| Literature DB >> 33095284 |
Audrey De Jong1, Hermann Wrigge2,3,4, Goran Hedenstierna5, Luciano Gattinoni6, Davide Chiumello6,7,8, Jean-Pierre Frat9,10, Lorenzo Ball11,12, Miet Schetz13, Peter Pickkers14, Samir Jaber15.
Abstract
Obesity is an important risk factor for major complications, morbidity and mortality related to intubation procedures and ventilation in the intensive care unit (ICU). The fall in functional residual capacity promotes airway closure and atelectasis formation. This narrative review presents the impact of obesity on the respiratory system and the key points to optimize airway management, noninvasive and invasive mechanical ventilation in ICU patients with obesity. Non-invasive strategies should first optimize body position with reverse Trendelenburg position or sitting position. Noninvasive ventilation (NIV) is considered as the first-line therapy in patients with obesity having a postoperative acute respiratory failure. Positive pressure pre-oxygenation before the intubation procedure is the method of reference. The use of videolaryngoscopy has to be considered by adequately trained intensivists, especially in patients with several risk factors. Regarding mechanical ventilation in patients with and without acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), low tidal volume (6 ml/kg of predicted body weight) and moderate to high positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), with careful recruitment maneuver in selected patients, are advised. Prone positioning is a therapeutic choice in severe ARDS patients with obesity. Prophylactic NIV should be considered after extubation to prevent re-intubation. If obesity increases mortality and risk of ICU admission in the overall population, the impact of obesity on ICU mortality is less clear and several confounding factors have to be taken into account regarding the "obesity ICU paradox".Entities:
Keywords: ARDS; COVID-19; HFNC; Mechanical ventilation; NIV; Obese; Obesity; Prone position; Prone positioning
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33095284 PMCID: PMC7582031 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-020-06286-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1Impedance changes due to regional ventilation in a patient with obesity. Thoracic transversal electric impedance tomography images show impedance changes due to regional ventilation summarized for tidal ventilation cycles in a patient with a body mass index of 57 kg/m2. Images were recorded during spontaneous breathing before intubation (a) and about 1 h after extubation (c) in a patient without lung pathology. Note the ventral shift of ventilation during mechanical ventilation with a positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) of 5 cmH2O (b), which is likely due to atelectasis formation in dependent lung areas. Obviously, the PEEP level was insufficient to keep the lung open
Main studies assessing oxygen and NIV ventilation (prophylactic and curative) on studies focused in patients with obesity
| Study first author, journal, year of publication | Design of the study | Inclusion criteria | Comparators (number of patients per group) | Main result | Other results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
El-Solh AA. Eur Respir J 2006 | Prospective study with historical matching | Extubation of patients with BMI ≥ 35 kg/m2 in ICU Prophylactic NIV | 124 patients 62 consecutive patients were assigned to NIV via nasal mask immediately post-extubation 62 historically matched controls treated with conventional oxygen therapy | 16% (95% confidence interval 2.9–29.3%) absolute risk reduction in the rate of respiratory failure in the first 48 h post-extubation | Post hoc analysis of the 47 patients who had hypercapnia during a trial of spontaneous breathing: reduced hospital mortality |
Duarte AG. Critical Care Medicine 2007 | Retrospective study | Patients with morbid obesity with ARF requiring ventilatory assistance Curative NIV | 50 patients 33 patients treated with NIV, 17 with IMV | 21 avoided intubation (NIV success) and 12 required intubation (NIV failure) | Significant improvements in pH and Paco2 were noted for the IMV and NIV success groups Hospital mortality for the IMV and NIV failure groups was increased |
Neligan PJ. Anesthesiology 2009 | Randomized controlled trial | Patients with morbid obesity and known obstructive sleep apnea undergoing laparoscopic bariatric surgery Prophylactic NIV | 40 patients 20 in the continuous positive airway pressure via the Boussignac system immediately after extubation (Boussignac group) 20 in the supplemental oxygen (standard care group) | Less reduction in forced vital capacity from baseline to 24 h after extubation in the Boussignac group | Less reduction in forced expiratory volume in 1 s and peak expiratory flow rate in the Boussignac group |
