| Literature DB >> 15701547 |
Muhammad R Sohail1, Philip R Fischer.
Abstract
With focused pretravel counseling and intervention, travelers can be prepared to avoid many risks of in-flight problems. Travel medicine practitioners can include appropriate guidance for in-flight health and safety in discussions during pretravel visits.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15701547 PMCID: PMC7135542 DOI: 10.1016/j.idc.2004.10.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Clin North Am ISSN: 0891-5520 Impact factor: 5.982
Travel guidelines for patients with specific respiratory conditions
| Disease | Recommendations |
|---|---|
| COPD: chronic bronchitis and emphysema | Arrange inflight oxygen if indicated; carry bronchodilators in hand luggage; consider PFT (FEV1) in patients with severe COPD |
| Asthma | Hand carry short-acting inhalers; advise to take a course of oral steroid with them for any emergencies during trip; delay travel if labile condition |
| Interstitial lung disease (idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and sarcoidosis) | Evaluate need for in-flight oxygen therapy |
| Bronchiectasis and cystic fibrosis | Control of lung infection with appropriate antibiotics; measures to loosen and clear secretions; adequate hydration; consider aerosolized rhDNAse to reduce sputum viscosity; medical oxygen if indicated |
| Pneumothorax | Diagnose and correct underlying etiology; delay travel until resolved |
| Pulmonary hypertension | Anticoagulation, evaluation for in-flight oxygen; restrict exercise during flight |
| Pleural effusion | Large effusion should be drained 10–14 days before flight for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes; consider repeating chest radiograph before trip |
| Neuromuscular disease (spinal cord injury, obesity hypoventilation syndrome, muscular dystrophy) | Arrange manual suctioning equipment, medical oxygen, and ventilator capabilities; some patients may require tracheostomy before trip |
| Tracheostomy | Humidification of inspired air; adequate hydration; suctioning |
| Patients on long-term home oxygen therapy | May need to increase flow rate from 1 to 2 L.min−1 to 4 L.min−1 |
| Recent exacerbation of any chronic respiratory disease | Delay travel until stabilized |
Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; PFT, pulmonary function tests.
Data from Refs. [1], [24], [27].
Recommended travel delay for specific conditions
| Condition | Recommended travel delay |
|---|---|
| Cardiac (CABG, valve replacement) surgery | 10–14 d |
| Uncomplicated myocardial infarction | 2–3 wk |
| Complicated myocardial infarction | 6 wk |
| Uncomplicated PCI | 3–5 d |
| Complicated PCI | 1–2 wk |
| Thoracic surgery | 10–14 d |
| Pneumothorax | 2–3 wk after resolution |
| Any unstable cardiopulmonary condition | Delay until stabilized |
| Stroke (CVA) | 2 wk |
| Postspinal anesthesia | 10–14 d |
| Open abdominal surgery | 1–2 wk |
| Laparoscopic abdominal surgery | 24 h (1–2 wk if intestinal lumen has been opened) |
| Colonoscopy with polypectomy | 24 h |
| Skull fracture or postneurosurgery | 1–2 wk |
| Scuba diving (one dive per day) | 12–24 h |
| Communicable diseases (including TB, SARS, measles, influenza) | Delay travel until period of communicability is over (clinical improvement, negative cultures, and so forth) |
Travel is by commercial airline flight. These are only guidelines and must be individualized based on clinical judgment and length of trip.
Abbreviations: CABG, coronary artery bypass grafting; CVA, cerebrovascular accident; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention; SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome; TB, tuberculosis.
Data from Refs. [1], [2], [29], [31], [32], [33].
Complicated by arrhythmia, postinfarct angina, or left ventricular dysfunction.