Changes in O2 consumption, O2 extraction, and intramural pH, resulting from a decreasing O2 delivery, were studied in the intact dog intestine. The O2 delivery was decreased by ischemia, hypoxia, and combined hypoxia-ischemia. A noninvasive approach for determining intramural pH based on the principle of tonometry was used. There was a strong correlation between the changes in intramural pH and intestinal O2 consumption as O2 delivery was decreased. Intramural pH and O2 consumption were initially maintained in the face of decreasing O2 delivery, but after a critical point they decreased. This critical point was 60.3 +/- 1.6% of base-line O2 delivery in the ischemic group and 51.3 +/- 2.7% of base line in the hypoxic-ischemic group. Despite a decrease to 36.0 +/- 5.6% of base-line O2 delivery, the intramural pH and O2 consumption did not decrease in the hypoxic group. O2 extraction increased with decreasing O2 delivery but did not plateau, indicating no diffusion limitation. The data suggest that blood flow is the major factor limiting intestinal O2 consumption. It is concluded that the noninvasive measure of intramural pH is a good marker of the adequacy of tissue oxygenation in canine intestine.
The recent outbreaks of multidrug-resistant strains of M. tuberculosis in health care facilities has increased concern over its transmission in health care facilities. Isolation has been recommended for all patients suspected to have tuberculosis even though the feasibility and the cost of this recommendation can be substantial. We have developed a classification tree using clinical and radiographic data from 277 isolation episodes in patients admitted between August 1992 and March 1994 who required isolation for suspicion of tuberculosis. The classification tree was developed with a sensitivity and negative predictive value of 100% by binary recursive partitioning to predict those patients who are unlikely to require isolation. The predictor variables were upper zone disease on chest radiograph, a history of fever, weight loss, and CD4 count. The tree was validated in a separate cohort of 286 isolation episodes between April 1994 and December 1995. In this validation cohort, no erroneous prediction was made of not isolating a patient with active pulmonary tuberculosis. The classification tree had a sensitivity of 100% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 92.5 to 100%), a specificity of 48.1% (95% CI: 43.8 to 52.4%), and a negative predictive value of 100% (95% CI: 98.5 to 100%). We estimate that the use of the tree could have reduced the number of patients requiring isolation by more than 40% without increasing the risk of cross infection.
Page H587: B. J. B. Grant and L. J. Paradowski. “Characterization of pulmonary arterial input impedance with lumped parameter models.” Equations 5 and 6 should appear as the following. (See PDF)
We have studied the serial changes in arterial blood gases in fourteen patients with acute severe asthma, all of whom received a standard therapeutic regime and had similar measurements made at identical time intervals under standard conditions. Hypoxaemia on admission was a constant finding, and the arterial oxygen tension often took a week or longer to return to a normal level. Treatment with 60% inspired oxygen provided a safe means of relieving hypoxaemia, provided that blood gases were measured before and during oxygen therapy. Most patients had a normal arterial carbon dioxide tension, which indicated the severity of their illness. Acid-base disturbances, when present, were mild and needed no specific treatment. Age, duration of the acute attack, and severity of airways obstruction were all unrelated to the changes in blood gas tension, and pulse rate was found to be a poor predictor of hypoxaemia in elderly asthmatics. Serial measurements of the arterial blood gases should be made in all patients with acute severe asthma.
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