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October 1981
Lung Volumes, Mechanics, and Oxygenation during Spontaneous Positive-Pressure Ventilation: the Advantage of CPAP Over EPAP
Richard M. Schlobohm, M.D.;
Richard M. Schlobohm, M.D.
*Clinical Professor of Anesthesia.
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Robert T. Falltrick, M.D.;
Robert T. Falltrick, M.D.
†Assistant Clinical Professor of Anesthesia. Present address: Department of Anesthesia, Saint Francis Memorial Hospital, San Francisco, California 94109.
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Stuart F. Quan, M.D.;
Stuart F. Quan, M.D.
‡Intensive Care Fellow. Presently, Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine, Division of Respiratory Sciences, University of Arizona Health Sciences Center, Tucson, Arizona 85724.
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Jeffrey A. Katz, M.D.
Jeffrey A. Katz, M.D.
‖As Greenbaum et al.3and Grenvik,7we prefer the more descriptive term “EPAP” to “PEEP” and “sPEEP”, because PEEP is usually associated with mechanical ventilation.
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§Assistant Professor of Anesthesia.
Anesthesiology October 1981, Vol. 55, 416–422.
Citation
Richard M. Schlobohm, Robert T. Falltrick, Stuart F. Quan, Jeffrey A. Katz; Lung Volumes, Mechanics, and Oxygenation during Spontaneous Positive-Pressure Ventilation: the Advantage of CPAP Over EPAP. Anesthesiology 1981; 55:416–422 doi: https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-198110000-00013
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