| Literature DB >> 27334879 |
Sara Verscheure1,2, Paul B Massion2, Franck Verschuren3, Pierre Damas2, Sheldon Magder4.
Abstract
Dead space is an important component of ventilation-perfusion abnormalities. Measurement of dead space has diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic applications. In the intensive care unit (ICU) dead space measurement can be used to guide therapy for patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS); in the emergency department it can guide thrombolytic therapy for pulmonary embolism; in peri-operative patients it can indicate the success of recruitment maneuvers. A newly available technique called volumetric capnography (Vcap) allows measurement of physiological and alveolar dead space on a regular basis at the bedside. We discuss the components of dead space, explain important differences between the Bohr and Enghoff approaches, discuss the clinical significance of arterial to end-tidal CO2 gradient and finally summarize potential clinical indications for Vcap measurements in the emergency room, operating room and ICU.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27334879 PMCID: PMC4918076 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1377-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Riley three compartment model. Compartment A: shunt = perfused but not ventilated alveolae (V/Q = 0). Compartment B: ideal condition. Compartment C: dead space = ventilated but not perfused alveolae (V/Q = ∞). VDaw airway dead space, VDalv alveolar dead space, VDphys the sum of airway and alveolar dead space
Fig. 2Concentration of CO2 during a tidal expiration. Phase I: beginning of expiration; expired gas represents contents of the conduction compartment of the respiratory system. Phase II: transition between anatomic and alveolar dead space. Phase III: alveolar gas. Expired FCO (%) fraction of expired CO2, SIII slope of phase III, VTCO ,br CO2 elimination per breath
Fig. 3Fletcher approach for evaluating expired gases. The shaded area is the total dead space for the breath. Area z (area to the left of the solid line) is the airway dead space (VDaw), area y (area above the slope of phase III) is the alveolar dead space (VDalv, in this case as per Enghoff). As per the Fowler approach [2], area q is equal to area p. Area x (area under capnogram curve) is the volume of CO2 expired per breath (VTCO2,br)
Fig. 4Volumes identified with volumetric capnography (based on Tang et al. [19]). The line a–b defines equal area q and p as in Fig. 3. The line c–d is created so that area A equals area B. The distance from b to d defines alveolar dead space (VDalv). Tang et al. did their analysis with the Enghoff approach which uses PaCO2 instead of PACO2 as in the Bohr approach. If PACO2 were used instead the line c–d would be more to the left and the value of VDalv smaller. VDaw is the anatomical dead space, VDalv is the alveolar dead space, VDphys is the physiological dead space, VTalv-eff is the efficient alveolar tidal volume, VTalv is the alveolar tidal volume, VT is the tidal volume
Fig. 5Difference between the Bohr approach and Enghoff approach. VDaw is the anatomical dead space, VDalv is the alveolar dead space, PACO is the alveolar partial pressure of CO2, PaCO is the arterial partial pressure of CO2, PĒCO is the mixed expired partial pressure of CO2
Fig. 6Schematic representation of three-compartment lung model, showing specific indices of capillary, alveolar and global efficiency of gas exchange. See text for abbreviations
Clinical studies of volumetric capnography
| Dead space indices (method) | Clinical impacts | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ARDS | VDphys/VT (Enghoff approach; equation with PĒCO2 estimated by indirect calorimeter or Vcap) | Predictive value of mortality | [ |
| VDphys/VT (Enghoff approach; equation with PĒCO2 estimated by Douglas bag or Vcap) | Indication values of recruitment with estimation of the best PEEP | [ | |
| Indices of Vcap unmodified during PEEP without recruitment maneuvers | [ | ||
| VDalv/VT (mainstream CO2 sensor) | Indication value of prone position’s response | [ | |
| VDphys/VT (Enghoff approach; equation with PĒCO2 estimated by indirect calorimeter) | Indices of Vcap unmodified during prone position | [ | |
| Pulmonary embolism | AVDSf, ETCO2/O2, time-based capnogram area and Vcap | Diagnostic tool in ER | Meta-analysis [ |
| VDalv/VT (Enghoff approach; Vcap) | [ | ||
| Fdlate, PE index (Enghoff approach; Vcap) | [ | ||
| Fdlate, slope III (Enghoff approach; Vcap) | Therapeutic efficacy in ER (case report) | [ | |
| Healthy patient undergoing elective surgery | VDalv/VTalv (Enghoff approach; Vcap) | Indices of Vcap unmodified during prone position | [ |
| VDphys/VT (Enghoff approach; Vcap) | Indication values of recruitment and estimation best PEEP (hysterectomies and hemicolectomies; faciomaxillary surgery) | [ | |
| Obese patient during bariatric surgery | Slope of phase III (SIII) (Vcap) | Indication values of recruitment and estimation of the best PEEP | [ |
| VTCO2,br and VDphys/VT (Bohr approach; Vcap) | [ | ||
| One-lung ventilation during thoracic surgery | VDalv/VTalv (Enghoff approach; Vcap) | Indication values of recruitment and estimation of the best PEEP | [ |
| VDalv/VTalv, VDphys/VT (Enghoff approach; Vcap) | Physiological dead space did not change but alveolar indice of Vcap improved during recruitment | [ | |
| Weaning from ventilator | VDphys/VT (Enghoff’ approach; Vcap) | Predictive value of successful extubation (pediatric and adult population) | [ |
AVDSf alveolar dead space fraction, ER emergency room, Fdlate late dead space fraction, PE index ratio between PaCO2-ETCO2 and slope of phase III’s plateau, PEEP positive end-expiratory pressure, Vcap volumetric capnography