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Isoflurane therapy for severe refractory status asthmaticus in children.

This abstract is by Shankar, churchill and Deshpande, who work at the Pediatric critical care unit at the children’s hospital in Vanderbilt, Tennessee. The pubmed number is 16614808.

OBJECTIVE: To describe the use of inhaled isoflurane in a series of children with life-threatening asthma.

DESIGN:Retrospective case series.

SETTING: Pediatric intensive care unit of a tertiary-care children’s hospital. Ten children ranging in age from 1 to 16 years with 11 episodes of severe asthma requiring invasive mechanical ventilation in the pediatric intensive care unit over a 5-year period. RESULTS: Isoflurane resulted in an improvement in arterial pH and a reduction in partial pressure of arterial carbon dioxide (PaCO(2)) in all the 11 instances. This effect was sustained in 10 cases and led to clinical improvement and rapid weaning from mechanical ventilation. One child failed to show sustained response and was placed on veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. One child died secondary to anoxic brain injury sustained prior to hospitalization. Hypotension was the major side effect, and occurred in 8 children necessitating vasopressor support.

CONCLUSIONS: Isoflurane improves arterial pH and reduces partial pressure of arterial carbon dioxide in mechanically ventilated children with life-threatening status asthmaticus who are not responsive to conventional management.

The full text of the article is available in the April 2006 edition of  Intensive Care Medicine.

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