Highlights from the journal CHEST®, September 2022
September 12, 2022
Glenview, Illinois –
Published monthly, the journal CHEST® features
peer-reviewed, cutting-edge original research in chest medicine: Pulmonary,
critical care and sleep medicine and related disciplines. Journal topics
include asthma, chest infections, COPD, critical care, diffuse lung
disease, education and clinical practice, pulmonary vascular disease,
sleep, thoracic oncology and the humanities.
The
September issue
of CHEST journal contains 40 articles, including clinically
relevant research, reviews, case series, commentary and more. Each month,
the journal also offers
complementary web and multimedia activities,
including visual abstracts, to expand the reach of its most interesting,
timely and relevant research.
“With September serving as pulmonary fibrosis awareness month, I recommend
reading original research such as “Disparities in Rural Populations With Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis,” published in the September issue, which finds that rural participants
with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis present with worse disease severity
compared with their suburban counterparts,” says Editor in Chief of the
journal CHEST, Peter Mazzone, MD, MPH, FCCP. “Lung diseases like
pulmonary fibrosis and more in the fields of pulmonary, critical care and
sleep medicine will be covered extensively at the upcoming
CHEST Annual Meeting
in Nashville, Oct. 16-19. The journal CHEST will publish all
presented abstracts 1 week before the conference begins, and authors will
speak to the research live at the meeting.”
Also included in the current issue of the journal CHEST:
-
Asthma
Original research, “Asthma Control, Airway Mucus, and 129Xe MRI Ventilation
After a Single Benralizumab Dose,” finds that improved airway function can be measured directly after a
first benralizumab dose and that the presence of airway mucus could
influence this potential response.
-
Critical Care
Nationwide study, “Factors Associated With Spontaneous Awakening Trial and SpontaneousBreathing Trial Performance in Adults With Critical Illness,” demonstrates that nonmodifiable (age, admitting ICU diagnosis and BMI)
and modifiable (ICU symptoms, physical restraint use, use of a target
sedation level, etc.) factors influence spontaneous awakening trial and
spontaneous breathing trial performance. A visual abstract for the research
can be viewed
here.
To view the entire September issue of the CHEST journal, visit journal.chestnet.org,
and follow @journal_CHEST on
Twitter for the latest journal news.
About the American College of Chest Physicians
The American College of Chest Physicians® (CHEST) is the global
leader in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of chest diseases. Its
mission is to champion advanced clinical practice, education, communication
and research in chest medicine. It serves as an essential connection to
clinical knowledge and resources for its 19,000+ members from around the
world who provide patient care in pulmonary, critical care and sleep
medicine. For information about the American College of Chest Physicians,
and its flagship journal CHEST®, visit chestnet.org.