RESUMO
We successfully employed inverse ratio ventilation on a 6-year-old multiple trauma victim with severe adult respiratory distress syndrome after conventional ventilation modes using volume ventilation with high positive peak inspiratory pressure and PEEP had failed to improve oxygenation.
Assuntos
Respiração Artificial/métodos , Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório/terapia , Traumatismos Torácicos/complicações , Criança , Feminino , Humanos , Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório/etiologiaRESUMO
Avoidance of ketamine has been recommended in children with pulmonary hypertension or with limited right ventricular reserve, despite absence of data about the effects of ketamine on pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) in children. Ketamine has been associated with increased PVR in studies of adults; in these studies adults were spontaneously breathing through unprotected airways, despite ketamine's known effects of ventilatory depression and partial loss of airway. The authors measured pulmonary and systemic hemodynamic responses to ketamine during spontaneous ventilation in 14 intubated infants who were receiving minimal ventilatory support with an intermittent mandatory ventilation (IMV) of 4 at an FIO2 of 0.3-0.4. No significant changes were found in cardiac index (CI), pulmonary vascular resistance index (PVRI), or systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI) in a group of seven infants with normal PVRI or in another group of seven infants with preexisting increased PVRI. Results did not differ in infants receiving diazepam sedation. The authors conclude that ketamine has little effect on baseline hemodynamics in mildly sedated infants whose airway and ventilation are maintained; in particular, PVRI is little changed by ketamine administration in ventilated infants with either normal or increased baseline PVRI.