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Results 451 - 500 of 1628
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Breakell A - - 2001
The difficulties inherent in the 'Look, Listen and Feel' method of identifying respiratory arrest prompted the authors to develop a simple mechanical breathing indicator that can show clearly, at a glance, whether or not a patient is breathing. The novel indicator was designed to be highly visible so that its ...
Beck J - - 2001
We compared crural diaphragm electrical activity (EAdi) with transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) during varying levels of pressure support ventilation (PS) in 13 intubated patients. With changing PS, we found no evidence for changes in neuromechanical coupling of the diaphragm. From lowest to highest PS (2 cm H(2)O +/- 4 to 20 ...
Uchiyama A - - 2001
Inspiratory drive and work of breathing provided by a ventilator (WOBv) during pressure support ventilation (PSV) were examined in 15 patients. At PSV 10 and 15 cm H2O during CPAP 5 cm H2O, patients with low P0.1 (<4.2 cm H2O, n=9) showed WOBv 0.57 and 0.92 J/l, those with high ...
Goso Y - - 2001
BACKGROUND: Sympathoexcitation and respiratory instability are closely related to worsening of chronic heart failure. To elucidate the dynamic nature of respiratory modulation of sympathetic activity in patients with heart failure, we studied within-breath variation of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) under various ventilatory volumes. METHODS AND RESULTS: MSNA, blood pressure, ...
Putensen C - - 2001
Improved gas exchange has been observed during spontaneous breathing with airway pressure release ventilation (APRV) as compared with controlled mechanical ventilation. This study was designed to determine whether use of APRV with spontaneous breathing as a primary ventilatory support modality better prevents deterioration of cardiopulmonary function than does initial controlled ...
Chiumello D - - 2001
The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of different pressurization rates during pressure support ventilation on breathing pattern, work of breathing, gas exchange and patient comfort in patients with acute lung injury. The pressurization rate modifies the initial pressure ramp by changing the initial peak flow rate: ...
Julu P O - - 2001
AIM: To investigate breathing rhythm and brain stem autonomic control in patients with Rett disorder. SETTING: Two university teaching hospitals in the United Kingdom and the Rett Centre, Sweden. PATIENTS: 56 female patients with Rett disorder, aged 2-35 years; 11 controls aged 5-28 years. DESIGN: One hour recordings of breathing ...
Binks A P - - 2001
Vibration of the thoracic surface has been shown to modify the drive to breathe and the sensation of dyspnea. It has been suggested that respiratory muscle afferents generate these effects. The possibility that the consequences of chest-wall vibration also involve intra-pulmonary afferents led us to investigate whether such vibration reaches ...
Lua A C - - 2001
A new proportional assist ventilation (PAV) method using a proportional solenoid valve (PSV) to control air supply to patients suffering from respiratory disabilities, was studied. The outlet flow and pressure from the proportional solenoid valve at various air supply pressures were tested and proven to be suitable for pressure and ...
Ugalde V - - 2001
Abdominal muscles are selectively active in normal subjects during stress and may increase the potential energy for inspiration by reducing the end-expiratory lung volume (EELV). We hypothesized that a similar process would occur in subjects with myotonic muscular dystrophy (MMD), but would be less effective, because of to their weakness ...
Loring S H - - 2001
Whereas gravity has an inspiratory effect in upright subjects, transient upward acceleration is reported to have an expiratory effect. To explore the respiratory effects of transient axial accelerations, we measured axial acceleration at the head and transrespiratory pressure or airflow in five subjects as they were dropped or lifted on ...
BuSha B F - - 2001
Evidence of the Hering-Breuer reflex has been found in humans during anesthesia and sleep but not during wakefulness. Cortical influences, present during wakefulness, may mask the effects of this reflex in awake humans. We hypothesized that, if lung volume were increased in awake subjects unaware of the stimulus, vagal feedback ...
Peták F - - 2001
Hyperoxia-induced lung damage was investigated via airway and respiratory tissue mechanics measurements with low-frequency forced oscillations (LFOT) and analysis of spontaneous breathing indexes by barometric whole body plethysmography (WBP). WBP was performed in the unrestrained awake mice kept in room air (n = 12) or in 100% oxygen for 24 ...
