| Literature DB >> 27496127 |
Gerardo Tusman1, Cecilia M Acosta2, Mauro Costantini2.
Abstract
Lung collapse is a known complication that affects most of the patients undergoing positive pressure mechanical ventilation. Such atelectasis and airways closure lead to gas exchange and lung mechanics impairment and has the potential to develop an inflammatory response in the lungs. These negative effects of lung collapse can be reverted by a lung recruitment maneuver (RM) i.e. a ventilatory strategy that resolves lung collapse by a brief and controlled increment in airway pressures. However, an unsolved question is how to assess such RM at the bedside. The aim of this paper is to describe the usefulness of lung sonography (LUS) to conduct and personalize RM in a real-time way at the bedside. LUS has favorable features to assess lung recruitment due to its high specificity and sensitivity to detect lung collapse together with its non-invasiveness, availability and simple use.Entities:
Keywords: Atelectasis; Lung ultrasound; Recruitment maneuvers; Tidal recruitment; VILI
Year: 2016 PMID: 27496127 PMCID: PMC4975737 DOI: 10.1186/s13089-016-0045-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Ultrasound J ISSN: 2036-3176
Fig. 1Algorithm to assess recruitment maneuver by ultrasound. Ultrasound diagnoses lung collapse (step 1) and assesses hemodynamics (step 2) before the lung recruitment maneuver is done (step 3). During the step-wise increment in airways pressure (Paw) of the recruitment maneuver, ultrasound can detect the plateau pressure at which dependent lungs collapse disappear (opening pressure—upper circle). Then, ultrasound defines the start of lung re-collapse in the most dependent pulmonary areas during the PEEP trial (closing pressure—lower circle). The images were obtained in an anesthetized child using a linear 7–13 MHz probe placed in the oblique position of the most dependent lung zones