Search results for "tilat"

showing 10 items of 730 documents

High-frequency oscillatory ventilation and an interventional lung assist device to treat hypoxaemia and hypercapnia

2004

A male patient accidentally aspirated paraffin oil when performing as a fire-eater. Severe acute respiratory distress syndrome ( P a 2 / F 2 ratio 10.7 kPa) developed within 24 h. Conventional pressure-controlled ventilation (PCV) with high airway pressures and low tidal volumes failed to improve oxygenation. Hypercapnia ( P a 2 12 kPa) with severe acidosis (pH<7.20) ensued. Treatment with high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) and a higher adjusted airway pressure (35 cm H2O) improved the P a 2 / F 2 ratio within 1 h from 10.7 to 22.9 kPa, but the hypercapnia and acidosis continued. Stepwise reduction of the mean airway pressure (26 cm H2O), and oscillating frequencies (3.5 Hz), as …

AdultMalePartial Pressuremedicine.medical_treatmentHigh-Frequency VentilationMean airway pressureHypercapniaExtracorporeal Membrane OxygenationmedicineHumansHypoxiaTidal volumeAcidosisRespiratory Distress Syndromebusiness.industryHigh-frequency ventilationOxygenationrespiratory systemrespiratory tract diseasesOxygenAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineParaffinAnesthesiaBreathingmedicine.symptombusinessAirwayOilsHypercapniaBritish Journal of Anaesthesia
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Influence of ultra-long-term fatigue on the oxygen cost of two types of locomotion.

2000

The aim of this study was to examine the effects of fatigue induced by a 65-km ultramarathon on the oxygen cost of running (Cr) and cycling (Ccycl). The day before and immediately after the race, a group of nine well-trained male subjects performed two sub-maximal 4-min exercise bouts: one cycling at a power corresponding to 1.5 W · kg−1 body mass on an electromagnetically braked ergometer, and one running at 11 km · h−1 on a flat asphalt roadway. Before oxygen cost determinations, the subjects performed 12 “ankle” jumps at a given frequency that was fixed by an electronic metronome (2.5 Hz). From the non-fatigued to the fatigued condition, there was a significant increase in minute ventila…

AdultMalePhysiologyContact timeEnergetic costchemistry.chemical_elementMetronomeOxygenlaw.inventionRunningAnimal scienceOxygen ConsumptionlawPhysiology (medical)HumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineRespiratory exchange ratioFatigueChemistryPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral MedicineBicyclingMovement patternCyclingEnergy MetabolismPulmonary VentilationRespiratory minute volumeEuropean journal of applied physiology
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Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in exhaled breath as a marker of hypoxia in multiple chemical sensitivity

2021

Abstract In the history of diagnostics, breath analysis was one of the first method used until the breakthrough of biochemical testing technology. Today, breath analysis has made a comeback with the development of gas analyzers and e‐noses, demonstrating its power in its applicability for diagnosing a wide range of diseases. The physical basis of multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS), an emerging environmental disease, is difficult to understand because it is based on the scenario of chronic hypoxia, with a complex of chemical compounds that trigger the syndrome and result in multiple symptoms. The aim of this study was to investigate MCS by analyzing exhaled volatile organic compounds (VOCs)…

AdultMalePhysiologyhyperventilationmultiple chemical sensitivityORT test-VOCsBreath testingPhysiology (medical)medicineBiochemical testingHumansQP1-981Breath testVolatile Organic CompoundslactateChromatographymedicine.diagnostic_testChemistryhypoxiaVOCsHypoxia (medical)Middle Agedmedicine.diseaseChronic hypoxiaIncreased lactateORT test‐VOCsBreath gas analysisBreath TestsExhalationFemalemedicine.symptomMultiple chemical sensitivityBiomarkersPhysiological Reports
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Baroreflex control of heart rate during sleep in severe obstructive sleep apnoea: effects of acute CPAP

2006

Baroreflex control of heart rate during sleep (baroreflex sensitivity; BRS) has been shown to be depressed in obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA), and improved after treatment with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). Whether CPAP also acutely affects BRS during sleep in uncomplicated severe OSA is still debatable. Blood pressure was monitored during nocturnal polysomnography in 18 patients at baseline and during first-time CPAP application. Spontaneous BRS was analysed by the sequence method, and estimated as the mean sequence slope. CPAP did not acutely affect mean blood pressure or heart rate but decreased cardiovascular variability during sleep. Mean BRS increased slightly during CPAP…

