Abstract
Three patients with primary group-A influenzal pneumonia had diffuse pulmonary infiltrates, arterial oxygen tensions (PaO2) less than 50 mm Hg while breathing oxygen at 1 atm (fractional concentration of oxygen in the inspired gas (FIo2) equals 1.0), and right-to-left pulmonary shunts greater than 45 percent of total pulmonary blood flow. At an FIo2 of 1.0, end-expiratory pressure (EEP) was added in increments of 2 to 5 cm H2O every 30 to 60 minutes until the PaO2 was above 200 mm Hg and right-to-left shunting had fallen to less than 25 percent. The FIo2 was then lowered to 0.5. Using this systematic approach, all three patients required an FIo2 of 1.0 for less than 12 hours, minimizing the risk of oxygen toxicity. Two of the three patients did not require mechanical ventilation and breathed spontaneously while on continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), and one of them tolerated an EEP of 31 cm H2O. Two patients survived, and one died of a neurologic complication of cardiopulmonary arrest, despite clearing on the chest x-ray film and improved gas exchange. Therapy with CPAP can be safely used in adults and has practical as well as theoretic benefits over continuous positive-pressure ventilation.
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