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The concentration of carbon dioxide in end-tidal gas was compared with the tension in arterial or superior vena caval blood during thoracotomy in twelve patients. In six adults requiring pulmonary resection, one-lung anaesthesia did not change the difference between the two measurements. In six children in whom a systemic to pulmonary arterial anastomosis was being created to improve pulmonary blood flow impaired by cyanotic congenital heart disease, occlusion of the pulmonary artery caused in increase in the blood-end-tidal carbon dioxide gradient. This change was particularly marked in two neonates and was of sufficient magnitude to render end-tidal monitoring unreliable in these circumstances.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2044.1981.tb08675.xDOI Listing

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