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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of congenital central hypoventilation syndrome (CCHS) was undiagnosed until the girl in question was eight years old. Her development was normal, although with symptoms and signs of nocturnal hypoventilation. At the age of eight, with an interval of eight months, she suffered two attacks of acute respiratory insufficiency necessitating intubation and respiratory treatment. The episodes were considered to be
pneumonia
/septicaemia, but were in retrospect proven to be lung congestion as a consequence of
hypercapnia
and hypoxaemia. After the last episode CCHS was confirmed. The difficulties in diagnosing CCHS are discussed. After extubation she has been successfully treated with nocturnal nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV) with BiPAP (Respironic), and she has in this way avoided tracheostomy.
...
PMID:[Congenital central hypoventilation--treated with nocturnal biphasic intermittent respiration via nasal mask]. 774 Jun 31
Many sick neonatal foals have respiratory failure secondary to perinatal hypoxia, sepsis, or
pneumonia
. These foals require ventilatory support to prevent respiratory embarrassment and other complications associated with chronic hypoxia and
hypercapnia
. This article discusses practical aspects of ventilatory therapy, such as choosing a candidate for mechanical ventilation, choosing the proper ventilatory mode, placing a foal on a ventilator, maintaining a foal on mechanical ventilation, and weaning from mechanical ventilation. This article details some of the techniques that have been developed based on experiences with mechanical ventilation of neonatal foals and encourages other clinicians to consider ventilatory therapy as a feasible option.
...
PMID:Ventilatory support of the neonatal foal. 803 30
Asthma is a common and debilitating problem in children. Its many costs to society include morbidity, hospitalization and treatment expenses, and a rising mortality rate. This paper examines recent trends in therapy for status asthmaticus. Oxygen, inhaled beta-adrenergic agonists, and corticosteroids remain the cornerstones of therapy for the child with a severe exacerbation of asthma. Ipratropium bromide provides additional bronchodilatation in the patient who does not respond to standard therapy. Theophylline may have a role in chronic outpatient management of asthma, but the data supporting the addition of this medication in acute therapy for status asthmaticus are inconclusive. Antibiotics are only indicated in children with asthma complicated by infection, such as sinusitis or
pneumonia
. Magnesium sulfate and heliox may have a role in helping the asthmatic child who is critically ill and for whom other interventions have failed. Mechanical ventilation has many complications. The concept of permissive
hypercapnia
may be important in limiting barotrauma. Prevention of exacerbations of asthma include limiting environmental exposure to allergens and tobacco, using corticosteroids, and reinforcing compliance with therapy.
...
PMID:Update on the management of status asthmaticus. 881 99
Two patients with severe cytomegalovirus (CMV)
pneumonitis
were treated with permissive
hypercapnia
. Case 1 was a 66-year-old male who suffered ventricular septal perforation caused by acute myocardial infarction. Case 2 was a 54-year-old male who sustained a blunt chest injury. In both cases, hypoxia with reduction of lung compliance developed after their operations. They were mechanically ventilated and we limited their peak inspiratory pressure, disregarding
hypercapnia
(i.e. permissive
hypercapnia
). During permissive
hypercapnia
, the maximum arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PaCO2) was 96 mmHg in case 1 and 141 mmHg in case 2. Duration of
hypercapnia
(PaCO2 > 50mmHg) was 22 days in case 1 and 29 days in case 2. The patients were weaned from the respirator after two months of mechanical ventilation. In conclusion, the permissive
hypercapnia
was a useful method in the treatment of severe CMV
pneumonitis
.
...
PMID:[Two cases of severe cytomegalovirus pneumonitis treated with permissive hypercapnia]. 881 4
An 18-year-old, previously healthy male presented with bilateral
pneumonia
and acute respiratory failure with severe
carbon dioxide retention
. The presence of mild brainstem signs and hypoventilation led to the discovery of a platybasia, basilar invagination, and kinking of the medulla oblongata with early syrinx. He was operated upon but postoperatively was noted to have a mixed type of sleep apnea. This case illustrates the diagnostic challenge in acute respiratory failure in a previously healthy young person and the possible pathogenic mechanisms underlying it.
...
PMID:A cranio-cervical malformation presenting as acute respiratory failure. 893 17
Pulmonary contusion is a common lesion occurring in patients sustaining severe blunt chest trauma. Alveolar hemorrhage and parenchymal destruction are maximal during the first 24 hours after injury and then usually resolve within 7 days. The diagnosis of traumatic lung injury is usually made clinically with confirmation by chest x-ray films. The chest computed tomography scan is highly sensitive in identifying pulmonary contusion and may help predict the need for mechanical ventilation. Respiratory distress is common after lung trauma, with hypoxemia and
hypercarbia
greatest at about 72 hours. Although management of patients with pulmonary contusion is supportive,
pneumonia
and adult respiratory distress syndrome with long-term disability occur frequently.
...
PMID:Pulmonary contusion: review of the clinical entity. 919 84
Non-invasive continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) seems to decrease the need for intubation in patients with severe cardiogenic pulmonary oedema (CPO) in the intensive care unit. The goals of our study were to delineate indications for CPAP in the emergency department, and to confirm its usefulness in such a setting. We retrospectively assess the evolution of all patients ventilated under CPAP for an acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure over a 1-year period (n = 64 patients).
