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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Neonatal mechanical ventilator. High gas flows are often used in neonatal ventilation which carries the risk of rheotrauma.

Rheotrauma is a medical term for the harm caused to a patient's lungs by high gas flows as delivered by mechanical ventilation.[1][2][3] Although mechanical ventilation may prevent death of a patient from the hypoxia or hypercarbia which may be caused by respiratory failure, it can also be damaging to the lungs, leading to ventilator-associated lung injury.[4] Rheotrauma is one of the ways in which mechanical ventilation may do this, alongside volutrauma, barotrauma, atelectotrauma and biotrauma. Attempts have been made to combine all of the mechanical forces caused by the ventilator on the patient's lungs in an all encompassing term: mechanical power.

References

  1. ^ Bach KP, Kuschel CA, Oliver MH, Bloomfield FH (2009). "Ventilator gas flow rates affect inspiratory time and ventilator efficiency index in term lambs". Neonatology. 96 (4): 259–64. doi:10.1159/000220765. PMID 19478530. S2CID 20216584.
  2. ^ Donn SM, Sinha SK (May 2006). "Minimising ventilator induced lung injury in preterm infants". Arch. Dis. Child. Fetal Neonatal Ed. 91 (3): F226–30. doi:10.1136/adc.2005.082271. PMC 2672704. PMID 16632652.
  3. ^ Steven M. Donn; Sunil K. Sinha (19 December 2016). Manual of Neonatal Respiratory Care. Springer. pp. 314–5. ISBN 978-3-319-39839-6.
  4. ^ Asim Kurjak; Frank A. Chervenak (25 September 2006). Textbook of Perinatal Medicine, Second Edition. CRC Press. pp. 39–41. ISBN 978-1-4398-1469-7.
This page was last edited on 1 September 2021, at 21:36
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