Institute of Physiology, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic.
Department of Anaesthesiology, Resuscitation and Intensive Medicine, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University and General University Hospital in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic.
BMC Pulm Med. 2021 Apr 24;21(1):133. doi: 10.1186/s12890-021-01501-x.
Among the challenges for personalizing the management of mechanically ventilated patients with coronavirus disease (COVID-19)-associated acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are the effects of different positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) levels and body positions in regional lung mechanics. Right-left lung aeration asymmetry and poorly recruitable lungs with increased recruitability with alternating body position between supine and prone have been reported. However, real-time effects of changing body position and PEEP on regional overdistension and collapse, in individual patients, remain largely unknown and not timely monitored. The aim of this study was to individualize PEEP and body positioning in order to reduce the mechanisms of ventilator-induced lung injury: collapse and overdistension.
We here report a series of five consecutive mechanically ventilated patients with COVID-19-associated ARDS in which sixteen decremental PEEP titrations were performed in the first days of mechanical ventilation (8 titration pairs: supine position immediately followed by 30° targeted lateral position). The choice of lateral tilt was based on X-Ray. This targeted lateral position strategy was defined by selecting the less aerated lung to be positioned up and the more aerated lung to be positioned down. For each PEEP level, global and regional collapse and overdistension maps and percentages were measured by electrical impedance tomography. Additionally, we present the incidence of lateral asymmetry in a cohort of forty-four patients.
The targeted lateral position strategy resulted in significantly smaller amounts of overdistension and collapse when compared with the supine one: less collapse along the PEEP titration was found within the left lung in targeted lateral (P = 0.014); and less overdistension along the PEEP titration was found within the right lung in targeted lateral (P = 0.005). Regarding collapse within the right lung and overdistension within the left lung: no differences were found for position. In the cohort of forty-four patients, ventilation inequality of > 65/35% was observed in 15% of cases.
Targeted lateral positioning with bedside personalized PEEP provided a selective attenuation of overdistension and collapse in mechanically ventilated patients with COVID-19-associated ARDS and right-left lung aeration/ventilation asymmetry.
Trial registration number: NCT04460859.
在为患有 COVID-19 相关急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)的机械通气患者进行个体化管理时,面临的挑战之一是不同的呼气末正压(PEEP)水平和体位对肺区域力学的影响。已有报道称,左右肺通气不均和难以复张的肺在仰卧位和俯卧位之间交替时,其可复张性增加。然而,实时监测患者个体在改变体位和 PEEP 水平时对区域性过度膨胀和塌陷的影响在很大程度上仍不清楚,也没有及时监测。本研究旨在通过个体化 PEEP 和体位定位来减少呼吸机引起的肺损伤机制:塌陷和过度膨胀。
我们在此报告了五例连续的 COVID-19 相关 ARDS 机械通气患者,在机械通气的头几天进行了 16 次递减 PEEP 滴定(8 对滴定:仰卧位后立即进行 30°目标侧卧位)。侧卧选择的依据是 X 光。这种有针对性的侧卧位策略是通过选择通气较差的肺位上,通气较好的肺位下来定义的。对于每个 PEEP 水平,通过电阻抗断层扫描测量全局和区域塌陷和过度膨胀图以及百分比。此外,我们还介绍了 44 例患者的侧位不对称发生率。
与仰卧位相比,目标侧卧位策略导致过度膨胀和塌陷的程度明显减小:在目标侧卧位时,左侧肺在 PEEP 滴定过程中的塌陷量减少(P=0.014);右侧肺在 PEEP 滴定过程中的过度膨胀量减少(P=0.005)。对于右侧肺塌陷和左侧肺过度膨胀:体位之间无差异。在 44 例患者的队列中,发现通气不均大于 65/35%的情况占 15%。
床边个体化 PEEP 的目标侧卧位定位选择性地减轻了 COVID-19 相关 ARDS 机械通气患者的过度膨胀和塌陷,并改善了左右肺通气/通气不均。
试验注册号:NCT04460859。