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Nutrition in respiratory failure [PDF]
Malnutrition, pneumonia, sepsis, respiratory and other organ failure are the major complications and causes of death in critically ill patients.
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Blood Purification, 2002
Acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are common causes of hypoxemic respiratory failure. Multiple etiologies lead to direct and indirect pulmonary injury that progresses through an acute exudative phase, fibroproliferative phase, and recovery phase.
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Acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are common causes of hypoxemic respiratory failure. Multiple etiologies lead to direct and indirect pulmonary injury that progresses through an acute exudative phase, fibroproliferative phase, and recovery phase.
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Medical Clinics of North America, 1977
Patients with respiratory failure should be approached in a systematic way, with emphasis both in diagnosis and treatment on arterial blood gases. The intelligent assessment of oxygenation, ventilation and acid-base balance, based on physiologic principles, can make the management of these patients very rewarding.
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Patients with respiratory failure should be approached in a systematic way, with emphasis both in diagnosis and treatment on arterial blood gases. The intelligent assessment of oxygenation, ventilation and acid-base balance, based on physiologic principles, can make the management of these patients very rewarding.
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Neuromuscular Respiratory Failure
Neurologic Clinics, 2021Neuromuscular respiratory failure can result from any disease that causes weakness of bulbar and/or respiratory muscles. Once compensatory mechanisms are overwhelmed, hypoxemic and hypercapnic respiratory failure ensues. The diagnosis of neuromuscular respiratory failure is primarily clinical, but arterial blood gases, bedside spirometry, and ...
Eelco F. M. Wijdicks, Tarun D. Singh
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Bronchoscopy in Respiratory Failure
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1972To the Editor.— Dr. Renz and associates deserve congratulations for their ingenious method of maintaining ventilation during bronchoscopy with a flexible fiberoptic bronchoscope (219:619,1972). The author has used a similar technique which may be somewhat simpler.
Lowell E. Renz+4 more
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A cough, then respiratory failure
The Lancet, 2000A 72-year-old man with long-standing, moderate kyphoscoliosis went to an accident and emergency department in February, 1997 after choking on some soup. After a fit of violent coughing in the department, he had a respiratory arrest and required intubation and subsequent ventilation in the intensive-care unit.
Richard Fuller, Andrew Stanners
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Medical Clinics of North America, 1983
The diseases which are commonly complicated by hypercapnic respiratory failure also compromise the respiratory muscles in several ways. Increased work of breathing, mechanical disadvantage, neuromuscular disease, impaired nutritional status, shock, hypoxemia, acidosis, and deficiency of potassium, magnesium, and inorganic phosphorus are the major non ...
Dudley F. Rochester, Narinder S. Arora
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The diseases which are commonly complicated by hypercapnic respiratory failure also compromise the respiratory muscles in several ways. Increased work of breathing, mechanical disadvantage, neuromuscular disease, impaired nutritional status, shock, hypoxemia, acidosis, and deficiency of potassium, magnesium, and inorganic phosphorus are the major non ...
Dudley F. Rochester, Narinder S. Arora
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