scholarly journals Right ventricular function and arterial oxygen tension monitoring during positive end-expiratory pressure changes in patients undergoing controlled ventilation

1996 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 336
Author(s):  
Giuseppe Pittella ◽  
Cesare F. Benanti ◽  
Carlo Palombo ◽  
Michaela Kozàkovà ◽  
Francesco Giunta ◽  
...  
CHEST Journal ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 92 (6) ◽  
pp. 999-1004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claude Martin ◽  
Pierre Saux ◽  
Jacques Albanese ◽  
Jean Jacques Bonneru ◽  
François Gouin

1988 ◽  
Vol 254 (3) ◽  
pp. H542-H546 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. C. Morin ◽  
E. A. Egan ◽  
W. Ferguson ◽  
C. E. Lundgren

The ability of the pulmonary circulation of the fetal lamb to respond to a rise in oxygen tension was studied from 94 to 146 days of gestation. The unanesthetized ewe breathed room air at normal atmospheric pressure, followed by 100% oxygen at three atmospheres absolute pressure in a hyperbaric chamber. In eleven near-term lambs (132 to 146 days of gestation), fetal arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) increased from 25 +/- 1 to 55 +/- 6 Torr (mean +/- SE), which increased the proportion of right ventricular output distributed to the fetal lungs from 8 +/- 1 to 59 +/- 5%. In five very immature lambs (94 to 101 days of gestation), fetal PaO2 increased from 27 +/- 1 to 174 +/- 70 Torr, but the proportion of right ventricular output distributed to the lung did not change, 8 +/- 1 to 9 +/- 1%. In five of the near-term lambs, pulmonary blood flow was measured. It increased from 34 +/- 3 to 298 +/- 35 ml.kg fetal wt-1.min-1, an 8.8-fold increase. We conclude that the pulmonary circulation of the fetal lamb does not respond to an increase in oxygen tension before 101 days of gestation; however, near term an increase in oxygen tension alone can induce the entire increase in pulmonary blood flow that normally occurs after the onset of breathing at birth.


1985 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 392-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROBERTO SÁNCHEZ DE LEÓN ◽  
CLIVE ORCHARD ◽  
KEITH SYKES ◽  
B CHIR ◽  
IMPERIA BRAJKOVICH

1993 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 317-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
D McIntosh ◽  
MM Baun ◽  
J Rogge

PURPOSE: To explore the effects of endotracheal suctioning on mixed venous oxygen tension and other measures of arterial and tissue oxygenation, to determine if these would be clinically useful outcome measures of endotracheal suctioning. BACKGROUND: Measuring arterial oxygenation only as an outcome of endotracheal suctioning can be misleading in that it may appear adequate in the presence of marked decreases in mixed venous oxygen tension, a good indicator of the adequacy of tissue oxygenation. METHODS: Eighteen instrumented and oleic acid-injured animal models of acute respiratory failure undergoing closed-system endotracheal suctioning were studied according to a 2 x 2 factorial design to measure the effects of oxygen inflations at tidal volume or 135% of tidal volume either in the presence or absence of positive end-expiratory pressure. RESULTS: Using multivariate analysis of variance for repeated measures, protocol by time effects for mixed venous oxygen tension, arterial oxygen saturation, arterial oxygen tension, oxygen delivery and oxygen extraction ratio were statistically significant. Changes in mixed venous oxygen tension and arterial oxygen saturation were parallel. CONCLUSIONS: Continuous measurement of mixed venous oxygen tension allows the calculation of oxygen delivery and oxygen extraction ratio, which provide a better estimation of the effects of endotracheal suctioning on tissue oxygenation than arterial oxygen tension alone.


2017 ◽  
Vol 126 (3) ◽  
pp. 543-546
Author(s):  
John Hedley-Whyte

Abstract Inspired Oxygenation in Surgical Patients During General Anesthesia With Controlled Ventilation: A Concept of Atelectasis. By Bendixen HH, Hedley-Whyte J, and Laver MB. New Engl J Med 1963; 269:991–996. Reprinted with permission. Abstract The purpose of this study was to determine if the pattern of ventilation, by itself, influences oxygenation during anesthesia and surgery and examine the hypothesis that progressive pulmonary atelectasis may occur during constant ventilation whenever periodic hyperventilation is lacking, but is reversible by passive hyperinflation of the lungs. Eighteen surgical patients, ranging in age from 24 to 87 yr, without known pulmonary disease, were studied during intraabdominal procedures and one radical mastectomy. Although ventilation remained constant, changes occurred in arterial oxygen tension and in total pulmonary compliance, with an average fall of 22% in oxygen tension and 15% in total pulmonary compliance. This fall in oxygen tension supports the hypothesis that progressive mechanical atelectasis may lead to increased venous admixture to arterial blood. The influence of the ventilator pattern on atelectasis and shunting is further illustrated by the reversibility of the fall in oxygen tension that follows hyperinflation. A relation between the degree of ventilation and the magnitude of fall in arterial oxygen tension was found, where large tidal volumes appear to protect against falls in oxygen tension, while shallow tidal volumes lead to atelectasis and increased shunting with impaired oxygenation.


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