| Literature DB >> 35566577 |
Hung-Yu Huang1,2,3, Chih-Yu Huang2,4, Li-Fu Li2,4.
Abstract
The number of patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV) is increasing worldwide, placing a burden on healthcare systems. Therefore, investigating the pathophysiology, risk factors, and treatment for PMV is crucial. Various underlying comorbidities have been associated with PMV. The pathophysiology of PMV includes the presence of an abnormal respiratory drive or ventilator-induced diaphragm dysfunction. Numerous studies have demonstrated that ventilator-induced diaphragm dysfunction is related to increases in in-hospital deaths, nosocomial pneumonia, oxidative stress, lung tissue hypoxia, ventilator dependence, and costs. Thus far, the pathophysiologic evidence for PMV has been derived from clinical human studies and experimental studies in animals. Moreover, recent studies have demonstrated the outcome benefits of pharmacological agents and rehabilitative programs for patients requiring PMV. However, methodological limitations affected these studies. Controlled prospective studies with an adequate number of participants are necessary to provide evidence of the mechanism, prognosis, and treatment of PMV. The great epidemiologic impact of PMV and the potential development of treatment make this a key research field.Entities:
Keywords: prolonged mechanical ventilation; reactive oxygen species; respiratory drive; ventilator-induced diaphragm dysfunction
Year: 2022 PMID: 35566577 PMCID: PMC9103623 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11092451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Figure 1Schematic figure illustrating the signaling pathway implicated in VIDD development. Endotoxin-induced augmentation of mechanical stretch-mediated ROS generation and diaphragm injury are associated with diaphragm proteolysis, mitochondrial dysfunction, autophagy, as well as activation of the caspase-3, calpain, and ubiquitin–proteasome pathways. Diaphragm weakness can be attenuated by administering antioxidants, enoxaparin, or through partial support for mechanical ventilation or pulmonary rehabilitation. Akt = serine/threonine kinase/protein kinase B; ETC = electron transport chain; FoxO1 = Class O of forkhead box1; HIF = hypoxia-inducible factor; LC3 = light chain 3; LMWH = low-molecular-weight heparin; LPS = lipopolysaccharide; mtDNA = mitochondrial DNA; mTOR = mammalian target of rapamycin; MuRF-1 = muscle ring finger-1; NF-κB = nuclear factor κappa B; PI3-K = phosphoinositide 3-OH kinase; ROS = reactive oxygen species; TLR4 = toll-like receptor 4; VIDD = ventilator-induced diaphragm dysfunction.
Risk factors of prolonged mechanical ventilation.
| Systemic comorbidities |
| Chronic respiratory diseases: COPD, bronchiectasis, pulmonary fibrosis |
| Heart failure |
| Cerebrovascular diseases |
| Neuromuscular diseases |
| End-stage renal disease |
| Liver cirrhosis |
| Malignancy |
| Infection: sepsis, multi-drug resistant infection |
| Malnutrition |
| Ventilator-induced diaphragm dysfunction |
| Critical illness neuromyopathy |
| Critical illness encephalopathy |
Abbreviation: COPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Management of prolonged mechanical ventilation.
| Systemic comorbidities treatment |
| Infection treatment |
| Nutrition support |
| Physical exercise programs |
| Breathing control |
| Passive leg raising |
| Weighted resistance |
| Stationary cycle ergometry training |
| Respiratory muscle training |
| Active limb exercise |
| Physiotherapy with positive pressure |
| Additional pressure support during exercise |
| Intermittent positive pressure breathing during exercise |
| Cough augmentation techniques |
| Electrical muscle stimulation therapy |