AdultMalePulmonary and Respiratory MedicineBaroreceptorPolysomnographymedicine.medical_treatmentPositive pressureBaroreflexHeart RateHeart rateHumansMedicineContinuous positive airway pressureMechanical ventilationAnalysis of VarianceSleep Apnea ObstructiveContinuous Positive Airway Pressurebusiness.industryBaroreflexMiddle Agedrespiratory tract diseasesMean blood pressureBlood pressurebaroreceptors blood pressure hypoxia positive intrathoracic pressure sleepAnesthesiaLinear ModelsMED/09 - MEDICINA INTERNAbusinesscirculatory and respiratory physiologyEuropean Respiratory Journal
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Exercise intolerance at high altitude (5050 m): critical power and W'.

2011

Abstract The relationship between work rate (WR) and its tolerable duration (tLIM) has not been investigated at high altitude (HA). At HA (5050 m) and at sea level (SL), six subjects therefore performed symptom-limited cycle-ergometry: an incremental test (IET) and three constant-WR tests (% of IET WRmax, HA and SL respectively: WR1 70 ± 8%, 74 ± 7%; WR2 86 ± 14%, 88 ± 10%; WR3 105 ± 13%, 104 ± 9%). The power asymptote (CP) and curvature constant (W′) of the hyperbolic WR–tLIM relationship were reduced at HA compared to SL (CP: 81 ± 21 vs. 123 ± 38 W; W′: 7.2 ± 2.9 vs. 13.1 ± 4.3 kJ). HA breathing reserve (estimated maximum voluntary ventilation minus end-exercise ventilation) was also comp…

AdultMalePulmonary and Respiratory MedicinePhysiologyOxygen pulsepower-duration relationshipPhysical exerciseExercise intoleranceAltitude SicknessSettore BIO/09 - FisiologiaAnimal scienceExercise toleranceOxygen pulsemedicineHumansMaximum voluntary ventilationHypoxiaMathematicsAltitudeGeneral NeuroscienceHypoxia Exercise tolerance Power–duration relationship Lactate Oxygen uptake Oxygen pulsehypoxia; exercise tolerance; power-duration relationship; lactate; oxygen uptake; oxygen pulseMiddle AgedEffects of high altitude on humansIncremental testOxygen uptakeCritical powerExercise TestPhysical EnduranceBreathingLactateFemalePower–duration relationshipmedicine.symptomPulmonary Ventilation
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Is it possible to predict which patients with mild pneumonias will develop hypoxemia?

2009

SummaryUsually, mortality due to mild community-acquired pneumonias (CAP) (Pneumonia severity index (PSI) classes I–III) is low (<3%), but the appearance of hypoxemia significantly increases mortality. Our aim was to determine the clinical parameters associated with risk factors of developing hypoxemia in subjects with mild CAP (PSI I–III) and the clinical outcomes of the hypoxemic group.We analyzed clinical characteristics and the outcomes of patients with mild CAP and hypoxemia (PaO2/FiO2<300), in a prospective, multicenter cohort study of 1195 patients.Mild pneumonias (PSI I–III) were found in 645 cases (53.9%), of which 217 (33.6%) presented hypoxemia according to a PaO2/FiO2<300. Patie…

AdultMalePulmonary and Respiratory Medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentCommunity-acquired pneumoniamedicine.medical_treatmentPneumonia severity indexSeverity assessmentHypoxemiaHypoxemiaPulmonary Disease Chronic ObstructiveYoung AdultCommunity-acquired pneumoniaHumansMedicineHypoalbuminemiaHypoxiaAgedMechanical ventilationCOPDbusiness.industrySeptic shockPneumoniaMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaserespiratory tract diseasesSurgeryCommunity-Acquired InfectionsRadiographyPneumoniaRisk factorsAnesthesiaFemalemedicine.symptomEpidemiologic MethodsbusinessHypoalbuminemiacirculatory and respiratory physiologyRespiratory Medicine
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Chest wall mechanics during pressure support ventilation.

