| Literature DB >> 35473715 |
Sonal Mistry1, Anup Das1, Sina Saffaran2, Nadir Yehya3, Timothy E Scott4, Marc Chikhani5, John G Laffey6, Jonathan G Hardman5,7, Luigi Camporota8, Declan G Bates9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Airway pressure release ventilation (APRV) is widely available on mechanical ventilators and has been proposed as an early intervention to prevent lung injury or as a rescue therapy in the management of refractory hypoxemia. Driving pressure ([Formula: see text]) has been identified in numerous studies as a key indicator of ventilator-induced-lung-injury that needs to be carefully controlled. [Formula: see text] delivered by the ventilator in APRV is not directly measurable in dynamic conditions, and there is no "gold standard" method for its estimation.Entities:
Keywords: Acute respiratory distress syndrome; Airway pressure release ventilation; Computer simulation; Driving pressure; Mechanical ventilation; Ventilator-induced lung injury
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35473715 PMCID: PMC9039982 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-022-01985-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Fig. 1Diagrammatic representation of the model and its main features
List of the parameters varied by the optimization algorithm in order to calibrate the model to patient data, with their dimensions and allowable range of variation
| Parameter (x) | size | ranges |
|---|---|---|
| Pext | 100 | [− 50,28.8]† |
| kstiff | 100 | [− 2,1]† |
| TOP (cmH2O) | 100 | [5,100] [ |
| RQ | 1 | [0.7,0.9] [ |
| VO2 (mL min−1) | 1 | [150,300] [ |
| HB (g.l−1) | 1 | [90,160] [ |
| Shuntanat (%) | 1 | [1, 2] [ |
| VD (mL) | 1 | [60,150] [ |
Pext: the extrinsic pressure acting on compartments; kstiff: the stiffness of the compartments; TOP: threshold opening pressure of the compartments; RQ: respiratory quotient; VO2: total oxygen consumption; HB: hemoglobin; Shuntanat: anatomical shunt; VD: volume of anatomical dead space
†Pext and Kstiff ranges were determined to provide a functional residual capacity of 2.5L for an average adult of 70 kg [23]
Fig. 2Results of matching the model to the patient data. A Baseline patient data for the cohort of 90 ARDS patients, B Patient data versus model outputs—PaO2, C Patient data versus model outputs—PaCO2
Pearson correlation coefficients indicating the strength and direction of the relationship between the actual ΔP and baseline lung compliance or baseline PF ratio for different APRV settings
Actual ΔPadult vs Compliance Phigh = 25 Plow = 0 | 0.00 |
Actual ΔPadult vs Compliance Phigh = 30 Plow = 0 | − 0.11 |
Actual ΔPadult vs Compliance Phigh = 30 Plow = 5 | − 0.07 |
Actual ΔPadult vs PF ratio Phigh = 25 Plow = 0 | − 0.12 |
Actual ΔPadult vs PF ratio Phigh = 30 Plow = 0 | − 0.19 |
Actual ΔPadult vs PF ratio Phigh = 30 Plow = 5 | − 0.07 |
The correlation coefficients were found to not be statistically significant (p < 0.05)
Fig. 3Bland–Altman plots showing estimation error versus true ΔP across the cohort of 90 virtual adult ARDS patients, with = 30 cmH2O and = 5 cmH2O. Solid lines indicate the average deviation (‘Bias’) between the true and estimated value of ΔP, dashed lines indicate the limits of agreement (LOA, the distribution of values within ± 1.96 standard deviation from the mean) A ΔP estimated by switching to volume controlled ventilation (as described in [2]), assuming that the monitoring PEEP recorded is exactly equal to the actual total expiratory pressure. B ΔP estimated using Eqs. (6) and (7), under the assumption that flow, volume and pressure decay mono-exponentially, as proposed in [7]. C ΔP estimated using Eqs. (4) and (5) as proposed in [6], under the assumption that the time taken to achieve full expiration and eliminate PEEPi (i.e., achieve zero expiratory flow) is equal to 4 expiratory time constants D ΔP estimated as in C but under the assumption that the time taken to eliminate PEEPi is equal to 3 expiratory time constants
Fig. 4Bland–Altman plots showing estimation error versus PF ratio across the cohort of 90 virtual adult ARDS patients, with = 30 cmH2O and = 5 cmH2O. Solid lines indicate the average deviation (‘Bias’) between the true and estimated value of ΔP, dashed lines indicate the limits of agreement (LOA, the distribution of values within ± 1.96 standard deviation from the mean) A ΔP estimated by switching to volume controlled ventilation (as described in [2]), assuming that the monitoring PEEP recorded is exactly equal to the actual total expiratory pressure. B ΔP estimated using Eqs. (6) and (7), under the assumption that flow, volume and pressure decay mono-exponentially, as proposed in [7]. C ΔP estimated using Eqs. (4) and (5) as proposed in [6], under the assumption that the time taken to achieve full expiration and eliminate PEEPi (i.e., achieve zero expiratory flow) is equal to 4 expiratory time constants D ΔP estimated as in (C) but under the assumption that the time taken to eliminate PEEPi is equal to 3 expiratory time constants