نتایج جستجو برای: continuous positive airway pressure cpap

تعداد نتایج: 1336259  

Journal: :Canadian family physician Medecin de famille canadien 2001
S Rappard J Hickey

Level I evidence shows that continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and bilevel positive airway pressure (BiPAP) are effective for preventing intubation and saving the lives of carefully selected patients with acute respiratory failure. This ar ticle attempts to review this evidence. We began by searching the literature, using OVID, looking for all randomized studies of congestive heart fail...

Journal: :The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne 2012
Rachael Gregson R Eddie Clutton

A 7-year-old gelded Irish sports horse weighing 650 kg was anesthetized on 2 consecutive days for lavage of a septic right radio-carpal joint. On both occasions the endotracheal tube connector, which had been bound in medical tape to produce an airtight seal, functioned as a unidirectional valve during mechanical ventilation, retarding expiration, imposing positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP...

Journal: :Sleep 2006
Clete A Kushida Michael R Littner Max Hirshkowitz Timothy I Morgenthaler Cathy A Alessi Dennis Bailey Brian Boehlecke Terry M Brown Jack Coleman Leah Friedman Sheldon Kapen Vishesh K Kapur Milton Kramer Teofilo Lee-Chiong Judith Owens Jeffrey P Pancer Todd J Swick Merrill S Wise

Positive airway pressure (PAP) devices are used to treat patients with sleep related breathing disorders (SRBD) including obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Currently, PAP devices come in three forms: (1) continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), (2) bilevel positive airway pressure (BPAP), and (3) automatic self-adjusting positive airway pressure (APAP). After a patient is diagnosed with OSA, th...

2008
Alejandro Chediak B. Berry Lee K. Brown David Gozal Conrad Iber Sairam Parthasarathy Stuart F. Quan James A. Rowley

157 Summary: Positive airway pressure (PAP) devices are used to treat patients with sleep related breathing disorders (SRBDs), including obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). After a patient is diagnosed with OSA, the current standard of practice involves performing attended polysomnography (PSG), during which positive airway pressure is adjusted throughout the recording period to determine the optima...

Journal: :The European respiratory journal 2007
S R Coughlin L Mawdsley J A Mugarza J P H Wilding P M A Calverley

Obstructive sleep apnoea is associated with increased blood pressure and other features of the metabolic syndrome. The aim of the present study was to determine the relative effectiveness of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in modifying these outcomes. A randomised placebo-controlled blinded crossover trial comparing cardiovascular and metabolic outcomes after 6 weeks of therapeutic a...

2008
Alasdair Gray David E. Newby Moyra Masson

Background Noninvasive ventilation (continuous positive airway pressure [CPAP] or noninvasive intermittent positive-pressure ventilation [NIPPV]) appears to be of benefit in the immediate treatment of patients with acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema and may reduce mortality. We conducted a study to determine whether noninvasive ventilation reduces mortality and whether there are important differ...

2001
David W. Hudgel Caroline Fung

SEVERAL STUDIES HAVE DEMONSTRATED THAT PATIENT COMPLIANCE WITH NASAL CONTINUOUS POSITIVE AIRWAY PRESSURE (CPAP), used to treat obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), is suboptimal.1-5 Interestingly, in these studies, a lower CPAP pressure was associated with better patient compliance. Auto-titrating positive airway pressure (APAP) systems were developed to allow for a lower average pressure over the co...

Journal: :The European respiratory journal 2006
G M Nolan S Ryan T M O'connor W T McNicholas

Auto-adjustable continuous positive airway pressure (APAP) devices are an emerging treatment alternative to fixed-pressure continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy for obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome. They have been engineered to automatically adjust the pressure to the optimal level on a continuous basis. However, not all APAP technologies use the same algorithm. Three different AP...

Journal: :The European respiratory journal 2003
A G Logan R Tkacova S M Perlikowski R S Leung A Tisler J S Floras T D Bradley

This study was undertaken to determine whether abolition of obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) by continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) could reduce blood pressure (BP) in patients with refractory hypertension. In 11 refractory hypertensive patients with OSA, the acute effects of CPAP on nocturnal BP were studied during sleep and its longer term effects on 24-h ambulatory BP after 2 months. Du...

2015
José Haba-Rubio Nicolas Julien Petitpierre Françoise Cornette Nadia Tobback Sopharat Vat Theresia Giallourou Ahmed Al-Jumaily Raphael Heinzer

Although continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is the most effective therapy for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), it is not always well tolerated by the patients. Previous physiological studies showed that pressure oscillations applied to the pharynx could activate upper airway muscles, but it is not clear whether these pressure oscillations could be tolerated during sleep in OSA patients. T...

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