22 results match your criteria: "General Hospital of Annecy[Affiliation]"

Importance: Rocuronium and succinylcholine are often used for rapid sequence intubation, although the comparative efficacy of these paralytic agents for achieving successful intubation in an emergency setting has not been evaluated in clinical trials. Succinylcholine use has been associated with several adverse events not reported with rocuronium.

Objective: To assess the noninferiority of rocuronium vs succinylcholine for tracheal intubation in out-of-hospital emergency situations.

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Introduction: Bag-valve-mask ventilation is the first-line ventilation method during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Risks include excessive volume delivery and gastric insufflation, the latter increasing the risk of pneumonia. The efficacy of ventilation can also be reduced by airway closure.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines how recruitability affects patient response to positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), proposing a bedside method for estimation.
  • A single-breath technique was validated to measure the recruited lung volume and distinguish between patients with high and low recruitment responses to PEEP.
  • Results indicated a strong correlation between recruited volume measurements and a recruitment-to-inflation ratio, which is linked to oxygenation levels, highlighting the approach's potential for clinical use.
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Background: Occlusion pressure at 100 ms (P0.1), defined as the negative pressure measured 100 ms after the initiation of an inspiratory effort performed against a closed respiratory circuit, has been shown to be well correlated with central respiratory drive and respiratory effort. Automated P0.

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Background: The electrical activity of the crural diaphragm (Eadi), a surrogate of respiratory drive, can now be measured at the bedside in mechanically ventilated patients with a specific catheter. The expected range of Eadi values under stressed or assisted spontaneous breathing is unknown. This study explored Eadi values in healthy subjects during unstressed (baseline), stressed (with a resistance) and assisted spontaneous breathing.

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Introduction: Hemodialysis patients with contraindication to systemic anticoagulation require a heparin-free hemodialysis technique. Among several alternatives to heparin, predilution hemodiafiltration (HDF) is often used, albeit without any confirmation of its effectiveness.

Methods: Patients hospitalized in a nephrology ICU and hemodialysed for stage 5 CKD or AKI and with contraindication to systemic anticoagulation were randomized to either standard HD with a polysulfone membrane, or to predilution HDF with the same membrane.

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Fifteen recommendations and a therapeutic algorithm regarding the management of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) at the early phase in adults are proposed. The Grade of Recommendation Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) methodology has been followed. Four recommendations (low tidal volume, plateau pressure limitation, no oscillatory ventilation, and prone position) had a high level of proof (GRADE 1 + or 1 -); four (high positive end-expiratory pressure [PEEP] in moderate and severe ARDS, muscle relaxants, recruitment maneuvers, and venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation [ECMO]) a low level of proof (GRADE 2 + or 2 -); seven (surveillance, tidal volume for non ARDS mechanically ventilated patients, tidal volume limitation in the presence of low plateau pressure, PEEP > 5 cmH2O, high PEEP in the absence of deleterious effect, pressure mode allowing spontaneous ventilation after the acute phase, and nitric oxide) corresponded to a level of proof that did not allow use of the GRADE classification and were expert opinions.

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The optimization of ventilation during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is a broad field of research. Recent physiological observations in this field challenge the current understanding of respiratory and circulatory interactions. Thanks to different models available (bench, animal, human), the understanding of physiological phenomena occurring during CPR has progressed.

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Purpose Of Review: In the setting of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), classical physiological concept about ventilation become challenging. Ventilation may exert detrimental hemodynamic effects that must be balanced with its expected benefits. The risks of hyperventilation have been thoroughly addressed, even questioning the need for ventilation, emphasizing the need to prioritize chest compression quality.

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Rationale: End-tidal CO (EtCO) is used to monitor cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), but it can be affected by intrathoracic airway closure. Chest compressions induce oscillations in expired CO, and this could reflect variable degrees of airway patency.

Objectives: To understand the impact of airway closure during CPR, and the relationship between the capnogram shape, airway closure, and delivered ventilation.

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Background: Recommendations regarding ventilation during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) are based on a low level of scientific evidence. We hypothesized that practices about ventilation during CPR might be heterogeneous and may differ worldwide. To address this question, we surveyed physicians from several countries on their practices during CPR.

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Esophageal Manometry and Regional Transpulmonary Pressure in Lung Injury.

