Articles: ventilators.
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Pediatr Crit Care Me · Nov 2024
Airway Anomalies in Pediatric Patients After Surgery for Congenital Heart Disease: Single-Center Retrospective Cohort Study, Taiwan 2017-2020.
Airway anomalies increase risk of morbidity and mortality in postoperative pediatric patients with congenital heart disease (CHD). We aimed to identify airway anomalies and the association with intermediate outcomes in patients undergoing surgery for CHD. ⋯ In our single-center retrospective study, 2017-2020, between one-in-five and one-in-four of our postoperative CHD patients undergoing an airway evaluation had airway anomalies. Factors associated with greater odds of airway anomaly included, those with premature birth, or genetic syndromes, and preoperative ventilator use. Overall, in patients undergoing airway evaluation, the finding of an airway anomalies was associated with longer postoperative intubation duration and greater hazard of intermediate mortality.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Nov 2024
Case ReportsCompassionate Ventilator Release In Patients With Neuromuscular Disease: A Two-Case Comparison.
Dyspnea, the subjective sensation of breathlessness, is a distressing and potentially traumatic symptom. Dyspnea associated with mechanical ventilation may contribute to intensive care unit (ICU) associated post-traumatic stress disorder and impaired quality of life. Dyspnea is both difficult to alleviate and a cause of significant distress to patients, their loved ones, and care providers People living with neuromuscular disease, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) or myasthenia gravis (MG), often rely on a ventilator at late stages of illness due to complications of progressive respiratory muscle weakness and paralysis. ⋯ Although limited recommendations have been published specific to patients with ALS, no guidelines currently exist for the terminal liberation from mechanical ventilation in patients experiencing respiratory muscle insufficiency from a neuromuscular disease. Further research on this topic is needed, including creation of a protocol for ventilator release in patients with neuromuscular disease. The following case reports detail the dissimilar EOL experiences of two patients with different forms of neuromuscular disease.
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As a mechanosensitive cation channel and key regulator of vascular barrier function, endothelial transient receptor potential vanilloid type 4 (TRPV4) contributes critically to ventilator-induced lung injury and edema formation. Ca2+ influx via TRPV4 can activate Ca2+-activated potassium (KCa) channels, categorized into small (SK1-3), intermediate (IK1), and big (BK) KCa, which may in turn amplify Ca2+ influx by increasing the electrochemical Ca2+ gradient and thus promote lung injury. The authors therefore hypothesized that endothelial KCa channels may contribute to the progression of TRPV4-mediated ventilator-induced lung injury. ⋯ KCa channels, specifically IK1, act as amplifiers of TRPV4-mediated Ca2+ influx and establish a detrimental feedback that promotes barrier failure and drives the progression of ventilator-induced lung injury.
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Tracheostomy bypasses physical barriers that decrease microbial access to the lower airway, which can lead to changes to the lung microbiota. Patients often become chronically colonized with potential pathogens. This study described the incidence and prevalence of specific organisms in a 5-y cohort of children with tracheostomy. ⋯ This retrospective single-site descriptive cohort analysis of pediatric subjects with long-term tracheostomy identified trends in microbial prevalence. The presence of specific bacterial strains was more likely to follow individual subject trajectories than sequential appearance of species. P. aeruginosa was associated with G-tube and Streptococcus species with upper-airway obstruction. Ventilator dependence was not associated with specific microbial profiles.