collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34876492/mechanical-ventilation-in-ards-quo-vadis
#21
REVIEW
Richard H Kallet
Contemplating the future should be grounded in history. The rise of post-polio ICUs was inextricably related to mechanical ventilation. Critically ill patients who developed acute respiratory failure often had "congestive atelectasis" (ie, a term used to describe ARDS prior to 1967). Initial mechanical ventilation strategies for treating this condition and others inadvertently led to ventilator-induced lung injury. Both injurious ventilation and later use of overly cautious weaning practices resulted from both limited technology and understanding of ARDS and other aspects of critical illness...
June 2022: Respiratory Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28385915/physiology-in-medicine-understanding-dynamic-alveolar-physiology-to-minimize-ventilator-induced-lung-injury
#22
REVIEW
Gary F Nieman, Josh Satalin, Michaela Kollisch-Singule, Penny Andrews, Hani Aiash, Nader M Habashi, Louis A Gatto
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) remains a serious clinical problem with the main treatment being supportive in the form of mechanical ventilation. However, mechanical ventilation can be a double-edged sword: if set improperly, it can exacerbate the tissue damage caused by ARDS; this is known as ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). To minimize VILI, we must understand the pathophysiologic mechanisms of tissue damage at the alveolar level. In this Physiology in Medicine paper, the dynamic physiology of alveolar inflation and deflation during mechanical ventilation will be reviewed...
June 1, 2017: Journal of Applied Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25693014/driving-pressure-and-survival-in-the-acute-respiratory-distress-syndrome
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marcelo B P Amato, Maureen O Meade, Arthur S Slutsky, Laurent Brochard, Eduardo L V Costa, David A Schoenfeld, Thomas E Stewart, Matthias Briel, Daniel Talmor, Alain Mercat, Jean-Christophe M Richard, Carlos R R Carvalho, Roy G Brower
BACKGROUND: Mechanical-ventilation strategies that use lower end-inspiratory (plateau) airway pressures, lower tidal volumes (VT), and higher positive end-expiratory pressures (PEEPs) can improve survival in patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), but the relative importance of each of these components is uncertain. Because respiratory-system compliance (CRS) is strongly related to the volume of aerated remaining functional lung during disease (termed functional lung size), we hypothesized that driving pressure (ΔP=VT/CRS), in which VT is intrinsically normalized to functional lung size (instead of predicted lung size in healthy persons), would be an index more strongly associated with survival than VT or PEEP in patients who are not actively breathing...
February 19, 2015: New England Journal of Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31907704/prevention-and-treatment-of-acute-lung-injury-with-time-controlled-adaptive-ventilation-physiologically-informed-modification-of-airway-pressure-release-ventilation
#24
REVIEW
Gary F Nieman, Louis A Gatto, Penny Andrews, Joshua Satalin, Luigi Camporota, Benjamin Daxon, Sarah J Blair, Hassan Al-Khalisy, Maria Madden, Michaela Kollisch-Singule, Hani Aiash, Nader M Habashi
Mortality in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) remains unacceptably high at approximately 39%. One of the only treatments is supportive: mechanical ventilation. However, improperly set mechanical ventilation can further increase the risk of death in patients with ARDS. Recent studies suggest that ventilation-induced lung injury (VILI) is caused by exaggerated regional lung strain, particularly in areas of alveolar instability subject to tidal recruitment/derecruitment and stress-multiplication. Thus, it is reasonable to expect that if a ventilation strategy can maintain stable lung inflation and homogeneity, regional dynamic strain would be reduced and VILI attenuated...
January 6, 2020: Annals of Intensive Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30996041/the-time-controlled-adaptive-ventilation-protocol-mechanistic-approach-to-reducing-ventilator-induced-lung-injury
#25
REVIEW
Michaela Kollisch-Singule, Penny Andrews, Joshua Satalin, Louis A Gatto, Gary F Nieman, Nader M Habashi
Airway pressure release ventilation (APRV) is a ventilator mode that has previously been considered a rescue mode, but has gained acceptance as a primary mode of ventilation. In clinical series and experimental animal models of extrapulmonary acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), the early application of APRV was able to prevent the development of ARDS. Recent experimental evidence has suggested mechanisms by which APRV, using the time-controlled adaptive ventilation (TCAV) protocol, may reduce lung injury, including: 1) an improvement in alveolar recruitment and homogeneity; 2) reduction in alveolar and alveolar duct micro-strain and stress-risers; 3) reduction in alveolar tidal volumes; and 4) recruitment of the chest wall by combating increased intra-abdominal pressure...
June 30, 2019: European Respiratory Review: An Official Journal of the European Respiratory Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19570975/alternative-modes-of-mechanical-ventilation-a-review-for-the-hospitalist
#26
REVIEW
Eduardo Mireles-Cabodevila, Enrique Diaz-Guzman, Gustavo A Heresi, Robert L Chatburn
Newer ventilators can be set to modes other than the pressure-control and volume-control modes of older machines. In this paper, the authors review several of these alternative modes (adaptive pressure control, adaptive support ventilation, proportional assist ventilation, airway pressure-release ventilation, biphasic positive airway pressure, and high-frequency oscillatory ventilation), explaining how they work and contrasting their theoretical benefits and the actual evidence of benefit.
July 2009: Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32076372/airway-pressure-release-ventilation-a-review-of-the-evidence-theoretical-benefits-and-alternative-titration-strategies
#27
REVIEW
Andrew S Fredericks, Matthew P Bunker, Louise A Gliga, Callie G Ebeling, Jenny Rb Ringqvist, Hooman Heravi, James Manley, Jason Valladares, Bryan T Romito
OBJECTIVE: To review the theoretical benefits of airway pressure release ventilation (APRV), summarize the evidence for its use in clinical practice, and discuss different titration strategies. DATA SOURCE: Published randomized controlled trials in humans, observational human studies, animal studies, review articles, ventilator textbooks, and editorials. DATA SUMMARY: Airway pressure release ventilation optimizes alveolar recruitment, reduces airway pressures, allows for spontaneous breathing, and offers many hemodynamic benefits...
2020: Clinical Medicine Insights. Circulatory, Respiratory and Pulmonary Medicine
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