Department of Surgical Sciences and Integrated Diagnostics, IRCCS AOU San Martino-IST, University of Genoa, Genoa, Italy.
Department of Surgical Sciences and Integrated Diagnostics, IRCCS AOU San Martino-IST, University of Genoa, Genoa, Italy -
Minerva Anestesiol. 2017 Oct;83(10):1075-1088. doi: 10.23736/S0375-9393.17.11970-X. Epub 2017 May 19.
Mechanical ventilation is a cornerstone of the intraoperative management of the surgical patient and is still mandatory in several surgical procedures. In the last decades, research focused on preventing postoperative pulmonary complications (PPCs), both improving risk stratification through the use of predictive scores and protecting the lung adopting so-called protective ventilation strategies. The aim of this review was to give an up-to-date overview of the currently suggested intraoperative ventilation strategies, along with their pathophysiologic rationale, with a focus on challenging conditions, such as obesity, one-lung ventilation and cardiopulmonary bypass. While anesthesia and mechanical ventilation are becoming increasingly safe practices, the contribution to surgical mortality attributable to postoperative lung injury is not negligible: for these reasons, the prevention of PPCs, including the use of protective mechanical ventilation is mandatory. Mechanical ventilation should be optimized providing an adequate respiratory support while minimizing unwanted negative effects. Due to the high number of surgical procedures performed daily, the impact on patients' health and healthcare costs can be relevant, even when new strategies result in an apparently small improvement of outcome. A protective intraoperative ventilation should include a low tidal volume of 6-8 mL/kg of predicted body weight, plateau pressures ideally below 16 cmH2O, the lowest possible driving pressure, moderate-low PEEP levels except in obese patients, laparoscopy and long surgical procedures that might benefit of a slightly higher PEEP. The work of the anesthesiologist should start with a careful preoperative visit to assess the risk, and a close postoperative monitoring.
机械通气是外科患者围术期管理的基石,在几种外科手术中仍然是强制性的。在过去的几十年中,研究的重点是预防术后肺部并发症(PPCs),包括通过使用预测评分来改善风险分层,以及采用所谓的保护性通气策略来保护肺部。本次综述的目的是提供当前建议的术中通气策略的最新概述,以及它们的病理生理原理,重点关注肥胖、单肺通气和体外循环等具有挑战性的情况。虽然麻醉和机械通气的安全性不断提高,但术后肺损伤对手术死亡率的影响不容忽视:出于这些原因,预防 PPCs,包括使用保护性机械通气是强制性的。机械通气应进行优化,提供足够的呼吸支持,同时最大限度地减少不必要的负面效应。由于每天进行大量的手术,对患者健康和医疗保健成本的影响可能是相关的,即使新策略的结果只略有改善。术中保护性通气应包括低潮气量(6-8ml/kg 预测体重)、理想情况下平台压低于 16cmH2O、最低可能的驱动压、除肥胖患者外适中的低 PEEP 水平、腹腔镜和长手术过程可能受益于稍高的 PEEP。麻醉师的工作应从仔细的术前访视开始,以评估风险,并进行密切的术后监测。