Palliative Use of High-flow Oxygen Nasal Cannula in End-of-life Lung Disease Patients
Lung DiseaseAcute Respiratory Distress SyndromeThe prevalence of severe dyspnoea among terminally ill patients has been reported as 70% and 90% for lung cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients, respectively. Current management to dyspnoea includes opioids, psychotropic drugs, inhaled frusemide, Heliox 28 and oxygen. Conventional oxygen supplementation is often used in these patients, but it may be inadequate, especially if they require high flows (from 30L/min to 120L/min in acute respiratory failure). High-flow oxygen nasal cannula (HFONC) is a new technological device in high-flow oxygen system that consists of an air-oxygen blender (allowing from 21% to 100% FiO2) which generates the gas flow rate up to 55 L/min and a heated humidification system. This technology may have an important role in reducing respiratory distress in do-not-intubate patients. Some HFONC's beneficial effects are the washout of the nasopharyngeal dead space reducing rebreathing of CO2 and improvement oxygenation through greater alveolar oxygen concentration; a better matching between patient's inspiratory demand and oxygen flow; generation of a certain level of positive pressure (PEEP) contributing to the pulmonary distending pressure and recruitment; improvement of lung and airway mucociliary clearance due to the heated and humidified oxygen; and patient's comfort because of the nasal interface allowing feeding and speech. The investigators hypothesize that patients supported with HFONC need less opioids to decrease dyspnoea.
Amphetamine Induced Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome
BurnsAcute Lung Injury2 moreMethamphetamine and amphetamine has various cardiovascular and central nervous system effects. Long-term use is associated with many adverse health effects including cardiomyopathy, hemorrhagic, and ischemic stroke. Death is usually caused by cardiovascular collapse and while amphetamine abuse has been considered as a potential cause of acute respiratory distress syndrome, the reports are usually anecdotal. This investigation considers reviewing individuals with few to zero medical conditions who develop acute respiratory distress syndrome and are methamphetamine positive
Ventilation-Perfusion Matching in Early-stage Prone Position Ventilation
Acute Respiratory Distress SyndromeProne positioning has been widely used in critical care medicine to improve oxygenation in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). This study aimed to compare the effect of pronation on lung ventilation-perfusion matching between COVID19-associated acute respiratory distress syndrome (CARDS) and ARDS from other etiologies (non-CARDS) using electrical impedance tomography (EIT).
Prevention of Skin Damage in the Patient in Prone Position: Development of Education Interventions...
Pressure UlcerSkin Lesion1 moreThis is study 1 of 3 - of the overall project: The ProneTection Quality Improvement Project. The three aims of this study, study 1 are: to establish the training needs critical care clinicians have regarding prone positioning, to investigate the conditions for effective implementation as in an intensive care setting, to develop an education and training package (The ProneTection package) for an interdisciplinary team of clinicians on skin damage prevention of patients in the prone position
Validation of a Simple Approach to Estimate Alveolar Recruitability in ARDS Patients
Acute Respiratory Distress SyndromeThis study will test the validity of a new approach to assess alveolar recruitability at the bedside in comparison to direct measurements of lung volume and derecruitment.
Hemodynamic Assessment With Trans-esophageal Doppler (TED) During Prone Ventilation in ARDS Patients...
Respiratory Distress SyndromeAdultAcute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) commonly complicates acute illness in ICU. This syndrome is associated with high morbidity and mortality. In management of ARDS patients, lung protective ventilation and prone ventilation are key strategies which have shown survival benefits in recent years. Prone positioning has been reported to have hemodynamic disturbances like hypotension and arrhythmias. The literature till date is unclear with regards to acute hemodynamic changes which can happen during initiation of prone ventilation ,with a few studies suggesting decreasing cardiac output and a few increasing cardiac output. In recent years, trans-esophageal Doppler (TED) has become one of important hemodynamic assessment tool due to its minimal invasiveness, ease of use with its clinical utility established by various studies both in operation theatres and intensive care units. In current study, the investigators would like to evaluate acute hemodynamic effects of prone ventilation with TED in patients of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).
A Role for RAGE/TXNIP/Inflammasome Axis in Alveolar Macrophage Activation During ARDS (RIAMA): a...
Acute Respiratory Distress SyndromeMechanical VentilationRAGE (the receptor for advanced glycation end-products) is a marker of alveolar type I cell injury and a pivotal mediator of acute inflammation and innate immunity. RAGE pathway is highly regulated; the interaction of the transmembrane receptor with its various ligands (e.g. HMGB1, S100A12) ultimately leads to NF-kB activation and RAGE upregulation itself, but precise RAGE functions and intracellular pathways remain underexplored. During ARDS, monocyte and macrophage activation could modulate alveolar inflammation and repair. As RAGE is also expressed at the surface of monocytes/macrophages, we hypothesize that alveolar monocyte/macrophage activation may be mediated through a RAGE-TXNIP (thioredoxin interacting protein)-NLRP3/inflammasome intracellular pathway. The purpose of this observational prospective study is to compare alveolar monocyte/macrophage activation profiles (as assessed by Fluorescence-Activated Cell Sorting (FACS)) in mechanically ventilated patients with or without ARDS.
Low-Flow CO2 Removal for Mild to Moderate ARDS With PRISMALUNG
Acute Respiratory Distress SyndromeThis pilot observational study will assess changes in pH /PaO2 /PaCO2, Respiratory Rate and device CO2 clearance in the first 24 hours of Extracorporeal CO2 removal (ECCO2R) following tidal volume (Vt), and plateau pressure reduction in patients with mild to moderate ARDS.
Dead Space Monitoring With Volumetric Capnography in ARDS Patients
Acute Respiratory Distress SyndromeCapnographyThis studies´ objective is to describe how different PEEP levels affect dead space measured by Bohr´s formula.
High-Dose Vitamin C Treatment in Critically Ill COVID-19 Patients
Respiratory Distress SyndromeAdult1 moreAcute respiratory failure due to COVİD-19 pneumonia has poor prognosis and high mortality . Both the lack of an effective antiviral treatment and the low level evidence of the recommendations presented in the guidelines on other treatment methods have highlighted supportive treatments. Studies suggest that high-dose vitamin C treatment reduces mortality in patients with sepsis and ARDS, and may also be beneficial in COVİD-19 disease. In the study; the investigator aimed to determine the effect of Vitamin C on short-term mortality and length of intensive care stay in COVID-19 patients.