| Literature DB >> 35049938 |
Abdallah Fayssoil1,2,3,4, Nicolas Mansencal4,5, Lee S Nguyen6,7, David Orlikowski8,9, Hélène Prigent2,3,10, Jean Bergounioux11, Djillali Annane12, Frédéric Lofaso2,3,10.
Abstract
In cardiac surgery, patients are at risk of phrenic nerve injury, which leads to diaphragm dysfunction and acute respiratory failure. Diaphragm dysfunction (DD) is relatively frequent in cardiac surgery and particularly affects patients after coronary artery bypass graft. The onset of DD affects patients' prognosis in term of weaning from mechanical ventilation and hospital length of stay. The authors present a narrative review about diaphragm physiology, techniques used to assess diaphragm function, and the clinical application of diaphragm ultrasound in patients undergoing cardiac surgery.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac ICU; cardiac surgery; diaphragm ultrasound; phrenic nerve
Year: 2022 PMID: 35049938 PMCID: PMC8779362 DOI: 10.3390/medicines9010005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicines (Basel) ISSN: 2305-6320
Figure 1Right diaphragm ultrasound. Note the normal inspiratory motion (64 mm) of the hemidiaphragm from the subcostal view. After the visualization of the right hemidiaphragm (bright line) using a B-mode (image on the left), an M mode was applied (image on the right) to record diaphragm motion.
Figure 2Measurement of the right peak sniff tissue Doppler imaging velocity from the subcostal view. The diaphragm velocity was recorded during a sniff maneuver. Here is a reduced peak sniff velocity (7 cm/s) in a patient with muscular dystrophy.
Figure 3Measurement of the right diaphragm thickness (dotted line) in the end-expiratory phase (A) and end-inspiratory phase (B), using ultrasound. The diaphragm is visualized as a hypo-echogenic central layer surrounded by two hyper-echogenic lines, namely, the pleural line and the peritoneum.
Normal values of diaphragm parameters determined by ultrasound.
| Author (Ref) | Year |
| Diaphragm Motion | Diaphragm Thickness | Diaphragm | Diaphragm |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wait [ | 1989 | 10 | 2.2 ± 0.4 mm (FRC) | |||
| Cohen [ | 1994 | 10 | Deep inspiratory motion: | |||
| Ueki [ | 1995 | 13 | 1.7 ± 0.2 mm (FRC) | |||
| Kantarci [ | 2004 | 164 | Right DM: 49.2 ± 10.9 mm | |||
| Boussuges [ | 2009 | 210 | QB: 9 mm (F) and 10 mm (M) | |||
| Testa [ | 2011 | 40 | QB: 18.4 ± 7.6 mm | |||
| Boon [ | 2013 | 150 | Right: 3.3 ± 1 mm (FRC) | |||
| Orde [ | 2016 | 50 | Right: | Right: | Right TF: | Right diaphragm |
| Carrillo-Esper [ | 2016 | 109 | Female: | |||
| Scarlata [ | 2018 | 100 | QB: | |||
| Fayssoil [ | 2019 | 27 | Right DB: 72 mm | Peak sniff TDI velocity: | ||
| Spiesshoefer [ | 2020 | 70 | QB: | 1.9 ± 0.6 mm (FRC) |
TF: thickening fraction; TDI: tissue Doppler imaging; FRC: functional residual capacity; TLC: total lung capacity; DM: diaphragm motion; QB: quiet breathing
Diaphragm ultrasound parameters cut-off values for predicting success from mechanical ventilation weaning in ICU patients.
| First Author | Diaphragm | Sensibility | Specificity | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pirompanich [ | 34 | TF ≥ 26% | 96% | 68% | RSBI |
| Dres [ | 76 | TF > 26% | 79% | 73% | Twitch pressure using phrenic nerve stimulation |
| DiNino [ | 63 | TF ≥ 30% | 88% | 71% | |
| Ferrari [ | 46 | TF > 36% | 82% | 88% | RSBI |
| Yoo [ | 60 | TF ≥ 30% | 68.1% | 61.5% | |
| Yoo [ | 60 | DM > 10 mm | 80.9% | 69.2% | |
| Jiang [ | 55 | DM > 11 mm | 84.4% | 82.6% | |
| Kim [ | 82 | DM < 10 mm * | 83% * | 41% * | RSBI |
| Spadaro [ | 51 | Diaphragmatic RSBI > 1.3 * | 94% | 64.7% | RSBI |
| Palkar [ | 73 | Decrease of diaphragm ET index < 3.8% ** | 79.2% | 75% | RSBI |
US: ultrasound; ICU: intensive care unit. TF: diaphragm thickening fraction; RSBI: rapid shallow breathing index: respiratory rate/tidal volume. ET index: excursion time index = product of diaphragmatic motion and inspiratory time. *: to predict weaning failure. **: between assist-control ventilation and spontaneous breathing trial.
Studies that analyzed diaphragm dysfunction and outcomes after cardiac surgery.
| First Author | Population | Outcome | DD | Prevalence | Factors Associated with DD | Prognosis in Patients with DD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Markand | Cardiac surgery | Phrenic nerve palsy after cardiac surgery | EPS | 11% PNI | ||
| Canbaz | Cardiac surgery | Effects on PNI of hypothermia, ice slush, and use of mammary artery harvesting | EPS | 10.2% PNI | Hypothermia | |
| Dimopoulou | Cardiac surgery | EPS | 21% PNI | Ice slush | ||
| Yamazaki [ | CABG | Incidence and factors associated with hemidiaphragm elevation after CABG | radiological study | 14.5% hemi-diaphragm elevation after CABG | Diabetes and use of internal thoracic artery grafting are risk factors | |
| DeVita [ | Cardiac surgery | Incidence of phrenic neuropathy after cardiac surgery | radiological and EPS studies | Abnormal DM in 54% of patients with abnormal CR | ||
| Merino-Ramirez | CABG | Incidence of phrenic neuropathy after CABG | EPS | 16% PNI | ||
| Bruni [ | Cardiac surgery | Rate of post-operative DD | TF < 20% | 38% | Duration of cardiopulmonary bypass | Higher rate of difficult weaning, |
| Moury | Cardiac surgery | Diaphragm thickening during weaning | TF < 20% | 75% | Length of surgery | |
| Tralhao [ | (79) | Diaphragm US in patients with cardiac surgery | DM < 10 mm | 36% at D2 after surgery | ||
| Laghlam [ | 3577 | Incidence, risk factors, and outcomes of patients with postoperative DD | 7.6% | HTA | Post-operative pneumonia |
CABG: coronary artery bypass graft; CR: chest radiography; Diag: diagnosis; D: day; DD: diaphragm dysfunction; DM: diaphragm motion; PNI: phrenic nerve injury; EPS: electrophysiological study of phrenic nerve; HTA: arterial hypertension; BMI: body mass index; ICU: intensive care unit.
Figure 4Chest X ray in a post-operative patient with diaphragm paralysis. Note ascension of the left diaphragm.