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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (hypercapnia)
7,939 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two uses of intermittent positive pressure can be distinguished: one supports inhalotherapy and the other longterm assisted ventilation. The apparatus can be connected to the patient either through mouth-piece or by tracheostomy. The main factors involved in the indication of assisted ventilation are the number of acute failures, hypoxemia, hypercapnia, cor pulmonale. In our department, 53 patients were kept under prolonged supervision before a decision was made to use assisted ventilation or not. This attitude seems absolutely necessary. An oxygen test of several hours provides very useful information. Finally, the authors review the indication of various ventilation methods (tracheostomy, oral) in relation to different chronic respiratory insufficiency etiologies (ie., chronic obstructive broncho-pneumonia, restrictive syndrome).
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PMID:[Preliminary report and indications of assisted ventilation at home (author's transl)]. 39 49

A retrospective analysis of 811 patients admitted to the hospital for status asthmaticus over a nine-year period was performed. Eight patients died, and 19 required mechanical ventilation. All persons who died of status asthmaticus were in the group that required mechanical ventilation. In 12 of the patients who received ventilation, no definite cause for the acute exacerbation could be identified, although initial arterial blood gas analyses showed profound hypoxemia, hypercapnia, and acute respiratory acidosis. Seventy-eight major complications occurred during mechanical ventilation. Pneumothorax, endotracheal tube malfunction, alveolar hypoventilation on the ventilator, and pneumonia were associated with decreased survival. Mucous plugging of the airways was found in all autopsied patients. Mechanical ventilation in status asthmaticus is a life-support system associated with substantial morbidity and should be instituted only when it becomes evident that maximal medical therapy will not be efficacious.
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PMID:Status asthmaticus. A nine-year experience. 57 61

Since February 1990, five children, aged 10 days to 6.5 years, were treated with extracorporeal lung support at our hospital for acute, unrelenting pulmonary failure. Two had viral pneumonia: one with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) bronchiolitis, and one with herpes simplex virus pneumonia, encephalitis, and disseminated intravascular coagulation. One presented with a febrile illness followed by a pulmonary hemorrhage. Two patients had adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) complicating severe systemic illnesses, toxic epidermal necrolysis in one and cat scratch disease with encephalitis in the other. All children had diffuse parenchymal lung disease by chest x-ray. On maximum medical management all patients were developing carbon dioxide retention and progressive hypoxemia, exceeding previously established NIH study criteria for extracorporeal treatment. Three children (10 days, 2 months, 13 months) were placed on venoarterial support and two children (20 months and 6.5 years) were placed on venovenous extracorporeal support (ECCO2R). Three of the five had open lung biopsies performed, which showed findings consistent with a moderate to severe cellular phase of ARDS. No viral inclusions were found in the patient with RSV infection. One hundred percent immediate survival was achieved in this patient population. Average duration of support was 330 hours (range, 89 to 840). Following completion of extracorporeal support, all children were successfully weaned from the ventilator with an average time to extubation of 23.2 days (range, 2 to 58 days). One child died of congestive heart failure following palliative surgery for a complex noncyanotic congenital cardiac lesion 35 days after successfully weaning from extracorporeal support for an acute febrile illness and pulmonary hemorrhage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Treatment of acute pulmonary failure with extracorporeal support: 100% survival in a pediatric population. 132 87

A 20-year-old male, recovering from post-traumatic ARDS, subsequently developed pneumonia with extreme hypercapnia (PaCO2 max 19.4 kPa) and hypoxemia (PaO2 min 5.1 kPa), in spite of maximal mechanical ventilation. Hypothermia was induced by surface cooling, reducing the body temperature from 40 degrees C to a mean of 33.3 degrees C. Buffer infusion (1375 mmol) during the first 2 days increased base excess from 3 to 22 mmol/l and pH from 7.16 to a median value of 7.30. Active cooling was discontinued on day 11. Weaning from the ventilator was possible 9 days later and the patient subsequently recovered fully. Combined use of hypothermia and buffering might offer an alternative to extracorporeal lung assist (ECLA) and facilitate a reduction of barotrauma and oxygen toxicity during mechanical ventilation.
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PMID:Combined use of hypothermia and buffering in the treatment of critical respiratory failure. 163 75

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has been used for 20 years in neonates and children with cardiac and respiratory failure. The number of neonates treated with ECMO has increased exponentially, but the number of older children treated is small. The selection and exclusion criteria for pediatric ECMO are poorly defined, and the results vary because of variable selection criteria and institutional experience with the technique. In order to help define the role of pediatric ECMO, we reviewed our experience in noneonatal pediatric respiratory failure. We have treated 22 patients ranging in age from 1 to 105 months and ranging in weight from 3 to 35 kg. Eighteen patients met the criteria for adult respiratory distress syndrome, two had respiratory syncytial virus pneumonia, and one had severe barotrauma complicating the management of reactive airway disease. All patients were considered by the referring institutions and by us to be failing conventional management as evidenced by hypoxia, hypercarbia, excessive ventilatory pressures, or progressive barotrauma. All were considered likely to die with continued conventional management. Sixteen of the 22 patients had complications (73%), but half of the last 10 patients had no complications. Hemorrhagic complications occurred in 12 patients. Mechanical complications included membrane failure, raceway rupture, pump malfunction, and improper cannula positioning. Other complications included culture-proven infection and renal failure. Eleven of the 22 patients survived (50%); nine of the last 12 survived (75%). These results suggest that ECMO may be a useful technique in selected pediatric patients with respiratory failure. Survival and complication rates improve as experience with the technique increases.
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PMID:Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for nonneonatal respiratory failure. 203 Apr 80