Gonschorek A S - - 2001
Although humans hold great advantages over other species as subjects for biomedical research, they also bring major disadvantages. One is that among the many rhythmic physiological signals that can be recorded, there is no sure way to know which individual change precedes another, or which change represents cause and which ...
Austin P N - - 2001
Portable ventilators (PVs) are used for patient transport with increasingly frequency. Due to design differences it would not be unexpected to find differences among these ventilators in the imposed work of breathing (WOBI) during spontaneous respiratory efforts. The purpose of this investigation was to compare the WOBI characteristics during spontaneous ...
Yasuma F - - 2001
Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) may serve to enhance pulmonary gas exchange efficiency by matching pulmonary blood flow with lung volume within each respiratory cycle. We examined the hypothesis that RSA is augmented as an active physiological response to hypercapnia. We measured electrocardiograms and arterial blood pressure during progressive hypercapnia in ...
Robson A G - - 2001
BACKGROUND: When monitoring patients with chronic lung disease it is important to distinguish genuine changes in gas transfer over time from natural variability. This study aims to define the coefficient of repeatability for routine measurements of single breath transfer factor (TCO) and transfer coefficient (KCO). METHODS: Sixty eight subjects (32 ...
Bernardi L - - 2001
OBJECTIVE: To assess the influence of different breathing patterns on autonomic cardiovascular modulation during acute exposure to altitude-induced hypoxia. DESIGN: We measured relative changes in minute ventilation (VE), oxygen saturation (%SaO2), spectral analysis of RR interval and blood pressure, and response to stimulation of carotid baroreceptors (neck suction) at baseline ...
Gruber E M - - 2001
Optimal analgesia is important after thoracotomy in pulmonary-limited patients to avoid pain-related pulmonary complications. Thoracic epidural anesthesia (TEA) can provide excellent pain relief. However, potential paralysis of respiratory muscles and changes in bronchial tone might be unfavorable in patients with end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Therefore, we evaluated the ...
Harper R M - - 2001
A variety of clinical pathology and experimental animal evidence suggests that cerebellar and vestibular structures mediate marked challenges to blood pressure and breathing, and are particularly involved in compensatory somatomotor and breathing efforts to overcome substantial losses in blood pressure. At least a subset of victims of the Sudden Infant ...
Duncan E J - - 2001
Differences in the "respiratory paralysis" caused by sarin (GB) and succinylcholine (SDC) were observed in a domestic swine model using a bedside pulmonary dynamics monitor. GB was administered intravenously (9 micrograms/kg/30 min) and compared with SDC administered intravenously (20 mg/30 min). All animals developed respiratory insufficiency indicated by decreased respiratory ...
Weicker S - - 2001
Nitric oxide (NO) has been detected in the exhaled gas of animals and humans. In previous work, investigators have used anesthetized, mechanically ventilated animals to obtain exhaled NO (E(NO)) measurements, which has unclear effects on the levels of E(NO) and does not allow for repeated analysis of E(NO). We sought ...
Akahoshi T - - 2001
1. Upper airway dilator muscles are phasically activated throughout breathing by respiratory pattern generator neurons. Studies have shown that non-physiological upper airway mechanoreceptive stimuli (e.g. rapidly imposed pulses of negative pressure) also activate these muscles. Such reflexes may become activated during conditions that alter airway resistance in order to stabilise ...
Sinderby C - - 2001
This study evaluated whether respiratory effort sensation (RES) changes over time when breathing is performed with constant contraction pattern, fixed diaphragm activation, and maintained pressure generation. Another aim was to assess whether there was any association between RES and the power spectrum center frequency of the diaphragm (CFdi) electrical activity. ...
Westerdahl E - - 2001
The effectiveness of three deep breathing techniques was evaluated in 98 male patients after coronary artery bypass graft surgery in a randomized trial. The techniques examined were deep breathing with a blow bottle-device, an inspiratory resistance-positive expiratory pressure mask (IR-PEP) and performed with no mechanical device. Pulmonary function and roentgenological ...
