Long-term oxygen therapy vs long-term ventilatory assistance |
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Authors: | Wedzicha J A |
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Affiliation: | Academic Department of Respiratory Medicine, St Bartholomew's and Royal London School of Medicine and Dentistry, St Bartholomew's Hospital, UK. |
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Abstract: | The use of positive-pressure nasal ventilation in combination with LTOT in stable COPD patients with hypercapnic respiratory failure controls hypoventilation and improves daytime ABGs, sleep, and quality of life. Nasal ventilation in COPD is unlikely to produce benefit unless used with supplemental oxygen therapy at night. The patients who show the greatest reduction in overnight PaCO2 with ventilation are the patients most likely to benefit from long-term ventilatory support. Although there is now evidence for short-term benefit from NPPV in hypercapnic COPD, large multicenter studies with survival, exacerbations, and hospital admissions as the primary end points are required to evaluate longer-term effects of this potentially important intervention. |
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