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Hypophosphatemia is a common phenomenon in the ICU, and several retrospective studies have shown that hypophosphatemia is associated with prolonged mechanical ventilation in ICU patients. However, the specific mechanism and causal relationship are not clear. Previous studies have shown that phosphate infusion improves the contraction of the diaphragm induced by exogenous electrical stimulation, but the effect of hypophosphatemia and phosphate supplementation on the pathophysiology in decannulated patients on mechanical ventilation has not been confirmed. The study group hypothesized that hypophosphatemia affects neural conduction function and muscle contraction by affecting ATP synthesis. Correcting hypophosphatemia may improve respiratory muscle strength and potentially improve diaphragmatic neural conduction, ultimately improving the patient's neuromuscular conversion efficiency and facilitating discharge.
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Inclusion criteria
age ≥18 years old; Acute respiratory failure, tracheal intubation patients; Invasive ventilator use time ≥48 hours; Clinically determined remission of primary disease, has switched to auxiliary ventilation mode and plans to go offline in the near future.
Exclusion criteria
patients with severe neuromuscular disease; Patients with central system diseases; Patients using muscle relaxants for more than 48 hours; Patients who have been or are about to be discontinued from life support; Patients with contraindications for gastric tube insertion after esophagogastric fundus varices, digestive tract perforation, and upper digestive tract surgery; Pregnant patients; Ultrasonic window is poor.
70 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Shitong Diao, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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