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Dive into the research topics where Gilbert Jenouri is active.

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Featured researches published by Gilbert Jenouri.


Chest | 1983

Breathing Patterns: 1. Normal Subjects

Martin J. Tobin; Tejvir S. Chadha; Gilbert Jenouri; Stephen Birch; Hacik Gazeroglu; Marvin A. Sackner

Ventilatory monitoring devices that require mouthpiece breathing produce a rise in tidal volume (VT), a fall in frequency (f) and alterations in periodicity and variability of breathing components. Together with the introduction of the respiratory inductive plethysmograph, a reliable noninvasive monitoring device of ventilation, major advances have taken place in understanding the significance of the components of the breathing pattern. We measured the breathing pattern of normal subjects utilizing respiratory inductive plethysmography and continuously processed these data with a microprocessor system. The mean values of the breathing pattern components in normal subjects were not affected by age, but the rhythmicity was more irregular in the elderly. The values of breathing pattern components obtained noninvasively by respiratory inductive plethysmography in normal subjects are fairly predictable in limits similar to other tests of pulmonary function.


Critical Care Medicine | 1983

Effect of positive end-expiratory pressure on breathing patterns of normal subjects and intubated patients with respiratory failure

Martin J. Tobin; Gilbert Jenouri; Stephen Birch; Bonnie Lind; Hugo Gonzalez; Tahir Ahmed; Marvin A. Sackner

The aims of this study included assessment of accuracy of respiratory inductive plethysmography when pulmonary hyperinflation was induced by application of PEEP, and examination of breathing patterns of normal subjects, intubated patients requiring mechanical ventilation and intubated patients immediately before extubation during application of PEEP by demand valve and high gas flow reservoir bag systems. Validation of tidal volume (VT) and end-expiratory level measured with respiratory inductive plethysmography to simultaneous spirometry (SP) was achieved with PEEP levels up to 12.5 cm H2O in 7 normals. In 17 intubated patients, almost all VT values measured with respiratory inductive plethysmography fell within +/- 10% of SP even with 2 to 3 changes of body posture. In normal subjects, increasing levels of PEEP from the demand valve system produced nonprogressive rises of VT and mean inspiratory flow, falls of frequency and fractional inspiratory time (TI/TTOT), and no changes of minute ventilation (Vmin) nor mean expiratory flow. PEEP from the high gas flow reservoir bag system produced nonprogressive rises of VT and rib cage (RC) contribution to VT, and rises of Vmin and mean inspiratory and expiratory flows between 10.0 and 12.5 cm H2O of PEEP. Intubated patients requiring intermittent mandatory ventilation (IMV) had a rapid, shallow breathing pattern unaltered by PEEP levels delivered by either system up to 12.5 cm H2O despite increases of end-expiratory level. Intubated patients who were about to be extubated breathed with patterns closer to ambulatory normal subjects with the exception of their elevated RC contribution to VT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 1985

Acute effects of aerosolized metaproterenol on breathing pattern of patients with symptomatic bronchial asthma

Martin J. Tobin; Stephen Birch; Gilbert Jenouri; Marvin A. Sackner

We studied the effect of two sequential puffs of metaproterenol (650 micrograms each puff) delivered with an auxiliary aerosol delivery system on the breathing pattern of patients with symptomatic bronchial asthma who were monitored noninvasively with respiratory inductive plethysmography. Particular attention was directed to respiratory center drive as reflected by mean inspiratory flow and minute ventilation. Both these components were elevated in the eight patients whose mean FEV1.0 was 1.43 L (45% predicted normal). Two puffs of metaproterenol produced a maximal increase over baseline in FEV1.0 of 50 +/- 25% (SD), whereas no change took place in FEV1.0 with placebo administration. This dose of metaproterenol did not alter heart rate nor blood pressure throughout the study period of 2 hours. Neither mean inspiratory flow, minute ventilation, nor any component of the breathing pattern changed with this partial reversal of bronchoconstriction. These results suggest that the neural mechanism accounting for heightened respiratory center drive in patients with symptomatic bronchial asthma does not wholly depend on bronchoconstriction.


Respiration | 1983

Effect of Naloxone on Breathing Pattern in Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease with and without Hypercapnia

Martin J. Tobin; Gilbert Jenouri; Marvin A. Sackner

Recent reports suggest that endogenously released endorphins may exert a modifying influence on respiratory center drive in patients with respiratory disease. In this report, we employed respiratory inductive plethysmography to noninvasively assess breathing patterns with particular attention to respiratory center drive as reflected by mean inspiratory flow. We studied 10 patients with documented chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (6 with hypercapnia and 4 with normocapnia) after treatment with placebo and the opiate antagonist, naloxone. No significant change in breathing pattern was observed in either patient group after treatment with placebo or naloxone, although individual patients displayed greater respiratory drive after naloxone than placebo. Therefore, endorphins do not exert a consistent influence on respiratory center output in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.


The American review of respiratory disease | 2015

Validation of Respiratory Inductive Plethysmography Using Different Calibration Procedures1–3

Tejvir S. Chadha; Herman Watson; Stephen Birch; Gilbert Jenouri; A. W. Schneider; M. A. Cohn; Marvin A. Sackner


Chest | 1983

Breathing Patterns: 2. Diseased Subjects

Martin J. Tobin; Tejvir S. Chadha; Gilbert Jenouri; Stephen Birch; Hacik Gazeroglu; Marvin A. Sackner


Chest | 1983

Validation of Respiratory Inductive Plethysmography in Patients with Pulmonary Disease

Martin J. Tobin; Gilbert Jenouri; Bonnie Lind; Herman Watson; Anne W. Schneider; Marvin A. Sackner


The American review of respiratory disease | 2015

Response to Bronchodilator Drug Administration by a New Reservoir Aerosol Delivery System and a Review of Other Auxiliary Delivery Systems1–3

Martin J. Tobin; Gilbert Jenouri; Ignasio Danta; Chong Kim; Herman Watson; Marvin A. Sackner


The American review of respiratory disease | 2015

Effects of abdominal and thoracic breathing on breathing pattern components in normal subjects and in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Marvin A. Sackner; Hugo Gonzalez; Gilbert Jenouri; Margarita Rodriguez


Chest | 1982

Subjective and Objective Measurement of Cigarette Smoke Inhalation

Martin J. Tobin; Gilbert Jenouri; Marvin A. Sackner

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Martin J. Tobin

Loyola University Chicago

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Martin J. Tobin

Loyola University Chicago

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