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Comparative Study
. 1983 Feb;137(2):139-41.
doi: 10.1001/archpedi.1983.02140280037010.

Respiratory status of children with epiglottitis with and without an artificial airway

Comparative Study

Respiratory status of children with epiglottitis with and without an artificial airway

D C Costigan et al. Am J Dis Child. 1983 Feb.

Abstract

During a ten-year period, 22 children from our 170 cases of acute epiglottitis had reliable records of arterial blood gas data. The arterial/alveolar (a/A) oxygen tension ratios were calculated, with a value less than 0.75 representing abnormal gas exchange. The mean a/A ratio for the whole group, 17 of whom already had an artificial airway, was 0.59 (range, 0.29 to 0.83). A subgroup of five children with blood samples taken during conservative treatment or before airway insertion had a mean a/A ratio of 0.62 (range, 0.49 to 0.77) without hypercapnia (mean Paco2, 32 mm Hg; range, 29 to 39 mm Hg), which seemed to be a late feature. Thirty-three percent of initial chest roentgenograms were abnormal, with the major disorder being atelectasis and/or consolidation. We propose that the radiologic and gas exchange abnormalities result from the common pathophysiologic mechanism of increased lung water.

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