4.6 Article

Lung Recruitment in Obese Patients with Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Journal

ANESTHESIOLOGY
Volume 130, Issue 5, Pages 791-803

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000002638

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Funding

  1. Department of Anesthesia at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts
  2. Department of Critical Care and Pain Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts
  3. Department of Respiratory Care at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

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Background: Obese patients are characterized by normal chest-wall elastance and high pleural pressure and have been excluded from trials assessing best strategies to set positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). The authors hypothesized that severely obese patients with ARDS present with a high degree of lung collapse, reversible by titrated PEEP preceded by a lung recruitment maneuver. Methods: Severely obese ARDS patients were enrolled in a physiologic crossover study evaluating the effects of three PEEP titration strategies applied in the following order: (1) PEEP ARDSNET : the low PEEP/Fio(2) ARDSnet table; (2) PEEP INCREMENTAL : PEEP levels set to determine a positive end-expiratory transpulmonary pressure; and (3) PEEP DECREMENTAL : PEEP levels set to determine the lowest respiratory system elastance during a decremental PEEP trial following a recruitment maneuver on respiratory mechanics, regional lung collapse, and overdistension according to electrical impedance tomography and gas exchange. Results: Fourteen patients underwent the study procedures. At PEEP ARDSNET (13 +/- 1 cm H2O) end-expiratory transpulmonary pressure was negative (-5 +/- 5 cm H2O), lung elastance was 27 +/- 12 cm H2O/L, and PaO2/Fio(2) was 194 +/- 111 mmHg. Compared to PEEP ARDSNET, at PEEP INCREMENTAL level (22 +/- 3 cm H2O) lung volume increased (977 +/- 708 ml), lung elastance decreased (23 +/- 7 cm H2O/l), lung collapse decreased (18 +/- 10%), and ventilation homogeneity increased thus rising oxygenation (251 +/- 105 mmHg), despite higher overdistension levels (16 +/- 12%), all values P < 0.05 versus PEEP ARDSnet. Setting PEEP according to a PEEP DECREMENTAL trial after a recruitment maneuver (21 +/- 4 cm H2O, P = 0.99 vs. PEEP INCREMENTAL) further lowered lung elastance (19 +/- 6 cm H2O/l) and increased oxygenation (329 +/- 82 mmHg) while reducing lung collapse (9 +/- 2%) and overdistension (11 +/- 2%), all values P < 0.05 versus PEEP ARDSnet and PEEP INCREMENTAL. All patients were maintained on titrated PEEP levels up to 24 h without hemodynamic or ventilation related complications. Conclusions: Among the PEEP titration strategies tested, setting PEEP according to a PEEP DECREMENTAL trial preceded by a recruitment maneuver obtained the best lung function by decreasing lung overdistension and collapse, restoring lung elastance, and oxygenation suggesting lung tissue recruitment.

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