2016
Accuracy of Transcutaneous Carbon Dioxide Measurement in Premature Infants
Janaillac M, Labarinas S, Pfister RE, Karam O. Accuracy of Transcutaneous Carbon Dioxide Measurement in Premature Infants. Critical Care Research And Practice 2016, 2016: 8041967. PMID: 27375901, PMCID: PMC4916268, DOI: 10.1155/2016/8041967.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPremature infantsBlood partial pressureBlood pCO2 valuesGestational ageBlood PCO2Tertiary neonatal intensive care unitNeonatal intensive care unitConsecutive premature infantsRetrospective observational studyWeeks gestational ageIntensive care unitTranscutaneous carbon dioxide measurementsCare unitCerebral lesionsObservational studyTranscutaneous methodCarbon dioxide valuesInfantsR correlationsTcPCO2Transcutaneous valuesPCO2 valuesPearson r correlationsPCO2Carbon dioxide measurements
2007
Noise levels during nCPAP are flow-dependent but not device-dependent
Karam O, Donatiello C, Van Lancker E, Chritin V, Pfister RE, Rimensberger PC. Noise levels during nCPAP are flow-dependent but not device-dependent. Archives Of Disease In Childhood - Fetal And Neonatal Edition 2007, 93: f132. PMID: 18089628, DOI: 10.1136/adc.2007.129098.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsNasal continuous positive airway pressureCare unitContinuous positive airway pressurePediatric critical care unitNeonatal intensive care unitOutcomes of infantsPositive airway pressureRespiratory distress syndromeIntensive care unitCritical care unitsAirway pressureDistress syndromeMechanical ventilationPremature infantsNeonatal careNoxious exposuresOral cavityOccupational limitsInfantsLevelsSyndromeCare