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To Breathe or Not to Breathe

New England Journal of Medicine, 1977
Apneic spells, often observed in premature infants, are most frequent in those of lowest gestational age. They are much less common in infants born at term and are rarely noted among normal infants in the months after birth. Occasionally, however, apnea occurs in otherwise healthy infants several months old, who may be capable of resuscitation, and ...
Ivan D. Frantz, Mary Ellen Avery
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Work of breathing [PDF]

open access: possibleIntensive Care Medicine, 2006
The main goal of mechanical ventilation is to help restore gas exchange and reduce the work of breathing (WOB) by assisting respiratory muscle activity. Knowing the determinants of WOB is essential for the effective use of mechanical ventilation and also to assess patient readiness for weaning.
Belen Cabello, Jordi Mancebo
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Breathe

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 2023
AbstractThis is a personal essay about breasts. It focuses on my experiences as a young girl, moving through adolescence to a history of breast cancer in my family, including my mother’s breast cancer diagnosis. As a physician, patient, and wife, I reflect on the choices that I have to make and what this means for my identity as a woman and mother.
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Breath, Breathing and ‘Mum-Guilt’

2023
This chapter traces breath in mothers’ stories about bushfires and the COVID-19 pandemic to contribute to a theorization of breath and breathing as feminist politics (Ahmed, 2010; Górska, 2018; Irigaray, 2004). Drawing on feminist new materialist thought that recognizes breath as intra-active phenomena (Barad, 2007; Górska, 2016), we configure breath ...
Celia Roberts   +3 more
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To Breathe, or Not to Breathe: That Is the Question

2016
Central apnea and specifically Cheyne-Stokes respiration represents a very common phenomenon in the context of systolic heart failure (HF) and has been associated with several neurohormonal and hemodynamic alterations that connote a negative clinical profile that ultimately leads to adverse prognosis.
Michele Emdin   +3 more
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Conclusion: The Afterlives of Breath: Breathe – Breathe Again … Breathe Better

2018
The book concludes by focusing on Beckett’s ‘aesthetics of failure’ in his final piece of discursive writing “The Three Dialogues,” and considers the exhaustion of possibilities as a fundamental artistic strategy,  as well as the tension between abstraction and expression, the dilemma of artistic expression and the impossibility of expression in ...
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Breathing and Noh: Emotional Breathing

2009
Breathing is primarily involuntary and generated for metabolic and homeostatic purposes in the brainstem. However, changes in breathing can be voluntary or altered by various environmental stimuli. Therefore, breathing is categorized as either metabolic or behavioral.
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To breathe or not to breathe

Journal of Wilderness Medicine, 1994
Robert D, Truog, Jeffrey P, Burns
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