Abstract
During the 6-year period from 1971 to 1977, 13 (about 1%) of 1225 admissions to hospital with asthma developed severe ventilatory failure (peak arterial PCO2 > 8 kPa). Mean age was 4.1 years (2.3-7.9), and on average each patient had been admitted to hospital on 5 occasions during the preceding year. Eleven gave a family history of asthma or a personal history of associated allergies. A viral upper respiratory tract infection was the most common precipitant of wheeze, and in 7 patients the duration of wheeziness before admission to hospital was 12 hours or less. Six (0.5%) patients were treated by mechanical ventilation and all survived. The changing patterns of management during the study period are reviewed.
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CITATION STYLE
Simpson, H., Mitchell, I., Inglis, J. M., & Grubb, D. J. (1978). Severe ventilatory failure in asthma in children. Experience of 13 episodes over 6 years. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 53(9), 714–721. https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.53.9.714
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