Lemmers Daniel H L, Abu Hilal Mohammed, Bnà Claudio, Prezioso Chiara, Cavallo Erika, Nencini Niccolò, Crisci Serena, Fusina Federica, Natalini Giuseppe
Dept of Surgery, Fondazione Poliambulanza, Brescia, Italy.
Dept of Surgery, Amsterdam UMC, Cancer Center Amsterdam, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
ERJ Open Res. 2020 Nov 16;6(4). doi: 10.1183/23120541.00385-2020. eCollection 2020 Oct.
In mechanically ventilated acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) patients infected with the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19), we frequently recognised the development of pneumomediastinum and/or subcutaneous emphysema despite employing a protective mechanical ventilation strategy. The purpose of this study was to determine if the incidence of pneumomediastinum/subcutaneous emphysema in COVID-19 patients was higher than in ARDS patients without COVID-19 and if this difference could be attributed to barotrauma or to lung frailty.
We identified both a cohort of patients with ARDS and COVID-19 (CoV-ARDS), and a cohort of patients with ARDS from other causes (noCoV-ARDS).Patients with CoV-ARDS were admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU) during the COVID-19 pandemic and had microbiologically confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection. NoCoV-ARDS was identified by an ARDS diagnosis in the 5 years before the COVID-19 pandemic period.
Pneumomediastinum/subcutaneous emphysema occurred in 23 out of 169 (13.6%) patients with CoV-ARDS and in three out of 163 (1.9%) patients with noCoV-ARDS (p<0.001). Mortality was 56.5% in CoV-ARDS patients with pneumomediastinum/subcutaneous emphysema and 50% in patients without pneumomediastinum (p=0.46).CoV-ARDS patients had a high incidence of pneumomediastinum/subcutaneous emphysema despite the use of low tidal volume (5.9±0.8 mL·kg ideal body weight) and low airway pressure (plateau pressure 23±4 cmHO).
We observed a seven-fold increase in pneumomediastinum/subcutaneous emphysema in CoV-ARDS. An increased lung frailty in CoV-ARDS could explain this finding more than barotrauma, which, according to its etymology, refers to high transpulmonary pressure.
在感染新型冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的机械通气急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)患者中,尽管采用了保护性机械通气策略,我们仍频繁发现纵隔气肿和/或皮下气肿的发生。本研究的目的是确定COVID-19患者纵隔气肿/皮下气肿的发生率是否高于非COVID-19的ARDS患者,以及这种差异是否可归因于气压伤或肺脆弱性。
我们确定了一组ARDS合并COVID-19的患者(CoV-ARDS)和一组其他原因导致ARDS的患者(非CoV-ARDS)。CoV-ARDS患者在COVID-19大流行期间入住重症监护病房(ICU),并经微生物学证实感染严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)。非CoV-ARDS是在COVID-19大流行前5年通过ARDS诊断确定的。
169例CoV-ARDS患者中有23例(13.6%)发生纵隔气肿/皮下气肿,163例非CoV-ARDS患者中有3例(1.9%)发生(p<0.001)。发生纵隔气肿/皮下气肿的CoV-ARDS患者死亡率为56.5%,未发生纵隔气肿的患者死亡率为50%(p=0.46)。尽管使用了低潮气量(5.9±0.8 mL·kg理想体重)和低气道压力(平台压23±4 cmH₂O),CoV-ARDS患者纵隔气肿/皮下气肿的发生率仍很高。
我们观察到CoV-ARDS患者纵隔气肿/皮下气肿增加了7倍。CoV-ARDS患者肺脆弱性增加比气压伤更能解释这一发现,气压伤根据其词源是指高跨肺压。