Objective: Negative-pressure ventilation (NPV) by external cuirass (RTX; Deminax Medical Instruments Limited, London, UK) in intubated patients after cardiac surgery improves hemodynamics measured by pulmonary artery catheter (PAC)-based methods with increased cardiac output (CO) and stroke volume (SV) without changing the heart rate (HR). The less-invasive pressure recording analytical method (PRAM) (MostCare; Vytech Health srl, Padova, Italy) allows radial artery monitoring of CO, SV, SV variation, and cardiac cycle efficiency (CCE). The authors investigated the hypothesis that NPV improves PRAM-based hemodynamics and arterial blood gas analysis in extubated cardiac surgery patients.
Design: A clinical investigation.
Setting: A teaching hospital.
Participants: Twenty recently extubated cardiac surgery patients.
Interventions: Five consecutive experimental ventilation modalities lasted 5 minutes: (1) baseline (no cuirass ventilation), (2) mode 1 (cuirass ventilation with a continuous negative pressure of -20 cmH(2)O), (3) rest 1 (no cuirass ventilation), (4) mode 2 (cuirass ventilation in the control mode of 12 breaths/min at -20 cmH(2)O, and (5) rest 2.
Measurements And Main Results: PRAM parameters were analyzed throughout the final minute of each experimental modality, concluding with arterial blood gas sampling. NPV was well tolerated. HR was unchanged. Mode 2 SV was higher than baseline and rest 2. Mode 2 CO was higher than rest 2. Rest 2 systolic blood pressure was lower than rest 1 and mode 2. Increased CCE with NPV was not significant (p = 0.0696). Oxygenation and PCO(2) were unchanged although mode 2 pH increased.
Conclusions: Extubated sedated cardiac surgery patients comfortably tolerated NPV with unchanged HR. SV and pH increased.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1053/j.jvca.2012.05.021 | DOI Listing |
Cureus
December 2024
Anesthesiology, Ibra Hospital, Ibra, OMN.
Airway surgeries pose great challenges for the anesthesiologists as the airway is shared by them and the surgeon. It is of paramount importance to have control of the airway during such surgeries. Many techniques have been employed to provide uninterrupted oxygenation to the patient with or without the presence of a definitive airway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWellcome Open Res
May 2024
Institute of Clinical Trials & Methodology, Medical Research Council Clinical Trials Unit at University College London, London, England, WC1V 6J, UK.
Background: African children with cerebral malaria and seizures caused are at greater risk of poor outcomes including death and neurological sequelae. The agonal events are severe hypoventilation and respiratory arrest often triggered by seizures. We hypothesised that prophylactic anti-seizure medication (ASM) could avert 'spikes' of intracranial pressure during or following seizures and that adequate ventilation could be supported by biphasic Cuirass Ventilation (BCV) which requires no intubation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
April 2024
Department of Medical Physics and Informatics, University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary.
Abdominal inflation with CO is used to facilitate laparoscopic surgeries, however, providing adequate mechanical ventilation in this scenario is of major importance during anesthesia management. We characterized high-frequency percussive ventilation (HFPV) in protecting from the gas exchange and respiratory mechanical impairments during capnoperitoneum. In addition, we aimed to assess the difference between conventional pressure-controlled mechanical ventilation (CMV) and HFPV modalities generating the high-frequency signal intratracheally (HFPVi) or extrathoracally (HFPVe).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRespir Care
February 2024
Drs DeRusso and Alibrahim are affiliated with Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. Mr Miller is affiliated with Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina; and Respiratory Care Services, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. Ms Caccamise is affiliated with Respiratory Care Services, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
Negative-pressure ventilation (NPV) is a form of noninvasive ventilation that has been recently utilized in pediatric acute respiratory failure. Negative-pressure ventilators apply negative pressure onto the chest wall via a cuirass to recruit areas of atelectasis. Continuous negative extrathoracic pressure, the most common mode, is similar to CPAP, where negative pressure is maintained at a constant level throughout the respiratory cycle while patients initiate their own breaths and continue to breathe spontaneously throughout.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Anaesth
October 2023
Department of Anaesthesia, Centre of Head and Orthopaedics, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
The first modern intensive care unit was established in Copenhagen 70 yr ago. This cornerstone of anaesthesia was largely based on experience gained using positive pressure ventilation to save hundreds of patients during the polio epidemic in 1952. Ventilation approaches, monitoring techniques, and pharmacological innovations have developed to such an extent that cuirass ventilation, which proved inadequate during the polio epidemic, might now have novel applications for both anaesthesia and treatment of the critically ill.
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