Selected article for: "cannula oxygen therapy and oxygen therapy"

Author: Kim, Jee-Eun; Heo, Jae-Hyeok; Kim, Hye-ok; Song, Sook-hee; Park, Sang-Soon; Park, Tai-Hwan; Ahn, Jin-Young; Kim, Min-Ky; Choi, Jae-Phil
Title: Neurological Complications during Treatment of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome
  • Document date: 2017_6_30
  • ID: 0wgafqdz_15
    Snippet: A 43-year-old woman who had been diagnosed with a laboratory-confirmed MERS-CoV infection was referred to our hospital. It was suspected that she had had contact with MERS-CoV-infected patients in another hospital 10 days before the onset of her symptoms. No underlying medical problems were present, but she initially presented with severe myalgia, chills, fever, cough, and headache. After 1 week (HD 2), she developed gastrointestinal symptoms, in.....
    Document: A 43-year-old woman who had been diagnosed with a laboratory-confirmed MERS-CoV infection was referred to our hospital. It was suspected that she had had contact with MERS-CoV-infected patients in another hospital 10 days before the onset of her symptoms. No underlying medical problems were present, but she initially presented with severe myalgia, chills, fever, cough, and headache. After 1 week (HD 2), she developed gastrointestinal symptoms, including nausea, vomiting, and anorexia. On HD 3, she developed acute respiratory failure, and the flow rate of her high-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy was increased to 60 L/min with an inspiratory fraction of oxygen of 1.0. A chest radiograph displayed bilateral diffuse ground-glass opacities and dense consolidation.

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