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Positive pressure ventilation during the first 2 weeks of life for a minimum of 3 days.
When intermittent positive pressure ventilation is available, the mortality can be reduced to 15%.
The café has pressure ventilation, and hot water is supplied from the basement.
It is not unusual for subcutaneous emphysema to result from positive pressure ventilation.
The isolation rooms in the hospital required negative pressure ventilation, allowing air to flow into the room but not escape out.
For example, positive pressure ventilation was used to stabilize the flail segment from within the chest.
Positive pressure ventilation systems are now more common than negative pressure systems.
It is also common to place control rooms under positive pressure ventilation to prevent smoke or toxic gases from entering.
Nocturnal non-invasive positive pressure ventilation for stable chronic obstructive disease.
Other potential causes are positive pressure ventilation for any reason and by any technique, in which its occurrence is frequently unexpected.
Positive pressure ventilation of the lungs with direct access through the trachea is indicated to avoid a complete respiratory failure."
These also differed in the subsequent deliveries in being fitted with air conditioning from new, rather than pressure ventilation.
Positive pressure ventilation can cause pulmonary embolism by forcing air out of injured lungs and into blood vessels.
A person may either inhale the material, or it may be delivered into the tracheobronchial tree during positive pressure ventilation.
If he is unable to breathe spontaneously it would be cruel to subject him to positive pressure ventilation to prolong his life artificially.
This was a robust unit and its availability encouraged the introduction of positive pressure ventilation techniques into mainstream European anesthetic practice.
Negative pressure ventilation cycles by producing a negative pressure around the chest and abdomen.
Positive pressure ventilation, meticulously adjusting the ventilator settings to avoid pulmonary barotrauma.
In 1670, English scientist John Mayow came up with the idea of external negative pressure ventilation.
If positive airway pressure ventilation is used to treat respiratory failure, this may be administered in a high dependency unit or equivalent area.
Positive pressure ventilation, in which air is forced into the lungs, is needed when oxygenation is significantly impaired.
Effects of non-synchronised nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation on spontaneous breathing in preterm infants.
Pressure variation during ventilator generated nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation in preterm infants.
Noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) forces air into your lungs through a face mask.
In an acute exacerbation treatment is with a combination of anticholinergics, beta-adrenoceptor agonists, steroids and possibly positive pressure ventilation.