FiO2

Jump to navigation Jump to search


WikiDoc Resources for FiO2

Articles

Most recent articles on FiO2

Most cited articles on FiO2

Review articles on FiO2

Articles on FiO2 in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ

Media

Powerpoint slides on FiO2

Images of FiO2

Photos of FiO2

Podcasts & MP3s on FiO2

Videos on FiO2

Evidence Based Medicine

Cochrane Collaboration on FiO2

Bandolier on FiO2

TRIP on FiO2

Clinical Trials

Ongoing Trials on FiO2 at Clinical Trials.gov

Trial results on FiO2

Clinical Trials on FiO2 at Google

Guidelines / Policies / Govt

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on FiO2

NICE Guidance on FiO2

NHS PRODIGY Guidance

FDA on FiO2

CDC on FiO2

Books

Books on FiO2

News

FiO2 in the news

Be alerted to news on FiO2

News trends on FiO2

Commentary

Blogs on FiO2

Definitions

Definitions of FiO2

Patient Resources / Community

Patient resources on FiO2

Discussion groups on FiO2

Patient Handouts on FiO2

Directions to Hospitals Treating FiO2

Risk calculators and risk factors for FiO2

Healthcare Provider Resources

Symptoms of FiO2

Causes & Risk Factors for FiO2

Diagnostic studies for FiO2

Treatment of FiO2

Continuing Medical Education (CME)

CME Programs on FiO2

International

FiO2 en Espanol

FiO2 en Francais

Business

FiO2 in the Marketplace

Patents on FiO2

Experimental / Informatics

List of terms related to FiO2

FiO2, in the field of medicine, is the fraction of inspired oxygen in a gas mixture.

The FiO2 is expressed as a number from 0 (0%) to 1 (100%). The FiO2 of normal room air is 0.21 (21%).

A patient's FiO2 may be varied through the use of different Venturi masks, in combination with varying oxygen flow rates. In addition, most mechanical ventilators have controls for adjusting FiO2. An increased FiO2 is necessary in managing adequate oxygenation in patients who are critically ill due to causes such as major surgery, acute lung injury, sepsis, pneumonia, congestive heart failure, or other cardiopulmonary disease.

Another common misconception is that the FiO2 changes with elevation. It remains at 0.21 at all altitudes within the atmosphere. What changes is the barometric pressure of air. At altitude, therefore, the partial pressure of oxygen delivered by that 21% of oxygen is lower. The partial pressure is the driving force to oxygenate the blood and therefore a lower partial pressure makes it that much harder to get O2 delivered to the tissues that require it, resulting in hypoxia.


Template:WH Template:WikiDoc Sources