期刊文献+

正压呼吸治疗多种严重疾病患儿的疗效

Positive expiratory pressure (PEP) treatment in children with multiple severe disabilities
下载PDF
导出
摘要 Background: Children with multiple severe disabilities cannot be spontaneously physically active and therefore lack the ventilatory stimulation of physical activity. They often produce large quantities of airway mucus, which they have difficulty to evacuate on their own. The accumulation of mucus may lead to respiratory insufficiency. Aim: To investigate whether chest physiotherapy with positive expiratory pressure (PEP)-could improve the blood oxygen tension (PO2) and/or decrease carbon dioxide tension (PCO2) in severely disabled children with airway mucus accumulation. Methods: Eighteen disabled children (mean age 7.5 y, SD 4.3, range 1.7-17.8 y) participated in the study. Transcutaneous (tc) PO2, tcPCO2 and respiratory rate (RR) were recorded before and after PEP treatment. The reproducibility of the effect of the treatment was tested by repeating the recordings. Results: The mean tcPO2 increased 1.0 kPa (range -0.2 to 3.4 kPa) immediately after PEP treatment (p=0.0001). No significant changes in tcPCO2 or RR were noted. The reproducibility of the effect of PEP treatment was good, with a significant increase in tcPO2 at all retests. All children accepted the treatment well. Conclusion: PEP increases blood oxygen tension immediately after treatment in severely disabled children with airway mucus accumulation. Long-term effects remain to be proven. Background: Children with multiple severe disabilities cannot be spontaneously physically active and therefore lack the ventilatory stimulation of physical activity. They often produce large quantities of airway mucus, which they have difficulty to evacuate on their own. The accumulation of mucus may lead to respiratory insufficiency. Aim: To investigate whether chest physiotherapy with positive expiratory pressure (PEP)-could improve the blood oxygen tension (PO2) and/or decrease carbon dioxide tension (PCO2) in severely disabled children with airway mucus accumulation. Methods: Eighteen disabled children (mean age 7.5 y, SD 4.3, range 1.7-17.8 y) participated in the study. Transcutaneous (tc) PO2, tcPCO2 and respiratory rate (RR) were recorded before and after PEP treatment. The reproducibility of the effect of the treatment was tested by repeating the recordings. Results: The mean tcPO2 increased 1.0 kPa (range -0.2 to 3.4 kPa) immediately after PEP treatment (p=0.0001). No significant changes in tcPCO2 or RR were noted. The reproducibility of the effect of PEP treatment was good, with a significant increase in tcPO2 at all retests. All children accepted the treatment well. Conclusion: PEP increases blood oxygen tension immediately after treatment in severely disabled children with airway mucus accumulation. Long-term effects remain to be proven.
  • 相关文献

相关作者

内容加载中请稍等...

相关机构

内容加载中请稍等...

相关主题

内容加载中请稍等...

浏览历史

内容加载中请稍等...
;
使用帮助 返回顶部