Am J Respir Crit Care Med

April 2018

2 Translational Medicine, Departments of Critical Care Medicine and Anesthesia, Hospital for Sick Children, and.

Rationale: Esophageal manometry is the clinically available method to estimate pleural pressure, thus enabling calculation of transpulmonary pressure (Pl). However, many concerns make it uncertain in which lung region esophageal manometry reflects local Pl.

Objectives: To determine the accuracy of esophageal pressure (Pes) and in which regions esophageal manometry reflects pleural pressure (Ppl) and Pl; to assess whether lung stress in nondependent regions can be estimated at end-inspiration from Pl.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the effects of chest compressions (CC) on ventilation and intrathoracic pressure (ITP) in Thiel-embalmed cadavers, comparing them to cardiac arrest patients and theoretical models.
  • It involved measuring respiratory mechanics, ITP variations, and airway pressure changes during CC, using equipment like an esophageal catheter in 11 cadavers and clinical data from 9 patients.
  • Results showed that the respiratory system's compliance and resistance in the cadavers were similar to the patients, and ITP changes during CC were influenced by PEEP, indicating potential airway closure issues at low lung volumes.
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Background: In pressure-controlled (PC) ventilation, tidal volume (V ) and transpulmonary pressure (P ) result from the addition of ventilator pressure and the patient's inspiratory effort. PC modes can be classified into fully, partially, and non-synchronized modes, and the degree of synchronization may result in different V and P despite identical ventilator settings. This study assessed the effects of three PC modes on V , P , inspiratory effort (esophageal pressure-time product, PTP), and airway occlusion pressure, P .

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Article Synopsis
  • Early exercise in critically ill patients can improve muscle strength and reduce systemic inflammation, but different ventilation modes (PSV vs. proportional) influence exercise outcomes.
  • In a study with ten patients, exercise under proportional ventilation resulted in less increase in oxygen consumption (VO) compared to PSV, indicating better efficiency during exercise.
  • Despite similar baseline pressures, proportional modes (PAV+ and NAVA) demonstrated improved work efficiency, with no significant impact on patient discomfort or other physical metrics.
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The optimal ventilation strategy during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is unknown. Chest compression (CC) generates circulation, while during decompression, thoracic recoil generates negative pressure and venous return. Continuous flow insufflation of oxygen (CFI) allows noninterrupted CC and generates positive airway pressure (Paw).

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Driving pressure and survival in the acute respiratory distress syndrome.

N Engl J Med

February 2015

From the Cardio-Pulmonary Department, Pulmonary Division, Heart Institute (Incor), University of São Paulo (M.B.P.A., E.L.V.C., C.R.R.C.), and the Research and Education Institute, Hospital Sirio-Libanês (E.L.V.C.) - both in São Paulo; the Departments of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics and Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON (M.O.M., T.E.S., M.B.), and the Keenan Research Centre for Biomedical Science, St. Michael's Hospital (A.S.S., L.B.), and the Interdepartmental Division of Critical Care Medicine and Department of Medicine, University of Toronto (A.S.S., L.B.), Toronto - all in Canada; the Massachusetts General Hospital Biostatistics Center, Harvard Medical School (D.A.S.), and Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care, and Pain Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School (D.T.) - both in Boston; the Basel Institute for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland (M.B.); the Department of Intensive Care and Hyperbaric Medicine, Angers University Hospital, Angers (A.M.), the Emergency Department, General Hospital of Annecy, Annecy (J.-C.M.R.), and INSERM UMR 955, Creteil (J.-C.M.R.) - all in France; and the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore (R.G.B.).

Background: Mechanical-ventilation strategies that use lower end-inspiratory (plateau) airway pressures, lower tidal volumes (VT), and higher positive end-expiratory pressures (PEEPs) can improve survival in patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), but the relative importance of each of these components is uncertain. Because respiratory-system compliance (CRS) is strongly related to the volume of aerated remaining functional lung during disease (termed functional lung size), we hypothesized that driving pressure (ΔP=VT/CRS), in which VT is intrinsically normalized to functional lung size (instead of predicted lung size in healthy persons), would be an index more strongly associated with survival than VT or PEEP in patients who are not actively breathing.

Methods: Using a statistical tool known as multilevel mediation analysis to analyze individual data from 3562 patients with ARDS enrolled in nine previously reported randomized trials, we examined ΔP as an independent variable associated with survival.

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