Zoremba M. BMC anesthesiology 2011 | Prospective observational study | Patients with BMI 30–45 kg/m2 undergoing minor peripheral surgery Prophylactic NIV | 60 patients 30 were randomly assigned to receive short-term NIV 30 received routine treatment (supplemental oxygen via Venturi mask) | During the PACU stay, inspiratory and expiratory lung function in the NIV group was significantly better than in the controls ( | Blood gases and the alveolar to arterial oxygen partial pressure difference were also better in the NIV group |
Lemyze M. Plos One 2014 | Prospective observational study | Patients with BMI > 40 kg/m2 prospectively included diagnosed with OHS and treated by NIV for ARF Curative NIV | 76 patients under NIV | NIV failed to reverse ARF in 13 patients | The patients failing NIV experienced poor outcome despite early resort to endotracheal intubation (in-hospital mortality, 92.3% vs 17.5%; |
Corley A. Intensive Care Med 2015 | Randomized controlled trial | Patients with extubation post-cardiac surgery with a BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 Prophylactic HFNC | 155 patients 74 in the control group (conventional oxygen therapy) 81 in the HFNC group | No difference was seen between groups in atelectasis scores on Day 1 or 5 | In the 24-h post-extubation, there was no difference in mean PaO2/FiO2 ratio or respiratory rate |
Stephan F. Respir Care 2017 | Post hoc analysis of a randomized controlled trial | Patients with obesity Extubation after cardiothoracic surgery Prophylactic and curative NIV | 231 patients 136 in the NIV group, 135 in the HFNC group | Treatment failure (defined as re-intubation, switch to the other treatment, or premature discontinuation) did not significantly differ between groups | No significant differences were found for dyspnea and comfort scores. Skin breakdown was significantly more common with NIV after 24 h |
NIV noninvasive ventilation, ARF acute respiratory failure, BMI body mass index, HFNC high-flow nasal cannula oxygen, OHS obesity hypoventilation syndrome, IMV invasive mechanical ventilation
Fig. 2Effect of obesity in main pressures of the respiratory system. The respiratory system includes the lung and the chest wall, and the airway pressure is related to both transpulmonary and transthoracic pressures, which differ in the patient with obesity compared to the patient without obesity. The relative part of pressure due to transthoracic pressure is often higher in the patient with obesity than in the patient without obesity (elevated pleural pressure, which can be estimated by esophageal pressure). The plateau pressure represents the pressure used to distend the chest wall plus lungs. In patients with obesity, elevated plateau pressure may be related to an elevated transthoracic pressure, and not an increase in transpulmonary pressure with lung overdistension. FRC functional residual capacity
Fig. 3Prone positioning in patients with obesity. ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome. PaO/FiO pressure of arterial oxygen to fractional inspired oxygen concentration
Fig. 4Main respiratory physiological modifications and suggestions for mechanical ventilation in critically ill patients with obesity. The main respiratory physiological modifications (functional residual capacity decreased, abdominal pressure often increased, pulmonary and chest wall compliance often decreased, cephalic ascension of diaphragm, oxygen consumption and work of breathing increased) lead to shunt via atelectasis and gas exchange impairment. Comorbidities are often associated with obesity: obstructive apnea syndrome and obesity hypoventilation syndrome. Consequences on airway management, potentially difficult, include the preparation of adequate material for difficult intubation as videolaryngoscopes, preoxygenation with noninvasive ventilation in a semi-sitting position, considering adding apneic oxygenation (OPTINIV method), rapid sequence induction and recruitment maneuver following intubation after hemodynamic stabilization. Ventilatory settings include low or limited tidal volume (6–8 ml/kg/PBW or less), moderate to high PEEP (7–20 cmH2O) if hemodynamically well tolerated, recruitment maneuver (if hemodynamically well tolerated, in selected patients), monitoring of esophageal pressure if possible, use of prone positioning in a trained team in case of severe ARDS, without contra-indicating ECMO. After extubation, CPAP or NIV should be considered early, as implementation of positive pressure therapies at home after evaluation. PBW predicted body weight, PEEP positive end-expiratory pressure, ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome, ECMO extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, CPAP continuous positive airway pressure, NIV noninvasive ventilation, HFNC high-flow nasal cannula oxygen
| In patients with obesity, using non-invasive ventilation (NIV) is advised both to prevent and treat acute respiratory failure. When invasive mechanical ventilation is needed, pre-oxygenation with NIV and appropriated choice of intubation devices will decrease complications. |
| During invasive mechanical ventilation, patients with obesity are more prone to lung collapse and require higher PEEP to avoid it; low |