Aerosol delivery during high frequency jet ventilation: an MRI evaluation. (33/41)

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Inhaled prostacyclin and high-frequency oscillatory ventilation in a premature infant with respiratory syncytial virus-associated respiratory failure. (34/41)

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Jet or intensive care unit ventilator during simulated percutaneous transtracheal ventilation: a lung model study. (35/41)

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Airway trauma in a high patient volume academic cardiac electrophysiology laboratory center. (36/41)

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Vaporizer for volatile anesthetics during high-frequency jet ventilation. (37/41)

At present, the potent inhalation anesthetics cannot be used during high-frequency jet ventilation (HFJV) because a suitable vaporizer is not available. A vaporizer for enflurane during HFJV was designed, built, and tested, based on the principle of airblast atomization in which liquid enflurane is delivered to the vaporizer by an infusion pump. Eight dogs were kept anesthetized with enflurane for 2 h using this device. Vital signs and arterial blood gases were within normal limits during anesthesia. The concentration of vaporized enflurane, measured by mass spectrometry, could be reliably and accurately controlled within the clinical range at any minute volume by adjusting the infusion rate. Measurements of blood enflurane indicated that enflurane uptake could be adequately achieved.  (+info)

Transthoracic resection of esophageal cancer in patients with pulmonary dysfunction. Usefulness of high frequency ventilation during thoracotomy. (38/41)

Although curative resection of esophageal cancer has become a safe procedure, in patients with pulmonary dysfunction, postoperative complications remain a serious problem. Of 122 patients who had transthoracic resection of esophageal cancer, 27 had pulmonary dysfunction; in six, the forced vital capacity was less than 70% (minimum of 42.8%, mean +/- SD of 56.6 +/- 8.9%); in 18, forced expiratory volume for one second (FEV1%) was less than 70% (minimum of 34.6%, mean +/- SD of 60 +/- 10%); and in three, both forced vital capacity and forced expiratory volume was less than 70%. Two patients had undergone hemipneumonectomy before receiving resection of the esophagus. During the intrathoracic operative procedure, high frequency ventilation was used, providing good surgical exposure and contributing to a decrease of postoperative pulmonary complications. There were no deaths during the month after surgery. The survival curve of these patients was not significantly different from that of other patients who had had esophagectomy for cancer of the esophagus. These patients survived for an average of 24 months. The patient who survived the longest has been alive for more than 11 years.  (+info)

Alternatives to ECMO. (39/41)

The past decade has witnessed technological advancements which are unparalleled in neonatology. ECMO has been demonstrated to be a powerful rescue treatment, but has perhaps been overutilised and is not universally available. Alternative treatments have been shown to be both safe and efficacious in the management of infants with respiratory failure. Direct head to head clinical trials will probably be necessary to establish appropriate criteria and indications for use, given the wide diversity of pathophysiology these unique patients present.  (+info)

Defensive reflexes of the respiratory system in anaesthetized rabbits during high frequency jet ventilation. (40/41)

The defensive airway reflexes during high frequency jet ventilation (HFJV) were studied in anaesthetized, non-vagotomized (n = 16) and vagotomized (n = 11) rabbits. The animals were ventilated by a high frequency jet ventilator. Sneezing and coughing were evoked by mechanical stimulation of the airways. During HFJV spontaneous breathing was inhibited only in the non-vagotomized rabbits. Mechanical stimulation of the airways during HFJV evoked sneezing and coughing, in which the inspiratory component was inhibited. This inhibition occurred not only in defensive reflexes evoked from the regions with increased pressure (trachea, bronchi), but also from the nose. Vagotomy diminished but did not fully eliminate the changes in sneezing accompanying HFJV. The intensity of maximum expiratory efforts was not significantly affected by HFJV in both subgroups.  (+info)