Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 117
Filter
1.
Chest ; 165(5): 1111-1119, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38211699

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Approximately one-third of acute ICU patients display atypical sleep patterns that cannot be interpreted by using standard EEG criteria for sleep. Atypical sleep patterns have been associated with poor weaning outcomes in acute ICUs. RESEARCH QUESTION: Do patients being weaned from prolonged mechanical ventilation experience atypical sleep EEG patterns, and are these patterns linked with weaning outcomes? STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: EEG power spectral analysis during wakefulness and overnight polysomnogram were performed on alert, nondelirious patients at a long-term acute care facility. RESULTS: Forty-four patients had been ventilated for a median duration of 38 days at the time of the polysomnogram study. Eleven patients (25%) exhibited atypical sleep EEG. During wakefulness, relative EEG power spectral analysis revealed higher relative delta power in patients with atypical sleep than in patients with usual sleep (53% vs 41%; P < .001) and a higher slow-to-fast power ratio during wakefulness: 4.39 vs 2.17 (P < .001). Patients with atypical sleep displayed more subsyndromal delirium (36% vs 6%; P = .027) and less rapid eye movement sleep (4% vs 11% total sleep time; P < .02). Weaning failure was more common in the atypical sleep group than in the usual sleep group: 91% vs 45% (P = .013). INTERPRETATION: This study provides the first evidence that patients in a long-term acute care facility being weaned from prolonged ventilation exhibit atypical sleep EEG patterns that are associated with weaning failure. Patients with atypical sleep EEG patterns had higher rates of subsyndromal delirium and slowing of the wakeful EEG, suggesting that these two findings represent a biological signal for brain dysfunction.


Subject(s)
Electroencephalography , Polysomnography , Ventilator Weaning , Humans , Ventilator Weaning/methods , Male , Female , Electroencephalography/methods , Middle Aged , Aged , Respiration, Artificial/methods , Sleep/physiology , Intensive Care Units , Wakefulness/physiology , Delirium/physiopathology , Delirium/etiology , Delirium/diagnosis , Time Factors
3.
Crit Care ; 26(1): 392, 2022 12 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36528765

ABSTRACT

A diagnosis of ARDS serves as a pretext for several perilous clinical practices. Clinical trials demonstrated that tidal volume 12 ml/kg increases patient mortality, but 6 ml/kg has not proven superior to 11 ml/kg or anything in between. Present guidelines recommend 4 ml/kg, which foments severe air hunger, leading to prescription of hazardous (yet ineffective) sedatives, narcotics and paralytic agents. Inappropriate lowering of tidal volume also fosters double triggering, which promotes alveolar overdistention and lung injury. Successive panels have devoted considerable energy to developing a more precise definition of ARDS to homogenize the recruitment of patients into clinical trials. Each of three pillars of the prevailing Berlin definition is extremely flimsy and the source of confusion and unscientific practices. For doctors at the bedside, none of the revisions have enhanced patient care over that using the original 1967 description of Ashbaugh and colleagues. Bedside doctors are better advised to diagnose ARDS on the basis of pattern recognition and instead concentrate their vigilance on resolving the numerous hidden dangers that follow inevitably once a diagnosis has been made.


Subject(s)
Respiratory Distress Syndrome , Humans , Respiratory Distress Syndrome/diagnosis , Tidal Volume , Respiration, Artificial
5.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med ; 205(10): 1145-1158, 2022 05 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35500908

