Mechanical ventilation in acute respiratory failure: recruitment and high positive end-expiratory pressure are necessary

To review as best the critical care clinicians can recruit the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) lungs and keep the lungs opened, assuring homogeneous ventilation, and to present the experimental and clinical results of these mechanical ventilation strategies, along with possible improvemen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current opinion in critical care 2005-02, Vol.11 (1), p.18-28
Hauptverfasser: Barbas, Carmen Sílvia Valente, de Matos, Gustavo Faissol Janot, Pincelli, Mariangela Pimentel, da Rosa Borges, Eduardo, Antunes, Telma, de Barros, Juliana Monteiro, Okamoto, Valdelis, Borges, João Batista, Amato, Marcelo Brito Passos, de Carvalho, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro
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container_issue 1
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container_title Current opinion in critical care
container_volume 11
creator Barbas, Carmen Sílvia Valente
de Matos, Gustavo Faissol Janot
Pincelli, Mariangela Pimentel
da Rosa Borges, Eduardo
Antunes, Telma
de Barros, Juliana Monteiro
Okamoto, Valdelis
Borges, João Batista
Amato, Marcelo Brito Passos
de Carvalho, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro
description To review as best the critical care clinicians can recruit the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) lungs and keep the lungs opened, assuring homogeneous ventilation, and to present the experimental and clinical results of these mechanical ventilation strategies, along with possible improvements in patient outcome based on selected published medical literature from 1972 to 2004 (highlighting the period from June 2003 to June 2004 and recent results of the authors' group research). In the experimental setting, repeated derecruitments accentuate lung injury during mechanical ventilation, whereas open lung concept strategies can attenuate lung injury. In the clinical setting, recruitment maneuvers improve short-term oxygenation in ARDS patients. A recent prospective clinical trial showed that low versus intermediate positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) levels (8 vs 13 cm H2O) associated with low tidal ventilation had the same effect on ARDS patient survival. Nevertheless, both conventional and electrical impedance thoracic tomography studies indicate that stepwise PEEP recruitment maneuvers increase lung volume and the recruitment percentage of lung tissue, and higher levels of PEEP (18-26 cm H2O) are necessary to keep the ARDS lungs opened and assure a more homogeneous low tidal ventilation. Stepwise PEEP recruitment maneuvers can open collapsed ARDS lungs. Higher levels of PEEP are necessary to maintain the lungs open and assure homogenous ventilation in ARDS. In the near future, thoracic CT associated with high-performance monitoring of regional ventilation (electrical impedance tomography) may be used at the bedside to determine the optimal mechanical ventilation of ARDS patients.
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source Journals@Ovid Ovid Autoload; MEDLINE
subjects Humans
Lung - diagnostic imaging
Lung - physiopathology
Lung Volume Measurements
Positive-Pressure Respiration - methods
Posture
Radiography, Thoracic
Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Adult - diagnostic imaging
Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Adult - physiopathology
Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Adult - therapy
Respiratory Mechanics
Treatment Outcome
title Mechanical ventilation in acute respiratory failure: recruitment and high positive end-expiratory pressure are necessary
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