Kingisepp P H - - 2001
Changes in heart rate (HR) and finger mean blood pressure (MBP) during registration of the flow-volume loop of forced respiration in healthy young subjects were studied. Breathing patterns of performing the flow-volume loop of forced respiration (forced respiratory manoeuvre, FRM) as well as the related responses of cardiovascular parameters in ...
Black A M - - 2001
The theory for optimal linear combination of uncalibrated breathing movements was developed and applied in non-invasive respiratory monitoring situations for assessment. 16 patients were monitored overnight for respiratory depression during postoperative pain treatment. Intranasal/extra-oral airway pressure monitoring and pulse oximetry signals were recorded at 50 Hz. Respiratory inductive plethysmography (RIP) ...
Looga R - - 2001
To elucidate whether the Valsalva manoeuvre (VM) can produce a bradycardia instead of well-known tachycardia, a systemic study of the influence of various degrees of strain pressure and lung volumes was undertaken. Six basic patterns beat-to-beat heart rate response (HRR) were seen during the inspiratory graded VM straining with a ...
Kolarzyk E - - 2001
During the methadone maintenance treatment an individually specified doses of methadone should prevent a withdrawal syndrome and may stabilise the activity of respiratory centres of opiate dependent patients. The aim of the study was to evaluate the direction of changes in respiratory pattern parameters of 34 opiate dependent patients (14 ...
Holt S J - - 2001
BACKGROUND: Weaning of mechanical ventilation in patients optimally includes meeting their needs by making frequent ventilator adjustments. The Siemens Servo 300A mechanical ventilator is designed to allow the ventilator to be interactive with the patient's needs by making breath-by-breath adjustments in both control and support modes. We undertook the following ...
Tokioka H - - 2001
With pressure support ventilation (PSV), each PSV breath is flow-cycled, and the breath termination criterion (TC) is usually nonadjustable. When TC does not match the interaction between the patient's inspiratory-expiratory efforts to the opening and closing of the inspiratory and expiratory valves, patient-ventilator asynchrony may occur, and the work of ...
Strömberg T - - 2001
Diaphragmatic activity is the standard assessment of respiratory neural output but is difficult to measure and cannot be used for long-term clinical monitoring. The tidal breathing minute ventilation (V') and mean inspiratory flow (VT/tI) reflect respiratory drive and can be monitored non-invasively using respiratory inductive plethysmography (RIP). Recent findings indicate ...
Volianitis S - - 2001
BACKGROUND: The variability of maximal inspiratory pressure (PImax) in response to repeated measurement affects its reliability; published studies have used between three and twenty PImax measurements on a single occasion. OBJECTIVE: This study investigated the influence of a specific respiratory 'warm-up' upon the repeated measurement of inspiratory muscle strength and ...
Warkander D E - - 2001
This study was performed to determine if inspiratory breathing resistance causes greater or smaller changes than expiratory resistance. Unacceptable inspiratory resistances were also determined. Five subjects exercised at 60% of their VO2max while immersed in a hyperbaric chamber. The chamber was pressurized to either 147 kPa (1.45 atm abs, 4.5 ...
Orozco-Levi M - - 2001
To evaluate expiratory muscle endurance in middle-aged healthy subjects using incremental as well as constant expiratory loads, 14 healthy volunteers (51 +/- 16 years) were submitted to a specific endurance test, which was performed breathing against a threshold valve, and was divided into two parts. In part I, the load ...
Calabrese P - - 2000
The addition to the respiratory system of a resistive load results in breathing pattern changes and in negative intrathoracic pressure increases. The aim of this study was to use resistive load breathing as a stimulus to the cardiorespiratory interaction and to examine the extent of the changes in heart rate ...
St Croix C M - - 2000
We tested the hypothesis that reflexes arising from working respiratory muscle can elicit increases in sympathetic vasoconstrictor outflow to limb skeletal muscle, in seven healthy human subjects at rest. We measured muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) with intraneural electrodes in the peroneal nerve while the subject inspired (primarily with the ...
Baraka A - - 2000
PURPOSE: The report investigates, in awake patients before induction of anesthesia, the effect of preoxygenation by the single vital capacity breath technique following forced exhalation on the mean arterial PO2 (PaO2). METHODS: In 10 adult patients undergoing elective surgery, the mean PaO2 values achieved 30 sec after preoxygenation by the ...
