Objective: Atelectatic alveoli can be recruited or kept open either by sustained inflation maneuvers or by positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP). Little is known about potential interactions between both approaches. Especially, it is not known whether the recruiting effect of sustained inflation maneuvers is maintained in combination with a low PEEP, as suggested recently. In an attempt to answer this question, we combined sustained inflation maneuvers with either high or low PEEP. Both approaches were compared with a strategy likely to result in alveolar atelectasis and with another ensuring adequate alveolar recruitment by adjustment of PEEP alone.
Design: Randomized block design.
Setting: Laboratory.
Subjects: Isolated perfused rabbit lungs (n = 28).
Interventions: The lungs were ventilated with a tidal volume of 8 mL/kg. After stabilization, the lungs were randomized to one of four ventilatory strategies, which then were followed for 120 mins: a) PEEP 1 cm H2O (PEEP1, negative control); b) PEEP 1 cm H2O and 30 sec-sustained inflations (20 cm H2O) every 30 mins (SI-1); c) PEEP 3 cm H2O combined with sustained inflations (SI-3); and d) PEEP repeatedly adjusted following a previously established strategy ensuring full alveolar recruitment (DYN, positive control).
Measurements And Main Results: Distribution of ventilation and perfusion (Va/Q distribution) was analyzed by the multiple inert gas elimination technique. Volume-dependent compliance within the tidal volume was determined by using the slice method. Shunt and Va/Q mismatch significantly differed between SI-1 and SI-3, indicating full alveolar recruitment only in the latter. Data of SI-1 did not differ substantially from those of PEEP1, and data obtained in SI-3 were similar to those of DYN.
Conclusions: First, enduring alveolar recruitment by sustained inflation maneuvers is only possible when the alveoli are stabilized thereafter by sufficient PEEP. Second, a ventilation strategy that uses repeated sustained inflations on a comparably high PEEP may not be superior to adequate adjustment of PEEP alone.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00003246-200207000-00033 | DOI Listing |
J Craniofac Surg
March 2025
Division of Plastic Surgery, Children's Hospital Colorado.
Background: Craniosynostosis requires early diagnosis and intervention to mitigate the risks of impaired cranial growth; however, patients with Medicaid face treatment delays for craniosynostosis care. Medicaid reimbursement rates have failed to match the inflation rate in medicine, remaining relatively static in many surgical fields. This study investigates Medicaid reimbursement and the longitudinal impact of economic inflation on reimbursement for craniosynostosis care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFERJ Open Res
March 2025
Paediatric Intensive Care Unit, Department of Woman's and Child's Health, University of Padua, Pafua, Italy.
Introduction: In severe paediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (PARDS) lung recruitment manoeuvres (LRMs) may be applied to improve oxygenation, but their application is still controversial. The aim of this survey is to report what the current practice is across European paediatric intensive care units (PICUs).
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Cleft Palate Craniofac J
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Division of Plastic Surgery, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora, CO, USA.
Objective: As Medicaid continues to expand, it remains unclear if reimbursement rates for cleft care are keeping up with the national economy. The purpose of this study is to determine how financial trends in cleft lip and palate repair reimbursements compare to annual changes in the U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChildren (Basel)
February 2025
Centre for the Studies of Asphyxia and Resuscitation, Neonatal Research Unit, Royal Alexandra Hospital, 10240 Kingsway Avenue NW, Edmonton, AB T5H 3V9, Canada.
Current resuscitation guidelines recommend a 3:1 chest compression/ventilation (C:V) ratio, which is associated with high morbidity and mortality. An alternative might be continuous chest compression superimposed with high distending pressure or sustained inflation (CC + SI). To compare CC + SI with 3:1 C:V during neonatal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The (STAR*D) trial was designed to give guidance in selecting the best next-step treatment for depressed patients who did not remit during their first, and/or subsequent, antidepressant trial, with up to four trials per patient. Our prior research documented protocol violations which inflated STAR*D's reported cumulative remission rate by 91.4%.
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