BACKGROUND: For mechanical ventilation to be lung-protective, an accepted suggestion is to place the tidal volume (V(T)) between the lower and upper inflection point of the airway pressure-volume relation. The drawback of this approach is, however, that the pressure-volume relation is assessed under quasistatic, no-flow conditions, which the lungs never experience during ventilation. Intratidal nonlinearity must be assessed under real (i.e., dynamic) conditions. With the dynamic gliding-SLICE technique that generates a high-resolution description of intratidal mechanics, the current study analyzed the profile of the compliance of the respiratory system (C(RS)). METHODS: In 12 anesthetized piglets with lung collapse, the pressure-volume relation was acquired at different levels of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP: 0, 5, 10, and 15 cm H(2)O). Lung collapse was assessed by computed tomography and the intratidal course of C(RS) using the gliding-SLICE method. RESULTS: Depending on PEEP, C(RS) showed characteristic profiles. With low PEEP, C(RS) increased up to 20% above the compliance at early inspiration, suggesting intratidal recruitment; whereas a profile of decreasing C(RS), signaling overdistension, occurred with V(T) > 5 ml/kg and high PEEP levels. At the highest volume range, C(RS) was up to 60% less than the maximum. With PEEP 10 cm H(2)O, C(RS) was high and did not decrease before 5 ml/kg V(T) was delivered. CONCLUSIONS: The profile of dynamic C(RS) reflects nonlinear intratidal mechanics of the respiratory system. The SLICE analysis has the potential to detect intratidal recruitment and overdistension. This might help in finding a combination of PEEP and V(T) level that is protective from a lung-mechanics perspective.
BACKGROUND: For mechanical ventilation to be lung-protective, an accepted suggestion is to place the tidal volume (V(T)) between the lower and upper inflection point of the airway pressure-volume relation. The drawback of this approach is, however, that the pressure-volume relation is assessed under quasistatic, no-flow conditions, which the lungs never experience during ventilation. Intratidal nonlinearity must be assessed under real (i.e., dynamic) conditions. With the dynamic gliding-SLICE technique that generates a high-resolution description of intratidal mechanics, the current study analyzed the profile of the compliance of the respiratory system (C(RS)). METHODS: In 12 anesthetized piglets with lung collapse, the pressure-volume relation was acquired at different levels of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP: 0, 5, 10, and 15 cm H(2)O). Lung collapse was assessed by computed tomography and the intratidal course of C(RS) using the gliding-SLICE method. RESULTS: Depending on PEEP, C(RS) showed characteristic profiles. With low PEEP, C(RS) increased up to 20% above the compliance at early inspiration, suggesting intratidal recruitment; whereas a profile of decreasing C(RS), signaling overdistension, occurred with V(T) > 5 ml/kg and high PEEP levels. At the highest volume range, C(RS) was up to 60% less than the maximum. With PEEP 10 cm H(2)O, C(RS) was high and did not decrease before 5 ml/kg V(T) was delivered. CONCLUSIONS: The profile of dynamic C(RS) reflects nonlinear intratidal mechanics of the respiratory system. The SLICE analysis has the potential to detect intratidal recruitment and overdistension. This might help in finding a combination of PEEP and V(T) level that is protective from a lung-mechanics perspective.
Authors: Akos Szlavecz; Yeong Shiong Chiew; Daniel Redmond; Alex Beatson; Daniel Glassenbury; Simon Corbett; Vincent Major; Christopher Pretty; Geoffrey M Shaw; Balazs Benyo; Thomas Desaive; J Geoffrey Chase Journal: Biomed Eng Online Date: 2014-09-30 Impact factor: 2.819
Authors: Jonas Weber; Jan Gutjahr; Johannes Schmidt; Sara Lozano-Zahonero; Silke Borgmann; Stefan Schumann; Steffen Wirth Journal: BMC Anesthesiol Date: 2020-02-20 Impact factor: 2.217
Authors: Emanuela Zannin; Raffaele L Dellaca; Peter Kostic; Pasquale P Pompilio; Anders Larsson; Antonio Pedotti; Goran Hedenstierna; Peter Frykholm Journal: Crit Care Date: 2012-11-07 Impact factor: 9.097