نتایج جستجو برای: peep

تعداد نتایج: 1809  

2017
Flavia Schaper-Magalhães José Felippe Pinho Carolina Andrade Bragança Capuruço Maria Glória Rodrigues-Machado

BACKGROUND Inspiratory muscle training (IMT) using a Threshold® device is commonly used to improve the strength and endurance of inspiratory muscles. However, the effect of IMT, alone or with positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), on hemodynamic parameters in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) remains unknown. OBJECTIVE To assess the effects of an overload of inspira...

Journal: :Journal of breath research 2015
Yinghua Cui Xin Pi Changsong Wang Shujuan Liu Yulei Gong Yang Wang Fan Zhang Jinghui Shi Ziwei Lin Xin Zhang Enyou Li

Exhaled nitric oxide (eNO) has been suggested to be a marker of small airway injury. We investigated the effects of different ventilation strategies on eNO. Sixty-nine patients who received elective open abdominal surgery under general anesthesia with more than 2 h of surgery duration were randomly divided into three groups: high tidal volume of 10-12 ml kg(-1) predicted body weight (PBW) with ...

2014
Luciana M. Camilo Mariana B. Ávila Luis Felipe S. Cruz Gabriel C. M. Ribeiro Peter M. Spieth Andreas A. Reske Marcelo Amato Antonio Giannella-Neto Walter A. Zin Alysson R. Carvalho

OBJECTIVES Variable ventilation (VV) seems to improve respiratory function in acute lung injury and may be combined with positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) in order to protect the lungs even in healthy subjects. We hypothesized that VV in combination with moderate levels of PEEP reduce the deterioration of pulmonary function related to general anesthesia. Hence, we aimed at evaluating the ...

Journal: :Chest 2010
Christina Passath Jukka Takala Daniel Tuchscherer Stephan M Jakob Christer Sinderby Lukas Brander

BACKGROUND Neurally adjusted ventilatory assist (NAVA) delivers airway pressure (Paw) in proportion to neural inspiratory drive as reflected by electrical activity of the diaphragm (EAdi). Changing positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) impacts respiratory muscle load and function and, hence, EAdi. We aimed to evaluate how PEEP affects the breathing pattern and neuroventilatory efficiency duri...

Journal: :Anesthesia and analgesia 1984
N A Perkins R F Bedford

In order to better understand the hemodynamic consequences of the use of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) in patients in the seated position, 11 patients undergoing neurosurgical operations were monitored with radial arterial and thermistor-tipped Swan-Ganz catheters both before and during 10-cm H2O PEEP. Significant (P less than 0.05) reductions in cardiac output (15%), stroke volume (1...

Journal: :The European respiratory journal 1991
B van den Berg H Stam J M Bogaard

We studied the effects of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) applied by the ventilator on respiratory mechanics in ventilated patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Airway pressures, relaxed expiratory flow-volume curves and end-expiratory volumes (EEV) were measured. In all patients investigated without PEEP applied by the ventilator, an intrinsic PEEP level (PEEPi) a...

2013
Alessandro Protti Davide T Andreis Giacomo E Iapichino Massimo Monti Beatrice Comini Marta Milesi Loredana Zani Stefano Gatti Luciano Lombardi Luciano Gattinoni

INTRODUCTION Healthy piglets ventilated with no positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) and with tidal volume (VT) close to inspiratory capacity (IC) develop fatal pulmonary oedema within 36 h. In contrast, those ventilated with high PEEP and low VT, resulting in the same volume of gas inflated (close to IC), do not. If the real threat to the blood-gas barrier is lung overinflation, then a simi...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology 2007
S J Flecknoe K J Crossley G M Zuccala J E Searle B J Allison M J Wallace S B Hooper

Although increased lung expansion markedly alters lung growth and epithelial cell differentiation during fetal life, the effect of increasing lung expansion after birth is unknown. We hypothesized that increased basal lung expansion, caused by ventilating newborn lambs with a positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), would stimulate lung growth and alter alveolar epithelial cell (AEC) proportion...

Journal: :Critical Care 2005
Christoph Haberthür Josef Guttmann

INTRODUCTION Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is used in mechanically ventilated patients to increase pulmonary volume and improve gas exchange. However, in clinical practice and with respect to adult, ventilator-dependent patients, little is known about the short-term effects of PEEP on breathing patterns. METHODS In 30 tracheally intubated, spontaneously breathing patients, we sequen...

2011
Tae-Hun An Jung-Woo Yang

BACKGROUND During general anesthesia, core temperature decreases, largely due to heat loss caused by peripheral vasodilation, resulting in heat redistribution to peripheral tissues. Multiple factors contribute to body temperature regulation during general anesthesia. It was reported that baroreceptor unloading by positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) attenuates anesthetically-induced hypother...

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