| Literature DB >> 34930396 |
Jan Graßhoff1,2, Eike Petersen3, Franziska Farquharson4, Max Kustermann4, Hans-Joachim Kabitz4, Philipp Rostalski3,5, Stephan Walterspacher4,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inspiratory patient effort under assisted mechanical ventilation is an important quantity for assessing patient-ventilator interaction and recognizing over and under assistance. An established clinical standard is respiratory muscle pressure [Formula: see text], derived from esophageal pressure ([Formula: see text]), which requires the correct placement and calibration of an esophageal balloon catheter. Surface electromyography (sEMG) of the respiratory muscles represents a promising and straightforward alternative technique, enabling non-invasive monitoring of patient activity.Entities:
Keywords: Assisted mechanical ventilation; Esophageal pressure; Inspiratory effort; Monitoring; Surface electromyography
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34930396 PMCID: PMC8686581 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-021-03833-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1An overview of the processing pipelines for surface EMG and esophageal/gastric pressure signals. Esophageal pressure () and gastric pressure () are measured simultaneously with the double balloon technique. Cardiogenic artifacts are removed from the raw pressure signals via template subtraction. The muscular pressure () is then calculated as the difference between and the chest wall recoil pressure (orange curve, given by the product of the chest wall elastance and the volume signal ). Transdiaphragmatic pressure () is calculated as the difference between and curves. The respiratory surface EMG is measured via two pairs of electrodes positioned bilaterally at the second intercostal space and the costal margin. The envelopes and are calculated on the raw ECG-gated signals using a moving RMS filter. Then, the more informative of the two channels, denoted as , is automatically selected and fitted to the airway pressure over the course of multiple subsequent occlusions, providing a scalar . The estimate is calculated via the factor and a baseline-corrected signal as in Eq. (2)
Clinical characteristics of patients included in the analysis
| Characteristic | Result |
|---|---|
| Age, | |
| Men, | 34 (79) |
| Weight, | |
| BMI, | |
| TLC, | |
| VC, | |
| FEV1 % predicted, | |
| Tiffeneau index, | |
| RV, | |
| RV/TLC, | |
| iPEEP, | |
| Diagnosis, | |
| OSAS | 4 (9) |
| COPD | 16 (37) |
| GOLD I | 2 (5) |
| GOLD II–III | 14 (33) |
| ACOS | 3 (7) |
| Bronchial asthma | 5 (19) |
| ILD | 7 (17) |
| Lung cancer | 20 (47) |
| Infectious or rheumatic diseases | 11 (26) |
Body-mass index (BMI), total lung capacity (TLC), vital capacity (VC), forced expiratory volume in (FEV1), residual volume (RV), intrinsic PEEP (iPEEP), obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma-COPD overlap syndrome (ACOS), interstitial lung disease (ILD). In several patients, multiple pulmonary/systemic diseases were diagnosed
Fig. 2Exemplary excerpt of relevant signals during assisted ventilation. The orange line is the estimated curve for the chest-wall recoil and the grey line is the raw signal before removal of artifacts. The envelope of the automatically selected EMG channel is denoted by (green line). The shaded areas correspond to PTP and ETP measures. ETP is calculated against an adaptive baseline (black line in the bottom graph)
Fig. 3Effect of different pressure support levels on muscular and airway pressure-time products ( and ), EMG-time products of the diaphragm, intercostal and selected channel (, , ), minute ventilation (MV), dynamic intrinsic PEEP (iPEEP) and the sEMG-derived estimate (). The PTP and ETP values were calculated by aggregating all efforts in each support level and then dividing by the length of the segment. Each point corresponds to one patient and one pressure support level. In , three outliers from a single patient are not shown within the plotting range. Numerical values (mean ± SD) of the data are reported in Additional file 2
Pearson correlation coefficient between different metrics of inspiratory effort, considering all observed breaths in individual patients (), (and where is involved)
| 0.84 ± 0.16 | |||||
| – | 0.77 ± 0.26 | ||||
| – | 0.86 ± 0.10 | ||||
| – | 0.86 ± 0.10 | ||||
| – | 0.97 ± 0.05 |
The included effort metrics are: muscular and transdiaphragmatic pressure-time products ( and ), EMG-time products of diaphragm, intercostal and selected channel (, , ) and sEMG-derived muscular pressure-time product (). Entries marked with are given by symmetry.
Neuromechanical conversion factors and biases of sEMG-derived effort metrics against ,
| 4.48 ± 3.89 | 4.71 ± 4.07 | 4.32 ± 3.73 | |
| 1.38 ± 1.63 | 1.16 ± 2.16 | 0.69 ± 1.43 |
Both parameters ( and ) were determined by fitting the different ETP metrics to via the linear regression model in Eq. (1). The parameter represents systemic offsets of the EMG signal against
Fig. 4The – relation in three selected patients with ranging from to . In all three patients, biases were small (the absolute value of was smaller than ) and biases were removed in this plot via the term . The correlations between and were (dark green), (orange) and (blue)
Fig. 5Correlation between neuromechanical conversion factor determined during multiple subsequent occlusions and the reference value determined by directly fitting the selected EMG channel () to . Each point represents one patient
Fig. 6Bland-Altman plot for sEMG-derived via Eq. (3) against . The plot depicts efforts from patients, each point represents one breath. The limits of agreement were calculated using the Bland-Altman method for repeated measurements, cf. [31]. The mean and interval are visualized via the solid grey line and dashed grey lines, respectively
Fig. 7Bland-Altman plot for sEMG-derived via Eq. (3) against . The plot depicts PTP values for patients and in each patient one point per pressure support level is plotted, i.e., four points for each patient. The limits of agreement were calculated using a variant of the Bland-Altman method for repeated measurements, cf. [31]. The mean and interval are visualized via the solid grey line and dashed grey lines, respectively