| Literature DB >> 31938825 |
Pieter R Tuinman1,2, Annemijn H Jonkman1, Martin Dres3, Zhong-Hua Shi1,4, Ewan C Goligher5,6, Alberto Goffi5,7, Chris de Korte8, Alexandre Demoule3, Leo Heunks9.
Abstract
Respiratory muscle ultrasound is used to evaluate the anatomy and function of the respiratory muscle pump. It is a safe, repeatable, accurate, and non-invasive bedside technique that can be successfully applied in different settings, including general intensive care and the emergency department. Mastery of this technique allows the intensivist to rapidly diagnose and assess respiratory muscle dysfunction in critically ill patients and in patients with unexplained dyspnea. Furthermore, it can be used to assess patient-ventilator interaction and weaning failure in critically ill patients. This paper provides an overview of the basic and advanced principles underlying respiratory muscle ultrasound with an emphasis on the diaphragm. We review different ultrasound techniques useful for monitoring of the respiratory muscle pump and possible therapeutic consequences. Ideally, respiratory muscle ultrasound is used in conjunction with other components of critical care ultrasound to obtain a comprehensive evaluation of the critically ill patient. We propose the ABCDE-ultrasound approach, a systematic ultrasound evaluation of the heart, lungs and respiratory muscle pump, in patients with weaning failure.Entities:
Keywords: Diaphragm dysfunction; Diaphragm ultrasound; Respiratory muscle ultrasound; Ultrasonography
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31938825 PMCID: PMC7103016 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-019-05892-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1Clinical application of respiratory muscle ultrasound: techniques and views
Reference values for diaphragm muscle ultrasound in ICU patients and in the general population
| Setting | Parameter | Patient position | Reference values | Abnormal values/values related to outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICU | Thickness (mm) | – | 2.4 ± 0.8 | [ | |
| Semi-recum | 2.4 (2.0–2.9) | [ | |||
| Semi-recum | < 1.7 | [ | |||
| Semi-recum | 1.9 ± 0.4 | [ | |||
| TFdi | Semi-recum | < 30% | [ | ||
| TFdi(max) | Semi-recum | < 36% | [ | ||
| TFdi | Semi-recum | < 34% | [ | ||
| Tidal excursion (mm) | Supine | < 11 (organ exc.) | [ | ||
| Semi-recum | Right < 14 | [ | |||
| Maximal breath (mm) | Semi-recum | Left < 12 | [ | ||
| Semi-recum | < 10 | [ | |||
| < 25 | |||||
| General population | Thickness (mm) | Sitting | 1.7 ± 0.2 | [ | |
| Standing | 2.8 ± 0.4 | < 1.9 | [ | ||
| Supine | 3.3 ± 1.0 | < 1.4 | [ | ||
| Supine | 1.6 ± 0.4 | < 1.5 | [ | ||
| Men: 1.9 ± 0.4 | < 1.7 | ||||
| Women: 1.4 ± 0.3 | < 1.3 | ||||
| TFdi(max) | Standing | 37 ± 9% | < 20% | [ | |
| Supine | 80 ± 50% | < 20% | [ | ||
| Tidal excursion (mm) | Standing | Men: 18 ± 3 | Men: < 10 | [ | |
| Women: 16 ± 3 | Women: < 9 | ||||
| Sniff test (mm) | Standing | Men: 29 ± 6 | Men: < 18 | ||
| Women: 26 ± 5 | Women: < 16 | ||||
| Maximal breath (mm) | Standing | Men: 70 ± 11 | Men: < 47 | ||
| Women: 57 ± 10 | Women: < 37 |
Thickness and excursion values are expressed in millimeter. Normal values are expressed as mean ± SD or median (range); for ICU patients, mean thickness values are reported from baseline measurements. TFdi: thickening fraction tidal breathing (or during maximal breathing = TFdi(max)), expressed in %; Position is presented as described in the original manuscript, although sitting and semi-recumbent (and potentially supine) may have overlap. Semi-recum = semi-recumbent; – = not mentioned in the manuscript
Fig. 2Point-of-Care Ultrasound (PoCUS) in patients with weaning failure: the ABCDE approach
Types of patient–ventilator asynchronies and their ultrasound correlate
RT reverse trigger, TFdi diaphragm thickening fraction
Clinical indications and role of ultrasound of the respiratory muscles in adults admitted in the intensive care unit or emergency department
| Setting | Indication | Role of respiratory muscle ultrasound | Diagnostic performance | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICU | Difficult weaning | Excursion and TFdi detect DD | Excursion poor to moderate TFdi moderate Better during SBT Combined with clinical parameters better performance | A significant portion of patients diagnosed with DD can be successfully extubated |
| Titrate ventilator support | Detection of underuse/overuse using TFdi | Needs further validation | ||
| Patient–ventilator interaction | Excursion and/or TFdi (compared to ventilator waveforms) can detect different types of asynchrony | Good/easy repeatable | Variability of the effectiveness between subjects Not suitable for continuous monitoring | |
| Estimating work of breathing | TFdi | Large range of effort at certain TFdi | Needs further validation | |
| Clinical suspicion of iatrogenic n. phrenicus lesion (e.g., postoperative) | Excursion can detect (unilateral) paralysis/weakness | Good | None | |
| ED | Dyspnea of unknown origin | Excursion/TFdi can detect weakness/paralysis | High sens and spec | None |
| AECOPD | Excursion/TFdi predict NIV-failure | Moderate | Needs further validation | |
| Both | Unilateral diaphragm relaxation on chest X-ray | Excursion/TFdi/left to right ratio | Good | None |
| Diagnosing and monitoring of diaphragmatic weakness/paralysis | Good, no technical failures | |||
| Stroke with respiratory impairment | Good detection of diaphragm involvement | None | ||
Neuromuscular disorders Cervical spine lesions | May help predict need for mechanical ventilation |
AECOPD acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, DD diaphragm dysfunction, ED emergency department, ICU intensive care unit, NIV non-invasive ventilation, SBT spontaneous breathing trial, TFdi diaphragm thickening fraction