Michael G Allison1, Michael C Scott2, Kami M Hu2, Michael D Witting3, Michael E Winters3. 1. Emergency Medicine/Internal Medicine/Critical Care Medicine Residency, University of Maryland Medical Center. Electronic address: mgallison@gmail.com. 2. Emergency Medicine/Internal Medicine/Critical Care Medicine Residency, University of Maryland Medical Center. 3. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Emergency department (ED) patients are at high risk for the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Settings only 1 mL/kg above recommended tidal volumes confers harm for these patients. The purpose of this study was to determine whether ED physicians routinely initiate mechanical ventilation with low tidal volumes in patients at risk for ARDS. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the charts of all adult patients who were intubated in an urban, academic ED. The charts were analyzed to identify patients in whom ARDS developed within 48 hours after ED admission. Patients were eligible for inclusion if they had bilateral infiltrates on imaging, had a Pao2/Fio2 ratio less than 300 mm Hg and did not have heart failure contributing to their presentation. The tidal volumes set in the ED were then compared with the recommended tidal volume of 6 mL/kg of predicted body weight. RESULTS: The initial tidal volumes set in the ED were higher than recommended by an average of 80 mL (95% confidence interval, 60-110, P < .0001) or 1.5 mL/kg (95% confidence interval, 1.0-1.9). Only 5 of the 34 patients received the recommended tidal volume ventilation setting. CONCLUSIONS: In an academic, tertiary hospital, newly intubated ED patients in whom ARDS developed within 48 hours after intubation were ventilated with tidal volumes that exceeded recommendations by an average of 1.5 mL/kg.
PURPOSE: Emergency department (ED) patients are at high risk for the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Settings only 1 mL/kg above recommended tidal volumes confers harm for these patients. The purpose of this study was to determine whether ED physicians routinely initiate mechanical ventilation with low tidal volumes in patients at risk for ARDS. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the charts of all adult patients who were intubated in an urban, academic ED. The charts were analyzed to identify patients in whom ARDS developed within 48 hours after ED admission. Patients were eligible for inclusion if they had bilateral infiltrates on imaging, had a Pao2/Fio2 ratio less than 300 mm Hg and did not have heart failure contributing to their presentation. The tidal volumes set in the ED were then compared with the recommended tidal volume of 6 mL/kg of predicted body weight. RESULTS: The initial tidal volumes set in the ED were higher than recommended by an average of 80 mL (95% confidence interval, 60-110, P < .0001) or 1.5 mL/kg (95% confidence interval, 1.0-1.9). Only 5 of the 34 patients received the recommended tidal volume ventilation setting. CONCLUSIONS: In an academic, tertiary hospital, newly intubated ED patients in whom ARDS developed within 48 hours after intubation were ventilated with tidal volumes that exceeded recommendations by an average of 1.5 mL/kg.
Authors: Michael J Lanspa; Michelle Ng Gong; David A Schoenfeld; Kathleen Tiffany Lee; Colin K Grissom; Peter C Hou; Ary Serpa-Neto; Samuel M Brown; Theodore J Iwashyna; Donald M Yealy; Catherine L Hough; Roy G Brower; Carolyn S Calfee; Robert C Hyzy; Michael A Matthay; Russell R Miller; Jay S Steingrub; B Taylor Thompson; Chadwick D Miller; Terry P Clemmer; Gregory W Hendey; David T Huang; Kusum S Mathews; Nida Qadir; Mark Tidswell Journal: Ann Am Thorac Soc Date: 2019-03