Effect of positive end-expiratory pressure on lung injury and haemodynamics during experimental acute respiratory distress syndrome treated with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and near-apnoeic ventilation
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Araos, Joaquín
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Effect of positive end-expiratory pressure on lung injury and haemodynamics during experimental acute respiratory distress syndrome treated with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and near-apnoeic ventilation
Author
- Araos, Joaquín;
- Alegría, Leyla;
- García, Aline;
- Cruces, Pablo;
- Soto, Dagoberto;
- Erranz, Benjamín;
- Salomón, Tatiana;
- Medina, Tania;
- García, Patricio;
- Dubo, Sebastián;
- Bachmann, Maria C.;
- Basoalto, Roque;
- Valenzuela, Emilio D.;
- Rovegno, Maximiliano;
- Vera, Magdalena;
- Retamal, Jaime;
- Cornejo Rosas, Rodrigo Alfredo;
- Bugedo, Guillermo;
- Bruhn, Alejandro;
Abstract
Background: Lung rest has been recommended during extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) for severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Whether positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) confers lung protection during ECMO for severe ARDS is unclear. We compared the effects of three different PEEP levels whilst applying near-apnoeic ventilation in a model of severe ARDS treated with ECMO.
Methods: Acute respiratory distress syndrome was induced in anaesthetised adult male pigs by repeated saline lavage and injurious ventilation for 1.5 h. After ECMO was commenced, the pigs received standardised near-apnoeic ventilation for 24 h to maintain similar driving pressures and were randomly assigned to PEEP of 0, 10, or 20 cm H2O (n=7 per group). Respiratory and haemodynamic data were collected throughout the study. Histological injury was assessed by a pathologist masked to PEEP allocation. Lung oedema was estimated by wet-to-dry-weight ratio.
Results: All pigs developed severe ARDS. Oxygenation on ECMO improved with PEEP of 10 or 20 cm H2O, but did not in pigs allocated to PEEP of 0 cm H2O. Haemodynamic collapse refractory to norepinephrine (n=4) and early death (n=3) occurred after PEEP 20 cm H2O. The severity of lung injury was lowest after PEEP of 10 cm H2O in both dependent and non-dependent lung regions, compared with PEEP of 0 or 20 cm H2O. A higher wet-to-dry-weight ratio, indicating worse lung injury, was observed with PEEP of 0 cm H2O. Histological assessment suggested that lung injury was minimised with PEEP of 10 cm H2O.
Conclusions: During near-apnoeic ventilation and ECMO in experimental severe ARDS, 10 cm H2O PEEP minimised lung injury and improved gas exchange without compromising haemodynamic stability.
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Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica (Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico) 1130248
1161556
Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica/Doctorado Nacional/2013
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Artículo de publícación WoS
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British Journal of Anaesthesia, 127 (5): 807e814 (2021)
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