extubated versus those who passed the trial but exhibited extubation failure within 48 h after extubation. ⋯ In our setting, at the end of SBT, subjects who developed extubation failure within 48 h after extubation experienced a greater diaphragmatic activation compared with subjects who were successfully extubated. (ClinicalTrials.gov registration NCT03962322.).
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Observational Study
Monitoring Transcutaneously Measured Partial Pressure of CO2 During Intubation in Critically Ill Subjects.
The risk for severe hypoxemia during endotracheal intubation is a major concern in the ICU, but little attention has been paid to CO2 variability. The objective of this study was to assess transcutaneously measured partial pressure of CO2 ([Formula: see text]) throughout intubation in subjects in the ICU who received standard oxygen therapy, high-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy, or noninvasive ventilation for preoxygenation. We hypothesized that the 3 methods differ in terms of ventilation and CO2 removal. ⋯ [Formula: see text] variability during intubation is significant and differs with the method of preoxygenation. A decrease in [Formula: see text] after the beginning of mechanical ventilation was associated with postintubation hypotension. (ClinicalTrials.gov registration NCT0388430.).