Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Department of Pediatrics and Public Health Science, Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Penn State Hershey Children's Hospital, Hershey, PA.
Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2019 Mar;20(3):e145-e153. doi: 10.1097/PCC.0000000000001846.
The impact of tidal volume on outcomes in mechanically ventilated children with pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome remains unclear. To date, observational investigations have failed to calculate tidal volume based on standardized corrections of weight. We investigated the impact of tidal volume on mortality and probability of extubation in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome using ideal body weight-adjusted tidal volume.
Retrospective analysis of an ongoing prospective cohort of pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome patients. Tidal volume was calculated based on actual body weight and two different formulations of ideal body weight.
PICU at a large, tertiary care children's hospital.
Pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome patients on conventional ventilation with a documented height or length.
None.
There were 483 patients with a measured height or length at pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome onset included in the final analysis, with 73 nonsurvivors (15%). At 24 hours, there remained 400 patients on conventional ventilation. When calculating tidal volume based on ideal body weight by either method, volumes were larger both at onset and at 24 hours compared with tidal volume based on actual body weight (all p < 0.001), and the proportion of patients being ventilated with tidal volumes greater than 10 mL/kg based on ideal body weight was larger both at onset (12.4% and 15.5%) and 24 hours (10.3% and 11.5%) compared with actual body weight at onset (3.5%) and 24 hours (4.0%) (all p < 0.001). Tidal volume, based on both actual body weight and ideal body weight, was not associated with either increased mortality or decreased probability of extubation after adjusting for oxygenation index in the whole cohort, whereas associations between higher tidal volume and poor outcomes were seen in subgroup analyses in overweight children and in severe pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Our retrospective analysis of a cohort of pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome patients did not find a consistent association between tidal volume adjusted for ideal body weight and outcomes, although an association may exist in certain subgroups. Although it remains to be shown in a prospective trial whether high volumes or pressures are injurious in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome, tidal volume is likely an imprecise parameter for titrating lung-protective ventilation.
机械通气患儿急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)中潮气量对结局的影响尚不清楚。迄今为止,观察性研究未能根据体重的标准化校正来计算潮气量。我们使用理想体重校正的潮气量,研究了ARDS 患儿的潮气量对死亡率和拔管概率的影响。
对正在进行的儿科 ARDS 患者前瞻性队列的回顾性分析。根据实际体重和两种不同的理想体重公式计算潮气量。
大型三级儿童医院的 PICU。
ARDS 患儿,接受常规通气,有记录的身高或长度。
无。
最终分析纳入了 483 例 ARDS 发病时有身高或长度记录的患者,其中 73 例未存活(15%)。24 小时时,仍有 400 例患者接受常规通气。当按两种方法中的任何一种用理想体重计算潮气量时,与基于实际体重的潮气量相比,潮气量在发病时和 24 小时时均更大(均 p < 0.001),并且基于理想体重的潮气量大于 10 mL/kg 的患者比例在发病时(12.4%和 15.5%)和 24 小时时(10.3%和 11.5%)均大于基于实际体重的潮气量(3.5%和 4.0%)(均 p < 0.001)。在整个队列中,调整氧合指数后,基于实际体重和理想体重的潮气量与死亡率增加或拔管概率降低均无相关性,而在超重儿童和严重 ARDS 亚组分析中,较高的潮气量与不良结局相关。
我们对儿科 ARDS 患者队列的回顾性分析并未发现理想体重校正的潮气量与结局之间存在一致的相关性,尽管在某些亚组中可能存在相关性。尽管在前瞻性试验中仍需证明ARDS 中高容量或高压力是否有害,但潮气量可能是调整肺保护性通气的不精确参数。