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Postoperative Respiratory Acidosis

Archives of Surgery, 1957
Respiratory acidosis developing in emphysematous patients from impaired pulmonary ventilation is well known.2-4Patients with normal lungs undergoing surgery have been observed to develop carbon dioxide retention from the failure of the anesthetist to maintain adequate ventilation.1,6In the immediate postoperative period, it is not unexpected that ...
W C, SEALY, W G, YOUNG, J B, HICKAM
openaire   +2 more sources

Respiratory Acidosis and Respiratory Alkalosis: Core Curriculum 2023

American Journal of Kidney Diseases, 2023
The respiratory system plays an integral part in maintaining acid-base homeostasis. Normal ventilation participates in the maintenance of an open buffer system, allowing for excretion of CO2 produced from the interaction of nonvolatile acids and bicarbonate.
Biff F, Palmer, Deborah J, Clegg
openaire   +2 more sources

Dialysis-induced Respiratory Acidosis

Chest, 1990
The inability to increase alveolar ventilation can lead to CO2 retention and acute respiratory acidosis in patients with ventilatory limitation. In this case, a young woman receiving maximum ventilatory support was unable to excrete excess CO2, associated with increasing dianeal concentrations of peritoneal dialysis.
J, Cohn, R A, Balk, R C, Bone
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Respiratory control in uremic acidosis

Journal of Applied Physiology, 1963
Lambertsen and co-workers were able to correlate increments in ventilation produced by a number of acute experimental acid-base derangements in man with combined shifts in H ion concentration in blood and cerebrospinal fluid. Comparing hyperventilation in a group of uremic acidotic patients with ventilation levels of a control group by the same ...
H G, PAULI, F, REUBI
openaire   +2 more sources

Respiratory acidosis.

Respiratory care, 2001
Respiratory acidosis, or primary hypercapnia, is the acid-base disorder that results from an increase in arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide. Acute respiratory acidosis occurs with acute (Type II) respiratory failure, which can result from any sudden respiratory parenchymal (eg, pulmonary edema), airways (eg, chronic obstructive pulmonary ...
S K, Epstein, N, Singh
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RESPIRATORY ACIDOSIS

Anesthesiology, 1959
N. W. Carter, D. W. Seldin, H. C Teng
  +4 more sources

Respiratory Acidosis: A Quick Reference

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 2008
This article serves as a quick reference for respiratory acidosis. Guidelines for analysis and causes, signs, and a stepwise approach are presented.
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