Time course of circulation, oxygen transport and consumption parameters were studied in patients with parenchymatous pulmonary diseases during their transfer to spontaneous respiration under conditions of pressure support ventilation after long forced ventilation of the lungs. The oxygen cost of respiration can serve as a reliable criterion of respiratory support adequacy when the use of a respirator is discontinued. With oxygen cost of respiration at least 14%, a decrease of respiratory support is hardly possible without decompensation of the respiration system and circulation, which dictates monitoring of this parameter during transfer of patients to spontaneous respiration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMechanical ventilation of the lungs (MVL) with positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP) is difficult in patients with unilateral lung damage because of uneven distribution of volumes and pressures in the involved and intact lungs. Harmful effects are easier manifested under such conditions. Selective MVL with selective PEEP is widely used abroad for optimizing MVL, but this method is rather expensive and is not devoid of shortcomings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relationship between the mean pressure in the trachea, generated in mechanical ventilation of the lungs (Ptr.m), and normal arterial oxygenation is linear in ventilated patients with severe bilateral acute parenchymatous damage to the lungs. Under conditions of mechanical ventilation of the lungs (MVL) with regulated volume, constant end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) and inspiratory pause (eIP) are effective methods for regulating Ptr.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe need in making the process of transfer of patients to spontaneous respiration using ventilation of the lungs with inspiratory pressure support (VLIPS) after prolonged mechanical ventilation of the lungs prompted the authors to analyze the prognostic value of criteria traditionally used by the physician to cease or decrease the respiratory support (vital capacity of the lungs, peak spontaneous flow, PaO2, etc.) and the P0.1 occlusion pressure in the airways at the end of the first 100 msec of inhalation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnesteziol Reanimatol
September 1994