PMC:6640909 / 77795-78076 JSONTXT

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    TEST0

    {"project":"TEST0","denotations":[{"id":"31100109-103-110-7610","span":{"begin":103,"end":106},"obj":"[\"13435355\"]"},{"id":"31100109-167-174-7611","span":{"begin":276,"end":279},"obj":"[\"28846440\"]"}],"text":"Mechanical ventilation should avoid hypoxia and hypercarbia, which could result in an increase of PVR [228]. Protective ventilation settings with tidal volumes of 6–8 ml/kg and appropriate positive end expiratory pressure reduce the risk of ventilator-associated lung injury [229]."}

    MyTest

    {"project":"MyTest","denotations":[{"id":"31100109-13435355-28905670","span":{"begin":103,"end":106},"obj":"13435355"},{"id":"31100109-28846440-28905671","span":{"begin":276,"end":279},"obj":"28846440"}],"namespaces":[{"prefix":"_base","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/testbase"},{"prefix":"UniProtKB","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/"},{"prefix":"uniprot","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprotkb/"}],"text":"Mechanical ventilation should avoid hypoxia and hypercarbia, which could result in an increase of PVR [228]. Protective ventilation settings with tidal volumes of 6–8 ml/kg and appropriate positive end expiratory pressure reduce the risk of ventilator-associated lung injury [229]."}

    0_colil

    {"project":"0_colil","denotations":[{"id":"31100109-13435355-7610","span":{"begin":103,"end":106},"obj":"13435355"},{"id":"31100109-28846440-7611","span":{"begin":276,"end":279},"obj":"28846440"}],"text":"Mechanical ventilation should avoid hypoxia and hypercarbia, which could result in an increase of PVR [228]. Protective ventilation settings with tidal volumes of 6–8 ml/kg and appropriate positive end expiratory pressure reduce the risk of ventilator-associated lung injury [229]."}

    2_test

    {"project":"2_test","denotations":[{"id":"31100109-13435355-28905670","span":{"begin":103,"end":106},"obj":"13435355"},{"id":"31100109-28846440-28905671","span":{"begin":276,"end":279},"obj":"28846440"}],"text":"Mechanical ventilation should avoid hypoxia and hypercarbia, which could result in an increase of PVR [228]. Protective ventilation settings with tidal volumes of 6–8 ml/kg and appropriate positive end expiratory pressure reduce the risk of ventilator-associated lung injury [229]."}