Literature DB >> 15965896

Twitch airway pressure elicited by magnetic phrenic nerve stimulation in anesthetized healthy children.

Gerrard F Rafferty1, Naveed Mustfa, William D Man, Karl Sylvester, Antony Fisher, Miguel Plaza, Mark Davenport, Sean Blaney, John Moxham, Anne Greenough.   

Abstract

Children with diaphragm dysfunction may be unable to maintain adequate ventilation. Accurate diagnosis is important, but can only be achieved using an appropriate test and reference range. The aim of this study, therefore, was to measure diaphragm contractility and examine the influence of age and maturation, using magnetic phrenic nerve stimulation in healthy children. Anterolateral magnetic stimulation (MS) of the phrenic nerves was performed using a 43-mm figure-eight coil in 23 children (14 male; mean age, 7.8 years; range, 1.8-15.7) anesthetized for minor surgery with sevoflurane gas. The airway was maintained with a cuffed laryngeal mask airway (LMA) which was briefly occluded during MS. Diaphragm contractility was assessed by measuring the airway pressure (TwPaw) elicited by MS. TwPaw responses were obtained in all subjects, with mean (SD) TwPaw 18.2 (6.8) cm H2O bilateral, 7.3 (3.2) cm H2O left unilateral, and 8.6 (3.1) cm H2O right unilateral. Subgroup analysis was performed in 17 of the children who were prepubertal. Their mean (SD) TwPaw was 17.3 (6.8) cm H2O bilateral, 7.1 (3.7) cm H2O left unilateral, and 8.3 (3.3) right unilateral. The mean (SD) intrapatient coefficients of variation for bilateral and left and right unilateral TwPaw were 8.4% (5.2), 6.7% (3.5), and 11.7% (10.3), respectively. Bilateral and left and right unilateral TwPaw were significantly related to age (P < 0.05). In healthy prepubertal children, diaphragm contractility is primarily influenced by age. Copyright 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15965896     DOI: 10.1002/ppul.20241

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Pulmonol        ISSN: 1099-0496


  4 in total

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4.  Interest of monitoring diaphragmatic electrical activity in the pediatric intensive care unit.

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  4 in total

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