Literature DB >> 234211

The effect of pre-existing pulmonary vascular disease on the response to mechanical ventilation with PEEP following open-heart surgery.

B Trichet, K Falke, A Togut, M B Laver.   

Abstract

The effects of mechanical ventilation with and without positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on hemodynamic performance and blood-gas exchange were studied in ten patients following open-heart surgery. Ventilation at constant tidal volume (15 ml/kg body weight) with 10 cm H2O PEEP following aortic valve replacement (AVR) IN FIVE PATIENTs without pulmonary vascular disease was associated with the following significant changes: a rise in arterial Po2, a fall in the alveolar-arterial Po2 gradient when Fio2 = 1.0, decreases in calculated Qs/Qt and cardiac index. Using a similar pattern of ventilation following mitral valve replacement (MVR) in patients with elevated pulmonary vascular resistance, we found a significant decrease in cardiac index (but less than in the AVR group), a significant elevation of calculated physiologic deadspace (Vd/Vt) and no change in Qs/Qt. An hour after removal of PEEP, intravascular pressures, blood flow and blood-gas exchange values of all patients with AVR had returned to control levels; patients with MVR had persistently significantly low cardiac indices, while Vd/Vt returned to pre-PEEP values. These findings suggest that evaluation of responses to different ventilation patterns must take into account pre-existing V/Q abnormalities secondary to pulmonary vascular disease, particularly when these are secondary to chronic congestive heart failure. Following AVR, Qs/Qt changed in the same direction as cardiac index (CI) irrespective of ventilatory pattern: CI decreased and rose as CI increased. The authors conclude that with increasing severity of pulmonary vascular disease, changes in airway pressure will have an unpredictable effect on cardiac index unless the level of myocardial competence is taken into account. In the presence of ventricular failure, changes in pleural (and therefore transmural) pressures will be minimal compared with the high filling pressures and exert no influence on stroke volume. Although pulmonary venous hypertension was more pronounded in the MVR than in the AVR group, there was no significant difference between the postoperative values for Qs/Qt (Fio2 = 1.0), a condition probably fostered by marked differences in pre-existing V/Q.

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Year:  1975        PMID: 234211     DOI: 10.1097/00000542-197501000-00010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anesthesiology        ISSN: 0003-3022            Impact factor:   7.892


  10 in total

1.  Anesthesia for open-heart surgery: Its contribution to the care of the critically ill.

Authors:  M B Laver
Journal:  Bull N Y Acad Med       Date:  1975-09

Review 2.  Right ventricular function in the surgical patient.

Authors:  R Raper; W J Sibbald
Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  1987-04       Impact factor: 3.352

3.  The effects of PEEP on arterial oxygenation. An examination of some possible mechanisms.

Authors:  A Gilston
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  1977-12       Impact factor: 17.440

Review 4.  Pulmonary hypertension in children: perioperative management.

Authors:  F A Burrows; J R Klinck; M Rabinovitch; D J Bohn
Journal:  Can Anaesth Soc J       Date:  1986-09

5.  Comparison of the effects of dopamine and dobutamine during continuous positive-pressure ventilation.

Authors:  M Brandl; T Pasch; H D Kamp; J Grimm
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  1983       Impact factor: 17.440

6.  [The effect of PEEP ventilation on hemodynamics and regional blood flow (author's transl)].

Authors:  J Beyer; K Messmer
Journal:  Klin Wochenschr       Date:  1981-12-01

7.  Myocardial transmural pressure in ventilated patients.

Authors:  K Skarvan; J Hasse; G Wolff
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  1981       Impact factor: 17.440

8.  Haemodynamic performance and weaning from mechanical ventilation following open-heart surgery.

Authors:  G Wolff; E Grädel
Journal:  Eur J Intensive Care Med       Date:  1975-11

9.  The influence of PEEP ventilation on organ blood flow and peripheral oxygen delivery.

Authors:  J Beyer; P Beckenlechner; K Messmer
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  1982-03       Impact factor: 17.440

Review 10.  Review: artifical ventilation with positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP). Historical background, terminology and patho-physiology.

Authors:  D B Stokke
Journal:  Eur J Intensive Care Med       Date:  1976-09
  10 in total

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