Paolo Navalesi
University of Padua
338 Papers
791 Citations
Paolo Navalesi is an academic researcher from University of Padua. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Mechanical ventilation. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 269 publications. Previous affiliations of Paolo Navalesi include University of Eastern Piedmont & Montreal General Hospital.
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Papers
High-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy to treat patients with hypoxemic acute respiratory failure consequent to SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Andrea Vianello,Giovanna Arcaro,Beatrice Molena,Cristian Turato,Andi Sukthi,Gabriella Guarnieri,Francesca Lugato,Gianenrico Senna,Paolo Navalesi +8 more
TL;DR: HFNC is suggested to be a safe treatment for less severe patients with SARS-CoV-2 hARF and efficacy will need to be assessed as part of a clinical trial.
Physiologic Evaluation of Different Levels of Assistance During Noninvasive Ventilation Delivered Through a Helmet
Roberta Costa,Paolo Navalesi,Massimo Antonelli,Franco Cavaliere,Andrea Craba,Rodolfo Proietti,Giorgio Conti +6 more
TL;DR: In volunteers, the helmet is efficient in ventilation, allowing a Vt increase and RRpes reduction, and a significant discomfort was present only at the highest level of assistance; however, it did not affect patient/ventilator interaction.
Bench Comparative Assessment of Mechanically Assisted Cough Devices
Pamela Frigerio,Federico Longhini,Maurizio Sommariva,Enrica Giuliana Stagni,Francesco Curto,Tiziana Redaelli,Marco Ciboldi,Anita K. Simonds,Paolo Navalesi +8 more
TL;DR: The performance of different mechanically assisted cough devices was erratic and included variance between models from the same manufacturer; it was affected by respiratory system impedance and air leaks.
Electrical activity of the diaphragm during pressure support ventilation in acute respiratory failure.
Jennifer Beck,Stewart B. Gottfried,Paolo Navalesi,Yoanna Skrobik,Norman Comtois,Mauro Rossini,Christer Sinderby +6 more
TL;DR: EAdi is a valid measurement of neural drive to the diaphragm in acute respiratory failure and it is concluded that ventilator assist continued during the diophragm deactivation period, a phenomenon that was further exaggerated at higher PS levels.
Physiologic evaluation of noninvasive mechanical ventilation delivered with three types of masks in patients with chronic hypercapnic respiratory failure.
TL;DR: It is shown that in patients with hypercapnic respiratory failure, irrespective of the underlying pathology, the type of interface affects the NIMV outcome more than the ventilatory mode.