| Literature DB >> 27784331 |
Guyi Wang1, Xiaoying Ji2, Yongshan Xu3, Xudong Xiang4.
Abstract
Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is the most frequent intensive care unit (ICU)-acquired infection that is independently associated with mortality. Accurate diagnosis and timely treatment have been shown to improve the prognosis of VAP. Chest X-ray or computed tomography imaging are used for conventional assessment of VAP, but these methods are impractical for real-time measurement in critical patients. Therefore, lung ultrasound (LUS) has been increasingly used for the assessment of VAP in the ICU. Traditionally, LUS has seemed unsuitable for the detection of lung parenchyma owing to the high acoustic impedance of air; however, the fact that the reflection and reverberation in the detection region of the ultrasound reflect the underlying pathology of lung diseases has led to the increased use of ultrasound imaging as a standard of care supported by evidence-based and expert consensus in the ICU. Considering that any type of pneumonia causes air volume changes in the lungs, accumulating evidence has shown that LUS effectively measures the presence of VAP as well as dynamic changes in VAP. This review offers evidence for ultrasound as a noninvasive, easily repeatable, and bedside means to assess VAP; in addition, it establishes a protocol for qualitative and quantitative monitoring of VAP.Entities:
Keywords: Intensive care unit; Lung ultrasound; Ventilator-associated pneumonia
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27784331 PMCID: PMC5081926 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1487-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Published diagnostic criteria for VAP
| VAP criteria | Inflammatory marks | Sputum | Chest radiography/LUS | Microbiologic or histopathology marks | PEEP/FiO2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CDC criteria [ | Temperature >38 °C, or >36 °C, or WBC ≥12,000 or ≤4000 cells/mm3 and new antimicrobial agent is started for ≥4 days | Purulent respiratory secretions | Microbiologic quantitative-positive | After a period of stability or improvement on the ventilator, Minimum daily FiO2 increase to 0.20 remain for 2 d or daily PEEP values increase to 3 cm H2O | |
| CPIS (a score of 6 is suggestive of VAP) [ | Temperature 38.5–38.9 °C = 1 point; ≥39 or <36.5 °C = 2 points | Non-purulent respiratory secretions = 1 point; purulent respiratory secretions = 2 points | Chest radiography | Moderate or heavy microbiologic quantitative or heavy microbiologic quantitative-positive = 1 point | PaO2/FiO2 ≤ 240 without ARDS = 2 points |
| CEPPIS (a score of 5 is suggestive of VAP) [ | Temperature 38.5–38.9 °C = 1 point; ≥39 or <36.5 °C = 2 points | Non-purulent respiratory secretions = 1 point; purulent respiratory secretions = 2 points | LUS-positive (sub-pleural echo-poor region or more with tissue-like echo texture) = 2 points | Microbiologic culture-positive = 2 points | PaO2/FiO2 ≤ 240 without ARDS = 2 points |
| CHEST [ | Temperature >38 °C | Purulent respiratory secretions | Chest radiography | ||
| Johanson criteria [ | Temperature >38 °C | Purulent respiratory secretions | Chest radiography |
ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome, CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CEPPIS Chest Echography and Procalcitonin Pulmonary Infection Score, CHEST American College of Chest Physicians, CPIS Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score, FiO fraction of inspired oxygen, PaO2, PEEP positive end expiratory pressure, RSV respiratory syncytial virus, WBC white blood cell
Fig. 1Basic characteristic sonographic patterns. The basic characteristic sonographic patterns are illustrated (left) and described according to distinctive features (right). a A lines are characteristic lines parallel to the pleural line. b B lines are long, vertical, hyperechoic, and dynamic lines originating from the pleural line, moving with lung sliding. c Lung consolidation is a tissue-like echotexture of the lung with or without a bronchogram. d The lung point is a point of contact between normal lung sliding (sandy sign) and the absence of lung sliding (barcode sign). e Pleural effusion is an echo-free zone (P tissue-like echotexture of the lung, E pleural effusion)
Fig. 2Sequential interpretation of the LUS protocol for detecting VAP. This is a schematic, simplified decision tree of the VAP protocol. The basic steps include the identification of landmarks, longitudinal scans, focal examination, and overall lung integration. The identification of landmarks is helpful for standardized and reproducible analyses. The longitudinal scans mainly provide a preliminary view of the sonographic patterns. The focal examination mainly reveals the characteristic features of a lesion. The overall lung integration enables the translation of all data into a possible clinical decision and monitoring plan. AIS alveolar interstitial syndromes, VAP ventilator-associated pneumonia
Spectral waveform analysis of pulmonary arterial flow patterns in different etiologies
| Pneumonia | Lung atelectasis | Tumor consolidation | Pulmonary embolism | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Presence of flow signal | Detected | Detected | Detected | None detected |
| Flow signal density | High | Low | Low | None |
| PI ([Peak systolic velocity − End diastolic velocity]/Mean velocity) | Median | High | Low | None |
| RI ([Peak systolic velocity − End diastolic velocity]/Peak systolic velocity) | Median | High | Low | None |
| AT (duration from the beginning to the peak systolic velocity) | Median | Low | High | None |
| The feature of blood flow | Moderate-impedance flow | High-impedance flow | Low-impedance flow | No flow |
Comparison among different lung aeration scores
| Lung aeration score | Lung aeration change score (re-aeration/loss of aeration) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Application object | Lung aeration evaluation to predict post extubation distress [ | PEEP-induced lung aeration changes in patients with ARDS [ | ||
| Value | N | 0 point | N ↔ B1; B1 ↔ B2; B2 ↔ C | 1 point |