Hypercarbia
and respiratory acidosis were present in most patients with CPO (PaCO2 = 54.4+/-22.3 mmHg; pH = 7.27+/-0.13), according to respiratory exhaustion, although initial PaCO2 was low in the
pneumonia
group. There was a significant improvement of arterial blood gases after 1 hour of ventilation in the CPO group (PaO2 = 254.1+/-121.0 mmHg; PaCO2 = 44.0+/-12.6 mmHg; pH = 7.34+/-0.08; p < 0.0001 for both parameters). In the
pneumonia
group, oxygenation was also improved but with the persistence of a significant shunt (PaO2 = 157.6+/-84.4 mmHg). Fifty-four patients (84%) were considered as successfully ventilated under CPAP, with no need for intubation and a favourable evolution, mainly in the CPO group. No side effects were reported. In conclusion, CPAP is a useful and easy-to-use ventilatory device in the emergency department. It is now one of our first line treatments during prehospital and emergency care of patients with CPO.
...
PMID:Non-invasive continuous positive airway pressure in acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure--experience of an emergency department. 982 33
In uncontrolled studies, noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) was found useful in avoiding endotracheal intubation in patients with acute respiratory failure (ARF) caused by severe community-acquired
pneumonia
(CAP). We conducted a prospective, randomized study comparing standard treatment plus NPPV delivered through a face mask to standard treatment alone in patients with severe CAP and ARF. Patients fitting the American Thoracic Society criteria for severe CAP were included in presence of ARF (refractory hypoxemia and/or
hypercapnia
with acidosis). Exclusion criteria were: severe hemodynamic instability, requirement for emergent cardiopulmonary resuscitation, home mechanical ventilation or oxygen long-term supplementation, concomitant severe disease with a low expectation of life, inability to expectorate or contraindications to the use of the mask. Fifty-six consecutive patients (28 in each arm) were enrolled, and the two groups were similar at study entry. The use of NPPV was well tolerated, safe, and associated with a significant reduction in respiratory rate, need for endotracheal intubation (21% versus 50%; p = 0.03), and duration of intensive care unit (ICU) stay (1.8 +/- 0.7 d versus 6 +/- 1.8 d; p = 0.04). The two groups had a similar intensity of nursing care workload, time interval from study entry to endotracheal intubation, duration of hospitalization, and hospital mortality. Among patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), those randomized to NPPV had a lower intensity of nursing care workload (p = 0.04) and improved 2-mo survival (88.9% versus 37.5%; p = 0.05). We conclude that in selected patients with ARF caused by severe CAP, NPPV was associated with a significant reduction in the rate of endotracheal intubation and duration of ICU stay. A 2-mo survival advantage was seen in patients with COPD.
...
PMID:Acute respiratory failure in patients with severe community-acquired pneumonia. A prospective randomized evaluation of noninvasive ventilation. 1093 20
A 29-year-old Japanese man with Duchenne muscular dystrophy was placed on a mechanical ventilator support at 23 years of age and admitted to our hospital at 25 years of age. He had severe neck contracture deviated to the left side which resulted in dysphagia and microaspiration. At 29 years of age, he developed left lobar pneumonia accompanied by slight fever, back pain and a foul odor from the patient's sputum. Although the patient received broad spectrum antibiotics,
pneumonia
disseminated to the right lung. A week later, chest computed tomography was conducted which revealed tracheopulmonary-subcutaneous fistula, and a massive subcutaneous abscess with free air production. Drainage from the subcutaneous abscess was done through a chest tube; however, respiratory
hypercapnia
was not corrected and the patient died. From the culture of drained fluid, anaerobic bacteria including peptostreptococcus sp. were detected. This tracheopulmonary-subcutaneous fistula was thought to be caused by chronic microaspiration of mouth anaerobes, mechanical injury of the trachea under long term ventilator support, and decreased deep back muscle bulk with substitution of adipose tissue around the chest.
...
PMID:[Tracheopulmonary-subcutaneous fistula associated with anaerobic subcutaneous abscess on mechanical ventilator support in a patient with Duchenne muscular dystrophy]. 1100 35
Respiratory complications account for the majority of deaths occurring in patients suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Patients normally succumb to their illness within an average of 3 to 5 years from the time of diagnosis from complications such as hypoventilation, hypoxemia,
hypercarbia
, aspiration, and other
pneumonia
and pulmonary emboli. Although invariably disabling, ALS need not be fatal if respiratory involvement is detected early, which will allow sufficient time to discuss and implement treatment options. The recently published American Academy of Neurology guidelines for the management of ALS recommends the following: Serial measures of pulmonary function to guide management and determine prognosis. Noninvasive ventilatory support--an effective initial therapy for symptomatic chronic hypoventilation and prolonged survival. Invasive ventilatory support when long-term survival is the goal and noninvasive support is no longer sufficient. Physicians respect the right of the patient to choose, refuse, or withdraw ventilatory support. Liberal use of opiates and anxiolytics to relieve dyspnea and anxiety when ventilatory support is refused or withdrawn.
...
PMID:Respiratory Failure or Impairment in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. 1118 Jul 50
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