Breathing failure: Causes, symptoms and treatment

The treatment of a patient suffering from breathing failure should be two goals: to treat functional imbalance as a supportive treatment, and to treat the original problem of breathing failure. In a portion of the patients, the only possible treatment is the relief of symptoms by improving the level of oxidation or ventilation, while the lung itself treats the breathing failure. There are many therapeutic methods available for doctors to treat patients with respiratory failure, these methods are classified into different groups: 1. Drug therapy There are many drug therapies used according to the condition of the patient, such as: the airflow of the air, anti -inflammatory, anti -intaat -and -oxygen supply to increase its focus in the blood of the patient. 2. Physiotherapy of the respiratory system is used in the pursuit of the extent that the patient may be closed, as well as the patient’s ability to stiff and exhale. 3. Artificial breathing when the patient cannot breathe automatically enough in the vast majority of cases. Talk about breathing with positive pressure, that is, through an artificial breathing apparatus pumping the gas through pressure into the patient’s lungs. Artificial breathing is classified as an unforeseen breathing. In unfair breathing, positive pressure on the patient lungs is generated by a tube tied in the trachea, while the gas not only breathes, the gas is pumped to the patient’s lungs by a mask attached to his face. It was recently found that it became possible to rehabilitate the patients with a high degree of physical failure by the gradual physical activity, while combining everything touched above. In recent years, a major development has taken place, so that patients with chronic breathing failure can stay at home, or within an appropriate framework, even if they are completely dependent on artificial breathing.