Anaesthesia
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Observational Study
Evaluation of N95 respirators, modified snorkel masks and low-cost powered air-purifying respirators: a prospective observational cohort study in healthcare workers.
Disposable N95 respirator masks are the current standard for healthcare worker respiratory protection in the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to shortages, qualitative fit testing can have low sensitivity for detecting poor fit, leading to inconsistent protection. Multiple groups have developed alternative solutions such as modified snorkel masks to overcome these limitations, but validation of these solutions has been lacking. ⋯ N95s and snorkel masks with high-efficiency filters failed one or more testing steps in 59% and 20% of participants, respectively, and 24% and 12% failed overall fit factors, respectively. The snorkel masks with powered-air purifying respirators had zero individual or overall failures. N95 and snorkel masks with high-efficiency filter respirators were found to provide inconsistent respiratory protection in healthcare workers.
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Observational Study
Observational study of pre-operative intravenous iron given to anaemic patients before elective cardiac surgery.
Cardiac surgical patients with anaemia experience increased morbidity and mortality. Iron deficiency is the most common cause of pre-operative anaemia in this group. We designed and implemented the Cardiff Pathway, a pre-assessment and treatment pathway to identify cardiac surgical patients with anaemia and iron deficiency. ⋯ Twenty-one (7%) of the non-anaemic group became newly anaemic waiting for surgery. The Cardiff Pathway reliably identified patients with anaemia and iron deficiency. Anaemic patients who had their Hb restored to normal after treatment required less blood peri-operatively and over half of them required no transfusion at all.
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Negative-pressure ventilation may have several advantages compared with positive-pressure ventilation. Negative-pressure ventilation simulates natural lung movements, does not require tracheal intubation and may reduce the incidence of barotrauma and adverse cardiovascular events. A group of engineers, doctors and nurses designed and bench-tested the Exovent, a new, lightweight, torso-only, negative-pressure ventilatory support system. ⋯ The Exovent allowed good nursing and monitoring access and was comfortable in both the semi-recumbent and prone positions. The Exovent delivered effective continuous negative extra-thoracic pressure and negative-pressure ventilation plus negative end-expiratory pressure to healthy adults. Further trials are needed to investigate the clinical utility of the device.