The effect of applying a high-frequency small-volume sinusoidal oscillation at the airway was investigated in anesthetized apneic beagle dogs (mean wt 11 kg, mean VDphys 6.6 +/- 0.6 ml/kg). Oscillations generated by a piston in a cylinder were transmitter to the lungs through an uncuffed endotracheal tube (4.5 mm ID, 6.0 mm OD), which allowed a substantial leak back through the vocal cords. A bias flow of fresh gas presented inspired air to the midtracheal level. The minimum distal airway pressure (measured at the end of the endotracheal tube) was maintained between 0 and 2 cmH2O. Peak airway pressures were 4-8 cmH2O. The optimal frequency for CO2 elimination was 15 Hz. Using volumes of 1.9 ml/kg (range 1.7-2.3) at this frequency the mean PaCO2 was 33.1 +/- 0.5 Torr. In four dogs breathing 100% O2 the PaO2 was 594 +/- 9 Torr during spontaneous ventilation and 580 +/- 9 Torr after 5 h of uninterrupted oscillation. In four experiments using room air the PaO2 was 95 +/- 5 Torr during spontaneous respiration and 106 +/- 1 Torr after 5 h of oscillation. In an additional seven studies there was no difference in mean cardiac output between oscillation and conventional mechanical ventilation. This study demonstrates that high-frequency small-volume oscillations can maintain gas exchange for many hours presumably by markedly enhancing the diffusivity of gases in the lung.
Extubation in the operating room after a modified Fontan procedure seems feasible. This approach is associated with improved early postoperative hemodynamics, earlier time to chest tube removal, and shorter intensive care unit and hospital lengths of stay.
In this series, approximately one-half of hemispheric strokes complicating CEA had an underlying correctable lesion (occlusion or stenosis), and these patients typically had delayed-onset strokes. Approximately one-half of these patients improved early as a result of reopening, although computed tomography revealed new infarcts in most of them. Urgent carotid repair may benefit a minority of selected patients who have a major stroke after CEA.
Hemorrhagic pulmonary edema was induced by intra-atrial infusion of 0.04--0.1 ml/kg of oleic acid into six anesthetized dogs. Gas exchange and cardiac outputs were then compared at identical mean airway pressures during randomized ventilation with either a volume-cycled ventilator with positive end-expiratory pressure (conventional positive-pressure ventilation, tidal volume 16--21 ml/kg, frequency 15--20 cycles/min) or a variable volume piston pump operating at 15 Hz (high-frequency oscillation). The fractional inspired oxygen concentration was maintained at 0.5 throughout. During 17 data sets matched for intratracheal mean airway pressures over a range of 7.5--27 cmH2O, measurements of systemic arterial pressure, arterial blood gas tensions, thermodilution cardiac outputs, and pulmonary arterial and capillary wedge pressures were identical (P less than 0.05) during ventilation with conventional positive-pressure ventilation and high-frequency oscillation. With both forms of ventilation, arterial oxygen tension progressively improved as mean airway pressure increased. In a shunt model of acute lung injury we were unable to show significant differences in oxygenation or cardiac output when high-frequency oscillation was compared with conventional positive-pressure ventilation with positive end-expiratory pressure at equivalent mean airway pressures.
Background: Since the validation of carotid endarterectomy (CEA) as an effective means of stroke prevention, there has been renewed interest in its best indications and methods, as well as in how it compares to carotid angioplasty and stenting (CAS). This review examines these topics, as well as the investigation of carotid stenosis and the role of auditing and reporting CEAresults. Investigation: Brain imaging with CTor MRI should be obtained in patients considered for CEA, in order to document infarction and rule out mass lesions. Carotid investigation begins with ultrasound and, if results agree with subsequent, good-quality MRAor CTangiography, treatment can be planned and catheter angiography avoided. An equally acceptable approach is to proceed directly from ultrasound to catheter angiography, which is still the gold-standard in carotid artery assessment. Indications: Appropriate patients for CEA are those symptomatic with transient ischemic attacks or nondisabling stroke due to 70-99% carotid stenosis; the maximum allowable stroke and death rate being 6%. Uncertain candidates for CEA are those with 50 -69% symptomatic stenosis, and those with asymptomatic stenosis ≥ 60% but, if selected carefully on the basis of additional risk factors (related to both the carotid plaque and certain patient characteristics), some will benefit from surgery. Asymptomatic patients will only benefit if surgery can be provided with exceptionally low major complication rates (3% or less). Inappropriate patients are those with less than 50% symptomatic or 60% asymptomatic stenosis, and those with unstable medical or neurological conditions. Techniques: Carotid endarterectomy can be performed with either regional or general anaesthesia and, for the latter, there are a number of monitoring techniques available to assess cerebral perfusion during carotid cross-clamping. While monitoring cannot be considered mandatory and no single monitoring technique has emerged as being clearly superior, EEG is most commonly used. "Eversion" endarterectomy is a variation in surgical technique, and there is some evidence that more widely practiced patch closure may reduce the acute risk of operative stroke and the longerterm risk of recurrent stenosis. Carotid angioplasty and stenting: Experience with this endovascular and less invasive procedure grows, and its technology continues to evolve. Some experienced therapists have reported excellent results in case series and a number of randomized trials are now underway comparing CAS to CEA. However, at this time it is premature to incorporate CAS into routine practice replacing CEA. Auditing: It has been shown that auditing of CEA indications and results with regular feed-back to the operating surgeons can significantly improve the performance of this operation. Carotid endarterectomy auditing is recommended on both local and regional levels.RÉSUMÉ: L' e n d a rt é rectomie carotidienne: une revue. I n t r o d u c t i o n : Depuis la validation de l'endartérectomie carotidienne (EAC) comme ...
Apnea has been observed in both animals and patients during high-frequency oscillatory ventilation. The effects of vagotomy were studied during periods of oscillator-induced apnea in 11 pentobarbital-anesthetized dogs. The animals were intubated and breathing spontaneously. An arterial cannula was inserted for monitoring blood pressure and blood gases. Intratracheal airway pressure was measured, and respiratory activity was assessed using either an intrapleural catheter or esophageal balloon. The dogs then underwent high-frequency ventilation at 15 Hz. Apnea was induced by appropriate selection of volume displacement of the piston pump and the distal airway pressure in eucapnic animals. Segments of right and left vagus nerves were exposed in the neck, bathed in local anesthetic, and transected. Spontaneous ventilation resumed immediately in nine animals and could not be suppressed at the same CO2 partial pressure despite continuation of oscillation. We conclude that the apnea observed during high-frequency ventilation is mediated by active vagal inhibition of central respiratory activity and is usually reversed by vagotomy.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.