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      Survival in patients with severe adult respiratory distress syndrome treated with high-level positive end-expiratory pressure :

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          Abstract

          To assess the mortality rate and complications in a population of surgical patients with severe adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) treated with positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) of > 15 cm H2O in an attempt to reduce intrapulmonary shunt to approximately 0.20 and reduce FIO2 to < 0.50. Retrospective review of patients treated by a standardized ventilatory support protocol at the time of their illness. A 24-bed surgical intensive care unit in a university medical center. All patients admitted to the surgical intensive care unit during a 34-month period who met the criteria for severe ARDS (Pao2 of < or = 70 torr [< or = 9.3 kPa] on an FIO2 of > or = 0.50, diffuse interstitial and/or alveolar infiltrates on chest radiograph, decreased lung compliance, no evidence of congestive heart failure, and a likely predisposing etiology) were evaluated. Patients treated with PEEP of > 15 cm H2O were selected for this review. Patients were treated by a protocol to achieve oxygenation end points, which consisted of maintaining arterial oxyhemoglobin saturation (as determined by pulse oximetry of > or = 0.92), while reducing FIO2 to < 0.50 and decreasing intrapulmonary shunt fraction to < or = 0.20 by adding PEEP. With the exception of patients with suspected intracranial hypertension related to closed-head injury, low-rate intermittent mandatory ventilation was the primary mode of ventilation. Pressure-support ventilation was added, when needed, to improve patient comfort, enhance spontaneous tidal volume, or improve CO2 excretion. Eighty-six patients with severe ARDS were treated with a PEEP of > 15 cm H2O. Nineteen of these patients died early of severe closed-head injury or massive uncontrollable hemorrhage and were excluded from the evaluation. The remaining 67 patients had a mean Lung Injury Score of 3.3 during their treatment with high PEEP. Twenty (30%) of 67 patients died. Eight of the deaths occurred after decrease of ventilatory support and with acceptable blood gases. The other 12 patients who died had continued oxygenation deficits and received increased levels of ventilatory support at the time of death. Twenty-six (39%) of 67 patients had radiographic manifestations of barotrauma (pneumothorax, subcutaneous emphysema, etc.) related to their primary injuries or to complications related to central venous catheter placement. Seven (17%) of 41 patients developed clinical or radiographic signs of barotrauma while receiving high-level PEEP. The hemodynamic effects of increased airway pressure were managed with fluids and inotropic agents, when necessary, and did not limit the application of PEEP to reach the defined end point of treatment. This subset of patients with severe ARDS treated with high-level PEEP had a mortality rate lower than those rates previously reported by other researchers using more conventional ventilatory support and resuscitation techniques. FIO2 may be significantly reduced and PaO2 may be maintained at acceptable values by decreasing intrapulmonary shunt fraction using high-level PEEP.

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          Most cited references36

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          An expanded definition of the adult respiratory distress syndrome.

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            Influence of positive end-expiratory pressure on left ventricular performance.

            Although left ventricular dysfunction is common during ventilatory support with positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), the mechanism of this disorder remains unclear. In 10 patients with the adult respiratory-distress syndrome we studied the effects of a stepwise increase in PEEP from 0.to 30 cm H2O on left ventricular output, intracardiac transmural pressures, and two-dimensional echocardiographic measurements of left ventricular cross-sectional area at end-systole and at end-diastole. Increasing PEEP was associated with progressive declines in cardiac output, mean blood pressure, and left ventricular dimensions and with equalization of right and left ventricular filling pressures. The radius of septal curvature decreased at both end-diastole and end-systole, implying a leftward shift of the interventricular septum. At the highest PEEP, blood-volume expansion did not restore cardiac output, although left ventricular transmural filling pressures had returned to base-line values. We conclude that decreased cardiac output during PEEP is mediated by a leftward displacement of the interventricular septum, which restricts left ventricular filling.
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              Histopathologic pulmonary changes from mechanical ventilation at high peak airway pressures.

              We investigated the histopathologic pulmonary changes induced by mechanical pulmonary ventilation (MV) with a high peak airway pressure and a large tidal volume in healthy baby pigs. Eleven animals were mechanically ventilated at a peak inspiratory pressure (PIP) of 40 cm H2O, a respiratory rate (RR) of 20 min-1, a positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) of 3 to 5 cm H2O, and an FIO2 of 0.4. High airway pressure MV was terminated in 22 +/- 11 h because of severe hypoxemia in the animals. Five of the baby pigs were killed for gross and light microscope studies. The pulmonary changes consisted of alveolar hemorrhage, alveolar neutrophil infiltration, alveolar macrophage and type II pneumocyte proliferation, interstitial congestion and thickening, interstitial lymphocyte infiltration, emphysematous change, and hyaline membrane formation. Those lesions were similar to that seen in the early stage of the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). The remaining six animals were treated for 3 to 6 days with conventional respiratory care with appropriate ventilator settings. Prominent organized alveolar exudate in addition to lesions was also found in the five animals. These findings were indistinguishable from the clinical late stage of ARDS. Six control animals were mechanically ventilated at a PIP of less than 18 cm H2O, a RR of 20 min-1, a PEEP of 3 to 5 cm H2O, and an FIO2 of 0.4 for 48 h. They showed no notable changes in lung functions and histopathologic findings. Aggressive MV with a high PIP is often applied to patients with respiratory distress to attain adequate pulmonary gas exchange.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Critical Care Medicine
                Critical Care Medicine
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                0090-3493
                1995
                September 1995
                : 23
                : 9
                : 1485-1496
                Article
                10.1097/00003246-199509000-00008
                7664550
                ab3f87c5-9bf8-4364-b5c6-c3dd2e28c1e8
                © 1995
                History

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