The ventilation and carbon dioxide elimination of each lung, and pulmonary arterial pressure, were studied in 17 patients during the early phases of anaesthesia for pulmonary surgery. The patients were ventilated mechanically to moderate hypocapnia. Expired tidal volume and carbon dioxide elimination rate of the lung to be operated on, and of the other lung, were similar in the supine position. There was a significant (P less than 0.01) increase in ventilation and a decrease in end-tidal PCO2 of the upper lung after turning the patient on to the side. Simultaneously, the physiological deadspace fraction of tidal volume (VD/VT) increased from 42 to 45% (P less than 0.05). Mean pulmonary arterial pressure (MPAP) increased slightly as surgery ...
Arterial pH, Pa>2, and whole blood standard bicarbonate were measured in surgical patients before...
To evaluate the effects of physiological ventilatory patterns on P(a-ET)CO2 gradient and on the alve...
Intraoperative mechanical ventilation is mandatory during many surgical procedures. Knowledge in thi...
Changes in the ability of the lungs to dear carbon dioxide were measured at different stages during ...
PULMONARY ventilation may vary widely it is generally agreed that the results are during anaesthesia...
Cardiac index, systemic and pulmonary arterial pressures, carbon dioxide elimination and ventilation...
Laparoscopic operations are a common and popular way for abdominal procedures. They are usually perf...
Background and objective: General anaesthesia impairs respiratory function. The present studies were...
We have measured the arterial to end-tidal?CO2 difference (PaC02—?E'C02) in 22 patients under-g...
Anaesthesia, with or without paralysis, causes profound changes in respiratory function. There is no...
Partial lung collapse, i.e., pulmonary atelectasis, is common during general anaesthesia. The main c...
This study compared cerebral blood flow-carbon dioxide (CBF-CO2) reactivities in the supine and mode...
BACKGROUND Maintenance of normal arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) is not generally a problem ...
This study was designed to evaluate the effects of posture on ventilation/perfusion in the postopera...
The purpose of this study was to analyse the effects of sitting, supine and laterals positions on ar...
Arterial pH, Pa>2, and whole blood standard bicarbonate were measured in surgical patients before...
To evaluate the effects of physiological ventilatory patterns on P(a-ET)CO2 gradient and on the alve...
Intraoperative mechanical ventilation is mandatory during many surgical procedures. Knowledge in thi...
Changes in the ability of the lungs to dear carbon dioxide were measured at different stages during ...
PULMONARY ventilation may vary widely it is generally agreed that the results are during anaesthesia...
Cardiac index, systemic and pulmonary arterial pressures, carbon dioxide elimination and ventilation...
Laparoscopic operations are a common and popular way for abdominal procedures. They are usually perf...
Background and objective: General anaesthesia impairs respiratory function. The present studies were...
We have measured the arterial to end-tidal?CO2 difference (PaC02—?E'C02) in 22 patients under-g...
Anaesthesia, with or without paralysis, causes profound changes in respiratory function. There is no...
Partial lung collapse, i.e., pulmonary atelectasis, is common during general anaesthesia. The main c...
This study compared cerebral blood flow-carbon dioxide (CBF-CO2) reactivities in the supine and mode...
BACKGROUND Maintenance of normal arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) is not generally a problem ...
This study was designed to evaluate the effects of posture on ventilation/perfusion in the postopera...
The purpose of this study was to analyse the effects of sitting, supine and laterals positions on ar...
Arterial pH, Pa>2, and whole blood standard bicarbonate were measured in surgical patients before...
To evaluate the effects of physiological ventilatory patterns on P(a-ET)CO2 gradient and on the alve...
Intraoperative mechanical ventilation is mandatory during many surgical procedures. Knowledge in thi...