Blaser Annika Reintam, Björck Martin, De Keulenaer Bart, Regli Adrian
From the Department of Anaesthesiology, Intensive Care, Emergency and Pain Medicine (A.R.B.), Lucerne Cantonal Hospital, Lucerne, Switzerland; Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care (A.R.B.), University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia; Section of Vascular Surgery (M.B.), Department of Surgical Sciences, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden; Intensive Care Medicine (B.D.K., A.R.), Fremantle Hospital; and Medical School (A.R.), The University of Notre Dame Australia, Fremantle; and Schools of Surgery (B.D.K.), and School of Medicine and Pharmacology (A.R.), The University of Western Australia, Crawley; and Intensive Care Unit, Murdock Private Hospital (B.D.K.), Western Australia, Australia.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2015 May;78(5):1044-53. doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000000616.
Abdominal compliance (AC) is an important determinant and predictor of available workspace during laparoscopic surgery. Furthermore, critically ill patients with a reduced AC are at an increased risk of developing intra-abdominal hypertension and abdominal compartment syndrome, both of which are associated with high morbidity and mortality. Despite this, AC is a concept that has been neglected in the past.AC is defined as a measure of the ease of abdominal expansion, expressed as a change in intra-abdominal volume (IAV) per change in intra-abdominal pressure (IAP):AC = ΔIAV / ΔIAPAC is a dynamic variable dependent on baseline IAV and IAP as well as abdominal reshaping and stretching capacity. Whereas AC itself can only rarely be measured, it always needs to be considered an important component of IAP. Patients with decreased AC are prone to fulminant development of abdominal compartment syndrome when concomitant risk factors for intra-abdominal hypertension are present.This review aims to clarify the pressure-volume relationship within the abdominal cavity. It highlights how different conditions and pathologies can affect AC and which management strategies could be applied to avoid serious consequences of decreased AC.We have pooled all available human data to calculate AC values in patients acutely and chronically exposed to intra-abdominal hypertension and demonstrated an exponential abdominal pressure-volume relationship. Most importantly, patients with high level of IAP have a reduced AC. In these patients, only small reduction in IAV can significantly increase AC and reduce IAPs.A greater knowledge on AC may help in selecting a better surgical approach and in reducing complications related to intra-abdominal hypertension.
腹部顺应性(AC)是腹腔镜手术期间可用工作空间的重要决定因素和预测指标。此外,AC降低的重症患者发生腹腔内高压和腹腔间隔室综合征的风险增加,这两种情况均与高发病率和高死亡率相关。尽管如此,AC这一概念在过去一直被忽视。AC被定义为衡量腹部扩张难易程度的指标,以腹腔内压力(IAP)每变化时腹腔内容积(IAV)的变化来表示:AC = ΔIAV / ΔIAPAC是一个动态变量,取决于基线IAV和IAP以及腹部重塑和伸展能力。虽然AC本身很少能够直接测量,但它始终应被视为IAP的一个重要组成部分。当存在腹腔内高压的伴随危险因素时,AC降低的患者容易迅速发展为腹腔间隔室综合征。本综述旨在阐明腹腔内的压力-容积关系。它强调了不同的状况和病理如何影响AC,以及可以应用哪些管理策略来避免AC降低带来的严重后果。我们汇总了所有可用的人体数据,以计算急性和慢性暴露于腹腔内高压的患者的AC值,并证明了指数形式的腹部压力-容积关系。最重要的是,IAP水平高的患者AC降低。在这些患者中,IAV仅有小幅降低就能显著增加AC并降低IAP。对AC有更深入的了解可能有助于选择更好的手术方法,并减少与腹腔内高压相关的并发症。