| Literature DB >> 30603960 |
Katerina Vaporidi1, Charalambos Psarologakis1, Athanasia Proklou1, Emmanouil Pediaditis1, Evangelia Akoumianaki1, Elisavet Koutsiana1,2, Achilleas Chytas2,3, Ioanna Chouvarda2,3, Eumorfia Kondili1, Dimitris Georgopoulos4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: During passive mechanical ventilation, the driving pressure of the respiratory system is an important mediator of ventilator-induced lung injury. Monitoring of driving pressure during assisted ventilation, similar to controlled ventilation, could be a tool to identify patients at risk of ventilator-induced lung injury. The aim of this study was to describe driving pressure over time and to identify whether and when high driving pressure occurs in critically ill patients during assisted ventilation.Entities:
Keywords: Compliance; Monitoring; Protective ventilation; Tidal volume
Year: 2019 PMID: 30603960 PMCID: PMC6314935 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-018-0477-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Fig. 1Upper panel: Identification of periods of sustained high ΔP: representative plot from one patient, generated via an R-Shiny application built for this purpose, showing the driving pressure (ΔP) time-series signal, raw data in green, and smoothen signal in blue (marked with thick blue arrow). The thick horizontal gray arrow indicates the period of sustained high ΔP ≥ 15 cmH2O. In x-axis is time in hours from initiation of recording. Lower panel: Identification of periods of stable compliance: representative plot of one patient showing compliance over time (x-axis showing time in seconds from initiation of recording). In the first step of this analysis, the slope change points (gray arrows) are identified, in the second step, the slope of each segment is calculated (segments numbered here from 1 to 15), and in the third step, periods with slope between − 0.001 and 0.001 are selected as periods of stable compliance (in this case periods 6 and 9 shown with blue arrows)
Patients’ Characteristics
| Demographics | Total |
|---|---|
| Male % ( | 68 (42) |
| Age (mean, SD) | 65 ± 16 |
| BMI (median, IQR) | 28.4 (26–33.7) |
| Severity Scores on admission (mean, SD) | |
| APACHE-II | 25 ± 7 |
| SOFA | 10 ± 3 |
| Admission diagnosis1 % ( | |
| Sepsis | 35 (22) |
| Multiple Trauma | 16 (10) |
| CNS injury2 | 21 (13) |
| Postoperative | 11 (7) |
| Pneumonia/LRTI | 23 (14) |
| Other | 16 (10) |
| ARDS present on admission | 45 (28) |
| Ventilation characteristics at inclusion | |
| Tidal volume, mL/kg IBW3 | 6.6 (5.8–7.8) |
| PAV+ % assist | 50 (40–50) |
| PEEP | 7 (6–9.5) |
| PO2/FiO2 | 200 (167–246) |
| Tracheostomy present % (n) | 44 (27) |
| Clinical characteristics at inclusion | |
| SOFA score (mean ± SD) | 8 ± 3 |
| Mild ARDS % ( | 34 (21) |
| Moderate ARDS % ( | 22 (14) |
| Metabolic acidosis % ( | 61 (38) |
| Norepinephrine > 0.1 μg/kg/min % ( | 5 (3) |
| Antibiotics4 % ( | 95 (59) |
| Sedation (propofol and/or midazolam, any dose) % ( | 13 (8) |
| Opioid analgesics (any dose) % ( | 53 (33) |
| Remifentanil or fentanyl dose (in mg/h, median, IQR) | 0.2 (0.1–0.3) |
BMI body mass index (kg/m2), APACHE-II Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II, SOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, CNS central nervous system, LRTI lower respiratory tract infection, IBW ideal body weight, PAV+ proportional assist ventilation, PEEP positive end-expiratory pressure, ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome, according to Berlin definition
