Results 301 to 310 of about 139,339 (348)
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Continuous Positive Airway Pressure
1991Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) ventilation means spontaneous breathing with positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP). In this mode, ventilation depends upon the patient, while the machine serves only to maintain an airway pressure which is constantly higher than atmospheric pressure, and to control oxygen concentration, temperature, and ...
BRASCHI, ANTONIO, IOTTI, GIORGIO ANTONIO
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Continuous positive airway pressure: new generations
Clinics in Chest Medicine, 2003Automatic positive airway pressure devices are the most technologically advanced positive airway pressure devices available for use in OSA. Although heterogeneous, they have in common the ability to detect and respond to changes in upper airway resistance.
Francoise J, Roux, Janet, Hilbert
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Predicting Effective Continuous Positive Airway Pressure
Chest, 2000The purpose of this study was to compare the pressure required to abolish apneas as predicted from a previously derived algorithm (Ppred) with the true effective pressure (Peff) determined during a continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) titration study.Sleep clinic of a university hospital.We prospectively studied 329 patients with sleep apnea ...
Z, Oliver, V, Hoffstein
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Continuous Positive Airway Pressure and Surfactant
Neonatology, 2008Nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) is an effective treatment of respiratory distress syndrome. Due to long-standing experience of early nCPAP as the primary respiratory support option in preterm infants, this approach is sometimes labeled ‘the Scandinavian Model’.
Kajsa, Bohlin +3 more
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Continuous positive airway pressure: current controversies
Current Opinion in Pediatrics, 2004Continuous positive airway pressure is increasingly being used in the care of premature infants. The purpose of this review is to highlight the current controversies in the use of neonatal continuous positive airway pressure.This review explores information about the devices available for delivering continuous positive airway pressure and the pressures
Colin, Morley, Peter, Davis
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Continuous Positive Airway Pressure
Clinics in Perinatology, 2016Samir Gupta, Steven M. Donn
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Pressure-Relief Continuous Positive Airway Pressure vs Constant Continuous Positive Airway Pressure
Chest, 2006Georg Nilius +3 more
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Walking with continuous positive airway pressure.
The European respiratory journal, 2006A ventilator-dependent child had been in the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) ever since birth. As a result, she had fallen behind considerably in her development. After 18 months, continuous positive airway pressure was successfully administered via a tracheostomy tube with a novel lightweight device. This enabled her to walk in the PICU.
Dieperink, W. +5 more
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