Abstract Background Early exercise of critically ill patients may have beneficial effects on muscle strength, mass and systemic inflammation. During pressure support ventilation (PSV), a mismatch between demand and assist could increase work of breathing and limit exercise. A better exercise tolerance is possible with a proportional mode of ventilation (Proportional Assist Ventilation, PAV+ and Neurally Adjusted Ventilatory Assist, NAVA). We examined whether, in critically ill patients, PSV and proportional ventilation have different effects on respiratory muscles unloading and work efficiency during exercise. Methods Prospective pil...
Proportional modes of ventilation assist the patient by adapting to his/her effort, which contrasts ...
The diaphragm is the largest contributing muscle in a spontaneous breath. Classically, when failure ...
The aim of the present study was to verify that the patient/ventilator interaction is similar, regar...
Abstract Background Early exercise of critically ill ...
International audienceIntroduction: Dyspnea is common and often severe symptom in mechanically venti...
SummaryBackgroundIt has been shown that upper limbs activity increases the respiratory workload in p...
OBJECTIVE: To compare the respiratory muscle workload associated with pressure support ventilation (...
The objective of this study was to compare patient-ventilator interaction during pressure-support ve...
Abstract Background Proportional modes (proportional assist ventilation, PAV, and neurally adjusted ...
Background and objective: Proportional assist ventilation (PAV) has been proposed as a more physiolo...
Background: Patients with COPD are frequently hospitalized for acute exacerbations (AECOPD), which m...
Noninvasive positive pressure ventilation has been regarded as a strategy for improving exercise per...
Purpose. The aim of this study was to compare the metabolic load between adaptive support ventilatio...
Background: Patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) present an important ventilatory (imit...
Background/PurposeNoninvasive positive pressure ventilation has been regarded as a strategy for impr...
Proportional modes of ventilation assist the patient by adapting to his/her effort, which contrasts ...
The diaphragm is the largest contributing muscle in a spontaneous breath. Classically, when failure ...
The aim of the present study was to verify that the patient/ventilator interaction is similar, regar...
Abstract Background Early exercise of critically ill ...
International audienceIntroduction: Dyspnea is common and often severe symptom in mechanically venti...
SummaryBackgroundIt has been shown that upper limbs activity increases the respiratory workload in p...
OBJECTIVE: To compare the respiratory muscle workload associated with pressure support ventilation (...
The objective of this study was to compare patient-ventilator interaction during pressure-support ve...
Abstract Background Proportional modes (proportional assist ventilation, PAV, and neurally adjusted ...
Background and objective: Proportional assist ventilation (PAV) has been proposed as a more physiolo...
Background: Patients with COPD are frequently hospitalized for acute exacerbations (AECOPD), which m...
Noninvasive positive pressure ventilation has been regarded as a strategy for improving exercise per...
Purpose. The aim of this study was to compare the metabolic load between adaptive support ventilatio...
Background: Patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) present an important ventilatory (imit...
Background/PurposeNoninvasive positive pressure ventilation has been regarded as a strategy for impr...
Proportional modes of ventilation assist the patient by adapting to his/her effort, which contrasts ...
The diaphragm is the largest contributing muscle in a spontaneous breath. Classically, when failure ...
The aim of the present study was to verify that the patient/ventilator interaction is similar, regar...