Grosu Horiana B, Ost David E, Lee Young Im, Song Juhee, Li Liang, Eden Edward, Rose Keith
Department of Pulmonary Medicine
Department of Pulmonary Medicine.
Respir Care. 2017 Jul;62(7):904-911. doi: 10.4187/respcare.05370. Epub 2017 Mar 28.
Diaphragm muscle weakness and atrophy are consequences of prolonged mechanical ventilation. Our purpose was to determine whether thickness of the diaphragm (TDI) changes over time after intubation and whether the degree of change affects clinical outcome.
For this prospective, longitudinal observational study, we identified subjects who required mechanical ventilation and measured their TDI by ultrasonography. TDI was measured at baseline and repeated 72 h later and then weekly until the subject was either liberated from mechanical ventilation, was referred for tracheostomy, or died. The analysis was designed to determine whether baseline TDI and change in TDI affect extubation outcome.
Of the 57 subjects who underwent both diaphragm measurements at 72 h, 16 died, 33 were extubated, and 8 underwent tracheostomy. Only 14 subjects received mechanical ventilation for 1 week, and 2 subjects received mechanical ventilation for 2 and 3 weeks. Females had significantly thinner baseline TDI ( = .008). At 72 h, TDI had decreased in 84% of subjects. We found no significant association between the rate of thinning and sex ( = .68), diagnosis of COPD ( = .36), current smoking ( = .85), or pleural effusion ( = .83). Lower baseline TDI was associated with higher likelihood of extubation: 12.5% higher for every 0.01-cm decrease in TDI (hazard ratio 0.875, 95% CI 0.80-0.96, = .003). For every 0.01-cm decrease in TDI at 72 h, the likelihood of extubation increased by 17% (hazard ratio 0.83, 95% CI 0.70-0.99, = .041).
Although most of the subjects showed evidence of diaphragm thinning, we were unable to find a correlation with outcome of extubation failure. In fact, the thinner the diaphragm at baseline and the greater the extent of diaphragm thinning at 72 h, the greater the likelihood of extubation. Thickening ratio or other measurement may be a more reliable indicator of diaphragm dysfunction and should be explored.
膈肌肌无力和萎缩是长期机械通气的后果。我们的目的是确定插管后膈肌厚度(TDI)是否随时间变化,以及变化程度是否影响临床结局。
在这项前瞻性纵向观察研究中,我们确定了需要机械通气的受试者,并通过超声测量他们的TDI。在基线时测量TDI,72小时后重复测量,然后每周测量一次,直到受试者脱离机械通气、接受气管造口术或死亡。该分析旨在确定基线TDI和TDI变化是否影响拔管结局。
在72小时时进行了两次膈肌测量的57名受试者中,16人死亡,33人拔管,8人接受了气管造口术。只有14名受试者接受了1周的机械通气,2名受试者接受了2周和3周的机械通气。女性的基线TDI明显更薄(P = 0.008)。在72小时时,84%的受试者TDI下降。我们发现变薄率与性别(P = 0.68)、慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)诊断(P = 0.36)、当前吸烟(P = 0.85)或胸腔积液(P = 0.83)之间无显著关联。较低的基线TDI与较高的拔管可能性相关:TDI每降低0.01厘米,拔管可能性高12.5%(风险比0.875,95%可信区间0.80 - 0.96,P = 0.003)。在72小时时TDI每降低0.01厘米,拔管可能性增加17%(风险比0.83,95%可信区间0.70 - 0.99,P = 0.041)。
尽管大多数受试者显示出膈肌变薄的证据,但我们未能发现与拔管失败结局的相关性。事实上,基线时膈肌越薄,72小时时膈肌变薄程度越大,拔管的可能性就越大。增厚率或其他测量指标可能是膈肌功能障碍更可靠的指标,应予以探索。