2005

Introduction During pressure support ventilation (PSV) a part of the breathing pattern is controlled by the patient, and synchronization of respiratory muscle action and the resulting chest wall kinematics is a valid indicator of the patient's adaptation to the ventilator. The aim of the present study was to analyze the effects of different PSV settings on ventilatory pattern, total and compartmental chest wall kinematics and dynamics, muscle pressures and work of breathing in patients with acute lung injury. Method In nine patients four different levels of PSV (5, 10, 15 and 25 cmH2O) were randomly applied with the same level of positive end-expiratory pressure (10 cmH2O). Flow, airway ope…

AdultMaleResearchMiddle AgedPressure support ventilation; Chest; Respiratory musclesPressure support ventilationPositive-Pressure RespirationRespiratory musclesRespiratory MechanicsChestHumansFemaleRespiratory InsufficiencyThoracic WallAged
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Performance of EasyBreath Decathlon Snorkeling mask for delivering continuous positive airway pressure

2021

AbstractDuring the COVID-19 pandemic, the need for noninvasive respiratory support devices has dramatically increased, sometimes exceeding hospital capacity. The full-face Decathlon snorkeling mask, EasyBreath (EB mask), has been adapted to deliver continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) as an emergency respiratory interface. We aimed to assess the performance of this modified EB mask and to test its use during different gas mixture supplies. CPAP set at 5, 10, and 15 cmH2O was delivered to 10 healthy volunteers with a high-flow system generator set at 40, 80, and 120 L min−1 and with a turbine-driven ventilator during both spontaneous and loaded (resistor) breathing. Inspiratory CO2 par…

AdultMaleRespiratory distress syndromeCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)DivingSciencemedicine.medical_treatmentSnorkelingArticle03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCPAPHealthy volunteersHumansMedicine030212 general & internal medicineContinuous positive airway pressureRespiratory systemPandemicsVentilators MechanicalMultidisciplinaryContinuous Positive Airway PressureSARS-CoV-2business.industryRespirationCo2 partial pressureQHealth careMasksRCOVID-19Respiration ArtificialHealthy VolunteersDiaphragm (structural system)030228 respiratory systemAnesthesiaBreathingMedicineFemalebusinessScientific Reports
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Two-rescuer CPR results in hyperventilation in the ventilating rescuer.

2005

The "Guidelines 2000 for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care--International Consensus on Science" recommend a tidal ventilation volume of 10 ml/kg body-weight without the use of supplemental oxygen during two-rescuer adult cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). This relates to a ventilation volume of about 6.4 l/min. Additionally, the first aid provider ventilating the victim will breathe for him/herself during the external chest compression period adding another 3.2 l/min of ventilation. Finally, a deep breath is recommended before each ventilation to increase the end-expiratory oxygen concentration of the air exhaled. To investigate the effects of these recommend…

AdultMaleResuscitationmedicine.medical_treatmentBlood PressureEmergency NursingDizzinesslaw.inventionlawHeart RateIntensive careHeart rateHyperventilationMedicineHumansHyperventilationCardiopulmonary resuscitationParesthesiaOxygen saturation (medicine)business.industryCarbon DioxideCardiopulmonary ResuscitationBlood pressureCaregiversAnesthesiaVentilation (architecture)Emergency MedicineFemalemedicine.symptomCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessResuscitation
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Deferral of assessment of pulmonary embolism

2007

We evaluated a simplified algorithm for safely postponing diagnostic imaging for pulmonary embolism (PE). At the index visit, patients were identified as being at high or low risk of PE; the former received full dosage low molecular weight heparin while the latter were left untreated until performance of diagnostic imaging (max 72 hours). During this period, no thromboembolic events occurred in low-risk patients (0/211, 0.% [upper 95% CI 0.9%]); only one event occurred in those at high-risk (1/125, 0.8% [upper 95% CI, 1.2]). Our study demonstrates that diagnostic imaging for PE can be safely deferred for up to 3 days.

AdultMaleRiskmedicine.medical_specialtyTime Factorsmedicine.drug_classLow molecular weight heparinThrombophiliaVentilation/perfusion ratioFibrin Fibrinogen Degradation ProductsPredictive Value of TestsThromboembolismD-dimerPrevalenceVentilation-Perfusion RatiomedicineHumansThrombophiliaAgedAged 80 and overVenous Thrombosisbusiness.industryRespiratory diseaseAnticoagulantsHematologyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePulmonary embolismSurgeryHospitalizationVenous thrombosisEarly DiagnosisTreatment OutcomePredictive value of testsFemalePulmonary EmbolismbusinessTomography Spiral ComputedAlgorithmsHaematologica
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