collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30247273/beyond-low-tidal-volume-ventilation-treatment-adjuncts-for-severe-respiratory-failure-in-acute-respiratory-distress-syndrome
#1
REVIEW
Vikram Fielding-Singh, Michael A Matthay, Carolyn S Calfee
OBJECTIVES: Despite decades of research, the acute respiratory distress syndrome remains associated with significant morbidity and mortality. This Concise Definitive Review provides a practical and evidence-based summary of treatments in addition to low tidal volume ventilation and their role in the management of severe respiratory failure in acute respiratory distress syndrome. DATA SOURCES: We searched the PubMed database for clinical trials, observational studies, and review articles describing treatment adjuncts in acute respiratory distress syndrome patients, including high positive end-expiratory pressure strategies, recruitment maneuvers, high-frequency oscillatory ventilation, neuromuscular blockade, prone positioning, inhaled pulmonary vasodilators, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, glucocorticoids, and renal replacement therapy...
November 2018: Critical Care Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29135500/association-of-driving-pressure-with-mortality-among-ventilated-patients-with-acute-respiratory-distress-syndrome-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#2
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Hiroko Aoyama, Tommaso Pettenuzzo, Kazuyoshi Aoyama, Ruxandra Pinto, Marina Englesakis, Eddy Fan
OBJECTIVES: A recent post hoc analysis suggested that driving pressure may be more important than traditional ventilatory variables in determining outcome in mechanically ventilated patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to summarize the risk of mortality for higher versus lower driving pressure. DATA SOURCES: MEDLINE, EMBASE, PubMed, CINAHL, and Cochrane CENTRAL from inception to February 10, 2017. STUDY SELECTION: Studies including mechanically ventilated adult patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome, reporting driving pressure and mortality...
February 2018: Critical Care Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27203509/clinical-challenges-in-mechanical-ventilation
#3
REVIEW
Ewan C Goligher, Niall D Ferguson, Laurent J Brochard
Mechanical ventilation supports gas exchange and alleviates the work of breathing when the respiratory muscles are overwhelmed by an acute pulmonary or systemic insult. Although mechanical ventilation is not generally considered a treatment for acute respiratory failure per se, ventilator management warrants close attention because inappropriate ventilation can result in injury to the lungs or respiratory muscles and worsen morbidity and mortality. Key clinical challenges include averting intubation in patients with respiratory failure with non-invasive techniques for respiratory support; delivering lung-protective ventilation to prevent ventilator-induced lung injury; maintaining adequate gas exchange in severely hypoxaemic patients; avoiding the development of ventilator-induced diaphragm dysfunction; and diagnosing and treating the many pathophysiological mechanisms that impair liberation from mechanical ventilation...
April 30, 2016: Lancet
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28320439/mechanical-ventilation-in-obese-icu-patients-from-intubation-to-extubation
#4
REVIEW
Audrey De Jong, Gerald Chanques, Samir Jaber
This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2017. Other selected articles can be found online at https://ccforum.com/series/annualupdate2017 . Further information about the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine is available from https://www.springer.com/series/8901 .
March 21, 2017: Critical Care: the Official Journal of the Critical Care Forum
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27818334/neuromuscular-blockade-in-the-21st-century-management-of-the-critically-ill-patient
#5
REVIEW
Julian deBacker, Nicholas Hart, Eddy Fan
Neuromuscular blockings agents (NMBAs) have a controversial role in the ventilatory and medical management of critical illness. The clinical concern surrounding NMBA-induced complications stems from evidence presented in the 2002 clinical practice guidelines, but new evidence from subsequent randomized trials and studies provides a more optimistic outlook about the application of NMBAs in the ICU. Furthermore, changes in the delivery of critical care, such as protocolized care pathways, minimizing or interrupting sedation, increased monitoring techniques, and overall improvements in reducing immobility, have created a modern, 21st century ICU environment whereby NMBAs may be administered safely...
March 2017: Chest
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26045965/mechanical-ventilation-of-acute-respiratory-distress-syndrome
#6
REVIEW
Ryoichi Ochiai
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) has been intensively and continuously studied in various settings, but its mortality is still as high as 30-40 %. For the last 20 years, lung protective strategy has become a standard care for ARDS, but we still do not know the best way to ventilate patients with ARDS. Tidal volume itself does not seem to have an important role to develop ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI), but the driving pressure, which is inspiratory plateau pressure-PEEP, is the most important to predict and affect the outcome of ARDS, though there is no safe limit for the driving pressure...
2015: Journal of Intensive Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24645944/late-outcomes-of-a-randomized-trial-of-high-frequency-oscillation-in-neonates
#7
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Sanja Zivanovic, Janet Peacock, Mireia Alcazar-Paris, Jessica W Lo, Alan Lunt, Neil Marlow, Sandy Calvert, Anne Greenough
BACKGROUND: Results from an observational study involving neonates suggested that high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV), as compared with conventional ventilation, was associated with superior small-airway function at follow-up. Data from randomized trials are needed to confirm this finding. METHODS: We studied 319 adolescents who had been born before 29 weeks of gestation and had been enrolled in a multicenter, randomized trial that compared HFOV with conventional ventilation immediately after birth...
March 20, 2014: New England Journal of Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23753238/evaluation-of-a-new-index-of-mechanical-ventilation-weaning-the-timed-inspiratory-effort
#8
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Leonardo Cordeiro de Souza, Fernando Silva GuimarĂ£es, Jocemir Ronaldo Lugon
PURPOSE: The performance of most indices used to predict ventilator weaning outcomes remains below expectation. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a new weaning index, the timed inspiratory effort (TIE) index, which is based on the maximal inspiratory pressure and the occlusion time required to reach it. METHODS: This observational prospective study included patients undergoing mechanical ventilation. Patients ready to be weaned had their TIE index and 6 previously reported indices recorded...
January 2015: Journal of Intensive Care Medicine
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