1Admission diagnosis: more than one may apply in each patient
2CNS injury traumatic and non-traumatic
3Tidal volume, PEEP, and PO2/FiO2 just before inclusion
4Antibiotics were administered for suspected or confirmed ICU-acquired infection
Fig. 2Time as % of the total analyzed period, with ΔP and VT values within the range of each cmH2O or mL/kg of ideal body weight, from less than 5 to more than 15, expressed as median and interquartile range of all patients’ values
Ventilation parameters during the total analyzed period and the high driving pressure periods (ΔP ≥ 15 cmH2O)
| Ventilation parameters | All patients total analyzed period | 18 periods of high Δ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low-Δ | High-Δ | ||
| FiO2(%) | 40 (30–50)* | 40 (35–50) | 40 (35–50) |
| PEEP (cmH2O) | 8 (6–8) | 8 (8–10) | 8 (7–8) |
| PaO2/FiO2 | 239 (182–280)* | 246 (174–269)# | 213 (149–237) |
| PAV+ % assist | 40 (25–50) | 40 (25–50) | 45 (30–50) |
| Respiratory Rate (breaths per min) | 23 (20–27) | 24 (22–28) | 25 (22–29) |
| 7.3 (6.5–8.3) | 7.3 (7–7.9)# | 7.6 (7.3–8.1) | |
| VE (L/min) | 10.2 (8.7–11.2) | 10.2 (9.1–11.4) | 10.1 (8.6–11.9) |
| RTOT(cmH2O/L/s) | 9.5 (8.3–12)* | 10.8 (8.7–13)# | 12.5 (8.8–15.7) |
| RPAV(cmH2O/L/s) | 6.2 (4.6–8.6) | 7.9 (3.5–9.2) | 7.7 (5.8–10.5) |
| PEEPi (cmH2O) | 0.3 (0.1–0.7) | 0.3 (0–0.5) | 0.2 (0.1–0.8) |
| Crs (mL/cmH2O) | 56 (42–71)** | 38 (32–45)## | 27 (24–30) |
| Ti (sec) | 0.89 (0.80- 1.04)* | 0.85 (0.77–0.97) | 0.81 (0.70–0.85) |
| WOB (J/L) | 0.9 (0.8–1.1)** | 1.1 (0.9–1.3)## | 1.5 (1.2–1.7) |
| Δ | 7.8 (6.3–9.9)** | 12 (10.2–12.3)## | 15.6 (15.1–16.1) |
FiO2 fraction of inspired oxygen %, PEEP: positive end-expiratory pressure, PaO2 arterial oxygen tension in mmHg, PAV+: proportional assist ventilation, VT tidal volume, VE minute ventilation, RTOT total calculated resistance (patient airways + artificial airway), RPAV patient resistance calculated by PAV+ software (difference between RTOT and estimated resistance of the artificial airway, after input of intratracheal tube size), PEEPi intrinsic PEEP, CPAV respiratory system compliance calculated by PAV+, Ti inspiratory time, WOB work of breathing, ΔP driving pressure
Values are presented as median and interquartile range. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.0001 for high-ΔP-time vs. complete analysis of all patients (Mann–Whitney U test), and #p < 0.05, ##p < 0.0001 for high-ΔP-time versus low-ΔP-time (rest of the recording) of the same patient (Friedman’s two-way analysis of variance by ranks)
Fig. 3Driving pressure (ΔP, in cmH2O) vs. tidal volume (VT, in mL/kg ideal body weight) during all periods of stable compliance (661 periods from 60 patients), colored according to the range of respiratory system compliance (Crs, mL/cmH2O). Dotted vertical and horizontal lines indicate thresholds of ΔP ≥ 15 cmH2O and VT ≥ 8 mL/kg, respectively, and solid black lines indicate the correlation lines for each range of compliance. In the upper right quarter (values ΔP ≥ 15 cmH2O and VT ≥ 8 mL/kg), there are 11 points (10 points with compliance 21–30 mL/cmH2O and one point with compliance of 31 mL/cmH2O), pertaining to four patients
Fig. 4ROC curve for the absence of ΔP ≥ 15 cmH2O based on compliance, for all periods of stable compliance (661 periods from 60 patients). Arrows indicate the coordinates for the specific values of compliance (AUC = 0.97)