Search results for "ventilation"

showing 10 items of 476 documents

Use of autobilevel ventilation in patients with obstructive sleep apnea: An observational study.

2017

Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is the first-choice treatment for obstructive sleep-disordered breathing. Automatic bilevel ventilation can be used to treat obstructive sleep-disordered breathing when CPAP is ineffective, but clinical experience is still limited. To assess the outcome of titration with CPAP and automatic bilevel ventilation, the charts of 356 outpatients (obstructive sleep apnea, n = 242; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease + obstructive sleep apnea overlap, n = 80; obesity hypoventilation syndrome [OHS], n = 34; 103 females) treated for obstructive sleep-disordered breathing from January 2014 to April 2017 were reviewed. Positive airway pressure titration was …

AdultMaleCognitive Neurosciencemedicine.medical_treatmentAmbulatory managementRespiratory failureSettore MED/10 - Malattie Dell'Apparato RespiratorioBody Mass Index03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicinePositive airway pressuremedicineNon-invasive ventilationHumansContinuous positive airway pressureAgedRetrospective StudiesObesity hypoventilation syndromeSleep Apnea ObstructiveContinuous Positive Airway Pressurebusiness.industryGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseRespiration ArtificialConfidence intervalrespiratory tract diseasesObstructive sleep apnea030228 respiratory systemRespiratory failureAnesthesiaNon-invasive ventilationBreathingPatient ComplianceFemalebusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFollow-Up StudiesJournal of sleep research
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The EasyTube for Airway Management in Emergencies

2005

The EasyTube (EzT) is a new sterile, disposable airway device approved by the European Union in February 2003 and by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in January 2005. The two-lumen design of the EzT enables it to be used as an endotracheal tube or as a supraglottic emergency airway.To report the preliminary experiences with the EzT airway device in prehospital and in-hospital emergency airway management procedures.All airway management procedures involving the EzT were recorded for a period of 18 months.The EzT was successfully used to intubate 15 patients with unanticipated airway difficulties during either anesthesia induction or prehospital airway management. In all patients, the Ez…

AdultMaleEmergency Medical Servicesmedicine.medical_treatmentEmergency Nursinglaw.inventionlawIntubation IntratrachealHumansMedicinemedia_common.cataloged_instanceAnesthesia inductionEuropean unionAgedmedia_commonEndotracheal tubeAged 80 and overbusiness.industryTracheal intubationMiddle Agedrespiratory systemRespiration ArtificialMedian timeAnesthesiaVentilation (architecture)Emergency MedicineFemaleAirway managementbusinessAirwayPrehospital Emergency Care
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Tidal Volume Estimation during Helmet Noninvasive Ventilation: an Experimental Feasibility Study

2019

AbstractWe performed a bench (BS) and human (HS) study to test the hypothesis that estimation of tidal volume (VT) during noninvasive helmet pressure support ventilation (nHPSV) would be possible using a turbine driven ventilator (TDV) coupled with an intentional leak single-limb vented circuit. During the BS a mannequin was connected to a lung simulator (LS) and at different conditions of respiratory mechanics, positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP) levels and leaks (30, 50 and 80 L/min). All differences were within the 95% limits of agreement (LoA) in all conditions in the Bland-Altman plot. The overall bias (difference between VT measured by TDV and LS) was 35 ml (95% LoA 10 to 57 ml), …

AdultMaleLeakmedicine.medical_specialtylcsh:MedicineSettore MED/41 - AnestesiologiaPressure support ventilationTherapeuticsRespiratory physiologyManikinsArticlePositive-Pressure Respiration03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicineHealthy volunteersTidal VolumemedicineHumanslcsh:SciencePositive end-expiratory pressureTidal volumeMouthpieceVentilators Mechanicalacute respiratory failureMultidisciplinarybusiness.industrylcsh:RhelmetReproducibility of Resultsnoninvasive ventilation030208 emergency & critical care medicineEquipment DesignHealthy Volunteers030228 respiratory systemPreclinical researchRespiratory MechanicsCardiologyFeasibility Studieslcsh:QFemaleHead Protective DevicesNoninvasive ventilationbusinessScientific Reports
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Measurement of end-tidal carbon dioxide in spontaneously breathing patients in the pre-hospital setting. A prospective evaluation of 350 patients

2002

Monitoring of end-tidal carbon dioxide (EtCO(2)) is good clinical practice in the patient who is intubated and ventilated. This study investigated the EtCO(2) values in spontaneously breathing patients treated in a physician-staffed mobile intensive care unit (MICU). This article also discusses whether EtCO(2) monitoring may have an influence on therapeutic decisions by emergency physicians by providing additional information.Over a period of 6 months, 350 spontaneously breathing patients (162 males, 137 females) were treated and transported in our MICU and monitored using a LifePak 12 monitor (EtCO(2), respiratory rate, pO(2), blood pressure, heart rate). Only 299 were enrolled in the stud…

AdultMaleNarcoticsArtificial ventilationEmergency Medical ServicesSubarachnoid hemorrhageAdolescentRespiratory ratemedicine.medical_treatmentAmbulancesEmergency Nursinglaw.inventionSeizureslawHumansMedicineProspective StudiesTidal volumeAgedAged 80 and overbusiness.industryGlasgow Coma ScaleCarbon DioxideMiddle AgedSubarachnoid Hemorrhagemedicine.diseaseIntensive care unitAsthmaHypoglycemiaBlood pressureAnesthesiaEmergency MedicineBreathingFemaleCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessResuscitation
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Nocturnal oxygen enrichment in sleep apnoea.

2000

We hypothesized that a modest oxygen enrichment, rather than 100% oxygen supplementation as used in previous trials, could result in improvement in ventilatory and cardiac symptoms, in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA), without jeopardizing the chemostimulant ventilatory drive. This hypothesis was tested in five male patients with OSA in a single-blinded trial consisting of one night spent sleeping in control room air (control night), followed by one night spent sleeping while exposed to air with a 9% enriched oxygen content (oxygen-enriched night). Oxygen enrichment resulted in a significant shift in the oxygen saturation profile towards values of ≥ 95% and to decrease desatura…

AdultMaleOxygen enrichmentmedicine.medical_treatmentchemistry.chemical_elementHemodynamics030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyNocturnalBiochemistryOxygen03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineOxygen therapyMedicineHumansIn patientOxygen saturation (medicine)Sleep Apnea Obstructivebusiness.industryBiochemistry (medical)Cell BiologyGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedSleep in non-human animalsVentilationCircadian RhythmOxygenAffectchemistry030220 oncology & carcinogenesisAnesthesiabusinessThe Journal of international medical research
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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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