Thompson W H - - 2000
Expiratory resistive loading (ERL) is used by chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients to improve respiratory function. We, therefore, used a noninvasive tension-time index of the inspiratory muscles (TT(mus) = I/PI(max) x TI/TT, where I is mean inspiratory pressure estimated from the mouth occlusion pressure, PI(max) is maximal inspiratory pressure, ...
Davies L C - - 2000
Oscillations in the cardiovascular system have been observed in patients with periodic breathing. It is not clear whether these are driven by primary oscillations in the respiratory system or whether an intrinsic cardiovascular instability is required, as previous studies with subjects performing voluntary periodic breathing have failed to produce the ...
Rich P B - - 2000
BACKGROUND: We examined the effects of decreasing respiratory rate (RR) at variable inspiratory times (It) and reducing inspiratory flow on the development of ventilator-induced lung injury. METHODS: Forty sheep weighing 24.6+/-3.2 kg were ventilated for 6 hours with one of five strategies (FIO2 = 1.0, positive end-expiratory pressure = 5 ...
Wasserman A M - - 2000
Our previous data obtained in the cat suggest that the neurons of the ventrolateral subnucleus of the tractus solitarius (vlNTS) act as an inspiratory off-switch and terminate the inspiratory phase of the respiratory cycle (Berger et al., Eur. J. Pharmacol. 277 (1995) 195-208; Gillis et al., Neurosci. Abstr. 23 (1997) ...
Aas-Hansen O - - 2000
Two winter-insulated Norwegian reindeer (Rangifer tarandus tarandus) were exposed to air temperatures of 10, 20, 30, and 38 degrees C while standing at rest in a climatic chamber. The direction of airflow through nose and mouth, and the total and the nasal minute volumes, respectively, were determined during both closed- ...
Manczur T I - - 2000
BACKGROUND: Extubation failure can result from poor respiratory drive, impaired respiratory muscle function, or excessive inspiratory load. Measurement of airway pressure changes either during tidal breathing or after end-expiratory occlusion allows assessment of respiratory drive and muscle function. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the results of airway pressure measurements characterized children ...
Stromberg J S - - 2000
PURPOSE: Active breathing control (ABC) temporarily immobilizes breathing. This may allow a reduction in treatment margins. This planning study assesses normal tissue irradiation and reproducibility using ABC for Hodgkin's disease. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Five patients underwent CT scans using ABC obtained at the end of normal inspiration (NI), normal expiration ...
Al-Bilbeisi F - - 2000
We previously found that weight lifters could generate greater inspiratory pressures and had more diaphragm mass than control subjects. We postulated that the weight-lifting activity itself provided a strength-training stimulus to the diaphragm. To evaluate the extent to which the diaphragm is recruited during strenuous nonrespiratory activities, we measured transdiaphragmatic ...
Corne S - - 2000
Increasing inspiratory flow (V) has been shown to shorten neural inspiratory time (TI(n)) in normal subjects breathing on a mechanical ventilator, but the effect of V on respiratory motor output before inspiratory termination has not previously been studied in humans. While breathing spontaneously on a mechanical ventilator, eight normal subjects ...
Volgyesi G A - - 2000
Researchers investigating the genetic component of various disease states rely increasingly on murine models. We have developed a ventilator to simplify respiratory research in small animals down to murine size. The new ventilator provides constant-flow inflation and tidal volume delivery independent of respiratory parameter changes. The inclusion of end-inspiratory and ...
Venkataraman S T - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: To validate predictors of extubation success and failure in mechanically ventilated infants and children by using bedside measures of respiratory function. DESIGN: Prospective, descriptive study. SETTING: A university-affiliated children's hospital with a 51-bed critical care area. PATIENTS: All infants and children who were mechanically ventilated for > or =24 ...
Polkey M I - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: Anterior magnetic stimulation (aMS) of the phrenic nerves is a new method for the assessment of diaphragm contractility that might have particular applications for the clinical assessment of critically ill patients who are commonly supine. DESIGN: We compared aMS with existing techniques for measurement of diaphragm weakness and fatigue ...
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