ABSTRACT

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the uncovering of the Tuskegee syphilis study, when the public learned that the Public Health Service (precursor of the CDC) for 40 years intentionally withheld effective therapy against a life-threatening illness in 400 African American men. In 2010, we learned that the same research group had deliberately infected hundreds of Guatemalans with syphilis and gonorrhea in the 1940s, with the goal of developing better methods for preventing these infections. Despite 15 journal articles detailing the results, no physician published a letter criticizing the Tuskegee study. Informed consent was never sought; instead, Public Health Service researchers deceived the men into believing they were receiving expert medical care. The study is an especially powerful parable because readers can identify the key players in the narrative and recognize them as exemplars of people they encounter in daily life-these flesh-and-blood characters convey the principles of research ethics more vividly than a dry account in a textbook of bioethics. The study spurred reforms leading to fundamental changes in the infrastructure of research ethics. The reason people fail to take steps to halt behavior that in retrospect everyone judges reprehensible is complex. Lack of imagination, rationalization, and institutional constraints are formidable obstacles. The central lessons from the study are the need to pause and think, reflect, and examine one's conscience; the courage to speak; and above all the willpower to act. History, although about the past, is our best defense against future errors and transgressions.


Subject(s)
Anniversaries and Special Events , Syphilis , Humans , Male , Black or African American , History, 20th Century , Informed Consent , Longitudinal Studies , United States
8.
Ann Intensive Care ; 12(1): 2, 2022 Jan 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34981267
16.
Respir Med ; 176: 106277, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33310203

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Deterioration of vital capacity (VC) in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) signifies disease progression and indicates need for non-invasive ventilation. Weak facial muscles consequent to ALS, with resulting poor mouth seal, may interfere with the accuracy of VC measurements. OBJECTIVES: To determine whether different interfaces affect VC measurements in ALS patients and whether the interface yielding the largest VC produces an even higher VC when re-measured after one week (learning effect). To explore the relationship between optimal interface VC and sniff nasal pressure (SNIP), a measurement of global inspiratory muscle strength. METHODS: Thirty-five patients (17 bulbar and 18 spinal ALS) were studied. Three interfaces (rigid-cylindrical, flanged, oronasal mask) were tested. One week after the first visit, VC was recorded using the optimal interface. SNIP recordings were also obtained. RESULTS: In the bulbar ALS group, median (interquartile range) VC with the flanged mouthpiece was 8.4% (3.9-15.5) larger than with the cylindrical mouthpiece (p < 0.001). VC values with oronasal mask were intermediate to VC with the other two interfaces. In spinal ALS, flanged mouthpiece VC was 4.6% (2.3-7.5) larger than with oronasal mask (p < 0.0006). The latter was 4.5% (0.6-5.2) smaller than with the cylindrical mouthpiece (p = 0.002). In both groups, VC during the second visit was greater than during the first visit (p < 0.025). SNIPs were logarithmically related to VC values recorded with the flanged mouthpiece. CONCLUSION: A flanged mouthpiece yields the largest values of VC in patients with bulbar and spinal ALS.


Subject(s)
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/physiopathology , Respiratory Function Tests/methods , Vital Capacity , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Muscle Strength , Nasal Cavity/physiopathology , Pressure , Reproducibility of Results , Respiratory Muscles/physiopathology , Sensitivity and Specificity
19.
Respir Res ; 21(1): 249, 2020 Sep 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32972411

ABSTRACT

In the article "The pathophysiology of 'happy' hypoxemia in COVID-19," Dhont et al. (Respir Res 21:198, 2020) discuss pathophysiological mechanisms that may be responsible for the absence of dyspnea in patients with COVID-19 who exhibit severe hypoxemia. The authors review well-known mechanisms that contribute to development of hypoxemia in patients with pneumonia, but are less clear as to why patients should be free of respiratory discomfort despite arterial oxygen levels commonly regarded as life threatening. The authors propose a number of therapeutic measures for patients with COVID-19 and happy hypoxemia; we believe readers should be alerted to problems with the authors' interpretations and recommendations.


Subject(s)
Coronavirus Infections/physiopathology , Dyspnea/prevention & control , Hypoxia/physiopathology , Oxygen/blood , Pneumonia, Viral/physiopathology , COVID-19 , Coronavirus Infections/epidemiology , Coronavirus Infections/therapy , Female , Humans , Hypoxia/epidemiology , Male , Oximetry/methods , Pandemics , Pneumonia, Viral/epidemiology , Pneumonia, Viral/therapy , Prognosis , Risk Assessment , Treatment Outcome
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...