We present our series of patients with chronic ventilatory failure treated with electrophrenic respiration: 13 males and nine females with a mean age of 12+11.5 years. The etiology was, 13 tetraplegia, ®ve sequelae of surgical treatment of intracranial lesions, and four central alveolar hypoventilation. The mean duration of the conditioning period were 3 ± 4 months. Eighteen patients (81.8%) achieved permanent, diaphragmatically-paced breathing with bilateral stimulation and in four (18.2%) patients, pacing was only during sleep. Five patients died (22.7%): two during the hospital stay and three at home; two deaths had unknown cause and three were due respectively to, lack of at-home care, recurrence of an epidermoid tumor, and sequelae of accidental disconnection of the mechanical ventilation before beginning the conditioning period. Two cases were considered failures: One patient had transitory neurapraxia lasting 80 days, and the other had an ischemic spinal cord syndrome with progressive deterioration of the left-side response to stimulation. One patient had right phrenic nerve entrapment by scar tissue and four suered infections. The follow-up periods since pacemaker implantation are currently: 1, 11 years; 4, 10 years, and 17, less than 5 years. The results of our experience demonstrate that complete stable ventilation can be achieved using diaphragmatic pacing and that it improves the prognosis and life quality of patients with severe chronic respiratory failure.
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