Objective.—To test the hypothesis that positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) prevents the collapse of a given lung region when it is equal to or greater than the hydrostatic pressure superimposed (SPL) to that region. Design.—Intervention study with sequential levels of PEEP applied in random order to a cohort of patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Setting.—Referral center for ARDS in a university hospital. Patients.—Ten ARDS patients (with Murray scores >2.5). Intervention.—Basal computed tomographic (CT) section taken at o, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 15, and 20 cm H2O PEEP. Main Outcome Measures.—Basal lung CT sections were divided into 10 equal levels from the ventral to dorsal surfaces. In each level SPL was measured from density and height. The inflation of the level was measured as the gas/tissue ratio (g/t); g/t changes with PEEP were defined as the g/t—P curve. The slope of the g/t—P curve was defined as level compliance (ie, the ratio of change in the g/t of the level to the change in pressure). A linear g/t—P curve was the criterion to detect inflation without recruitment (ie, new pulmonary units opening at a given pressure). A biphasic g/t—P curve (change of compliance after an inflection point) was the criterion to detect recruitment. Pflex was defined as the pressure at which the inflection point occurred. Results.—The SPL increased from level 1 (ventral) to level 10 (dorsal) (r=.91; P<.01). The number of linear g/t—P curves decreased from level 1 to level 10 (r=.98; P<.01), while the number of biphasic g/t—P curves increased (r=.95; P<.01). The Pflex increased from level 1 to 10 (r=.97; P<.01) and Pflex was similar to SPL (Pflex=1.05+0.9 SPL; r=.75; P<.01). Conclusions.—The increased SPL causes compression atelectasis; this is prevented when PEEP to a given lung region is equal to or greater than the SPL

Gattinoni, L., D'Andrea, L., Pelosi, P., Vitale, G., Pesenti, A., Fumagalli, R. (1993). Regional Effects and Mechanism of Positive End-Expiratory Pressure in Early Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome. JAMA, 269(16), 2122-2127 [10.1001/jama.1993.03500160092039].

Regional Effects and Mechanism of Positive End-Expiratory Pressure in Early Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome

D'ANDREA, LUCA MARIA PIETRO;Pesenti A.;Fumagalli R.
1993

Abstract

Objective.—To test the hypothesis that positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) prevents the collapse of a given lung region when it is equal to or greater than the hydrostatic pressure superimposed (SPL) to that region. Design.—Intervention study with sequential levels of PEEP applied in random order to a cohort of patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Setting.—Referral center for ARDS in a university hospital. Patients.—Ten ARDS patients (with Murray scores >2.5). Intervention.—Basal computed tomographic (CT) section taken at o, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 15, and 20 cm H2O PEEP. Main Outcome Measures.—Basal lung CT sections were divided into 10 equal levels from the ventral to dorsal surfaces. In each level SPL was measured from density and height. The inflation of the level was measured as the gas/tissue ratio (g/t); g/t changes with PEEP were defined as the g/t—P curve. The slope of the g/t—P curve was defined as level compliance (ie, the ratio of change in the g/t of the level to the change in pressure). A linear g/t—P curve was the criterion to detect inflation without recruitment (ie, new pulmonary units opening at a given pressure). A biphasic g/t—P curve (change of compliance after an inflection point) was the criterion to detect recruitment. Pflex was defined as the pressure at which the inflection point occurred. Results.—The SPL increased from level 1 (ventral) to level 10 (dorsal) (r=.91; P<.01). The number of linear g/t—P curves decreased from level 1 to level 10 (r=.98; P<.01), while the number of biphasic g/t—P curves increased (r=.95; P<.01). The Pflex increased from level 1 to 10 (r=.97; P<.01) and Pflex was similar to SPL (Pflex=1.05+0.9 SPL; r=.75; P<.01). Conclusions.—The increased SPL causes compression atelectasis; this is prevented when PEEP to a given lung region is equal to or greater than the SPL
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
PEEP; ARDS
English
1993
269
16
2122
2127
none
Gattinoni, L., D'Andrea, L., Pelosi, P., Vitale, G., Pesenti, A., Fumagalli, R. (1993). Regional Effects and Mechanism of Positive End-Expiratory Pressure in Early Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome. JAMA, 269(16), 2122-2127 [10.1001/jama.1993.03500160092039].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/218635
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