Results 251 to 260 of about 56,541 (302)
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Permissive hypercapnia

Respiratory Care Clinics, 2002
There has been increasing recognition that mechanical ventilation can cause acute parenchymal lung injury (ventilator-induced lung injury, or VILI) in addition to the more widely recognized forms of barotrauma. Furthermore, in patients with acute lung injury, this type of injury may cause considerable morbidity and mortality. Subsequently, the goals of
Ulrich H, Thome, Waldemar A, Carlo
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Hypercapnia

Current Opinion in Critical Care, 2015
Multiple clinical and laboratory studies have been conducted to illustrate the effects of hypercapnia in a range of injuries, and to understand the mechanisms underlying these effects. The aim of this review is to highlight and interpret information obtained from these recent reports and discuss how they may inform the clinical context.In the last ...
Claire, Masterson   +2 more
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Permissive hypercapnia

Current Opinion in Critical Care, 2001
The term permissive hypercapnia defines a ventilatory strategy for acute respiratory failure in which the lungs are ventilated with a low inspiratory volume and pressure. The aim of permissive hypercapnia is to minimize lung damage during mechanical ventilation; its limitation is the resulting hypoventilation and carbon dioxide (CO2) retention. In this
Bigatello, Luca M.   +2 more
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Permissive Hypercapnia

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 2008
Mechanical ventilation using high tidal volume (VT) and transpulmonary pressure can damage the lung, causing ventilator-induced lung injury. Permissive hypercapnia, a ventilatory strategy for acute respiratory failure in which the lungs are ventilated with a low inspiratory volume and pressure, has been accepted progressively in critical care for adult,
Alex, Rogovik, Ran, Goldman
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Permissive hypercapnia

Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology, 2015
Hypercapnia is a central component of diverse respiratory disorders, while 'permissive hypercapnia' is frequently used in ventilatory strategies for patients with severe respiratory failure. This review will present data from recent studies relating to hypercapnia, focusing on issues that are of importance to anesthesiologists caring for the surgical ...
Maya, Contreras   +2 more
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Hypercapnia and Hyperkalaemia

Survey of Anesthesiology, 1979
Studies in patients undergoing peritoneal laparoscopy, in which carbon dioxide was used as insufflating gas, showed that artificial hyperventilation was an effective means of preventing serious hypercapnia. The hypercapnia caused a rapid hyperkalaemia and there was a linear relationship between the two.
H, Hassan, J, Gjessing, P J, Tomlin
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Hypercapnia in Hyperalimentation

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1982
Excerpt To the editor: We write to clarify a potential misunderstanding that could result from the provocative short paper by Covelli and associates (1) on hypercapnia in hyperalimentation.
P J, Kearns, A, Banuelos
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Permissive Hypercapnia

The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care, 1995
Traditional practice of mechanical ventilation includes tactics to reduce lung injury, such as avoidance of excessive airway pressure, patient distress, and tidal volume. Gas exchange objectives have received priority, however, and a degree of lung injury has been accepted as inevitable. The current trend toward increasing use of permissive hypercapnia
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