Patients with chronic obstructive bronchitis and lingering pneumonia and healthy subjects were examined. Indices featuring lung ventilation function, blood gases and its acid-base state were analysed in the process of a series of inhalation tests with a hypercapnic mixture. It was found that the use of 2% hypercapnic mixture in aerosol therapy can ensure deeper permeability into the airways due to a rise of the respiration amplitude. Hypercapnic mixture-containing aerosol therapy is not advisable for the patients with a serious respiratory insufficiency since it might cause an increase in the blood hypercapnia.
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PMID:[The rationale for the use of a hypercapnic mixture in the aerosol therapy of patients with diseases of the lungs]. 211 53

There is a resurgence of interest in single- and double-lung transplantation for end-stage disease. An experience with six double-lung and three single-lung transplants is reported. The lungs were procured from a distance of up to 600 miles and the heart was shared with another team for transplantation in seven of nine instances. The operative mortality rate was 33%. Early transplant infections of donor origin were lethal. Late transplant pneumonitis was well tolerated and recovery was the rule. Three of nine cases had significant tracheal suture line stenosis and were managed conservatively. A technique of bronchial artery implantation using a conduit tailored from donor aorta is described. Transplant rejection was easily diagnosed and treated. Other notable complications included occasional massive pleural fluid loss, temporary space problem, and a delay in the 'resetting' of chemoreceptors resulting in moderate post-transplant hypercarbia accompanied by episodes in which the patient felt hypoxemic despite the maintenance of excellent levels of blood gases. A comprehensive rehabilitation program begun before operation is essential for success.
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PMID:Single- and double-lung transplantation. Problems and possible solutions. 235 31

The ability to manage acute airway obstruction can be life-saving. Airway relief should be expeditious and immediate, with low morbidity and mortality. It should not interfere with future definitive therapy. In patients with terminal malignancy, it should be economical in cost and should minimize hospitalization. We used biopsy forceps and the rigid bronchoscope to "core out" 56 patients with obstructing airway neoplasms. The location of the obstruction was trachea in 16 patients, carina in 24, main bronchi in 8, and distal airway in 8. Improvement in the airway was accomplished in 90% of patients. A single bronchoscopy was sufficient in 96%. Nineteen complications occurred in 11 patients: pneumonia in 5, bleeding in 3, pneumothorax in 2, hypoxia/hypercarbia in 2, arrhythmias in 6, and laryngeal edema in 1. There were four deaths within 2 weeks of core-out related to respiratory failure. Further therapy consisted of resection in 28.6% (tracheal in 9, carinal in 3, pulmonary in 4), irradiation alone or in combination with chemotherapy in 60.7%, and no therapy in 10.7%. Palliation of symptoms and establishment of an airway in acute obstruction is the goal. Survival depends on the effectiveness of the proposed treatment. We find this time-honored method superior to use of the laser.
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PMID:Endoscopic relief of malignant airway obstruction. 247 87

The aim of the present study was to evaluate clinical and laboratory features of acute severe asthma (ASA) in children and their outcome of mechanical ventilation (MV). Twenty ASA episodes admitted to the hospital with hypercapnia (HC) and/or lost of consciousness (LC) and/or severe non reversible bronchial obstruction (NRBO) were retrospectively studied. Long lasting asthma and frequent admissions were registered in the majority of cases. In HC group (14 cases) the PaCO2 was 70 +/- 26 mmHg (X +/- SD). Hypercapnia was associated with intravenous administration of sodium bicarbonate in three cases. In NRBO group (4 cases) the acute response to salbutamol brought out during the first week of treatment and it was associated with increased basal forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1). Ten cases were treated with MV because of hypercapnia and/or lost of consciousness, seizures (one case), and cardiac arrest (one case). The later patient died in 24 hours. Pneumothorax and atelectasis (one case), and pneumonia (one case) were the complications of mechanical ventilation. Three cases with PaO2 less than 60 mmHg and four cases with FEV1 less than 60% were sent home. After 27 days one patient from the later group had a new episode of ASA. Arterial gases and expiratory flow measurements are paramount tools for close monitoring of children with ASA. It is suggested that normalization of those parameters are an essential criteria for discharging those patients.
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PMID:[Severe asthmatic crisis in children]. 265 54

During the winter of 1986-1987, 64 children with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection were admitted to our hospital. The diagnosis was made by direct immunofluorescent antibody technique. Twenty-three children (36%) needed intensive care treatment. Nearly 11 (52%) had a preexisting disease state, identified as a risk factor i.e., prematurity (n = 8), bronchopulmonary dysplasia (n = 2), congenital heart disease (n = 1). Twelve patients (50%) were intubated and ventilated. Conditions for intubation and ventilation were repetitive apnea with or without bradycardia (n = 4), clinical deterioration (n = 3) or hypercarbia (n = 5). Seventy-five percent of the patients who needed intensive care management were under three months of age compared to 34% of the children who were admitted to the clinical ward. The mean age for ventilated patients was 7.9 weeks. The mean duration of ventilation was 5.5 days. Volume controlled ventilation was initially applied to all patients. Pulmonary complications (atelectasis, pneumonia, pneumothorax or adult respiratory distress syndrome) were present in 15 (65%) IC patients. Nine (39%) of them also had symptoms of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (IADHS). Only two patients had symptoms of IADHS and two others had convulsions. Three children (5%) died as a result of respiratory insufficiency. Two of these infants belonged to the risk group.
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PMID:Respiratory syncytial virus infections in children admitted to the intensive care unit. 281 76


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