Prone position reduces lung stress and strain in severe acute respiratory distress syndrome
- PMID: 15738300
- DOI: 10.1183/09031936.05.00105804
Prone position reduces lung stress and strain in severe acute respiratory distress syndrome
Abstract
The present authors hypothesised that in severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), pronation may reduce ventilator-induced overall stress (i.e. transpulmonary pressure (P(L))) and strain of lung parenchyma (i.e. tidal volume (V(T))/end-expiratory lung volume (EELV) ratio), which constitute major ventilator-induced lung injury determinants. The authors sought to determine whether potential pronation benefits are maintained in post-prone semirecumbent (SR(PP)) posture under pressure-volume curve-dependent optimisation of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP). A total of 10 anesthetised/paralysed, mechanically ventilated (V(T) = 9.0+/-0.9 mL.kg(-1) predicted body weight; flow = 0.91+/-0.04 L.s(-1); PEEP = 9.4+/-1.3 cmH(2)O) patients with early/severe ARDS were studied in pre-prone semirecumbent (SR(BAS)), prone, and SR(PP) positions. Partitioned respiratory mechanics were determined during iso-flow (0.91 L.s(-1)) experiments (V(T) varied within 0.2-1.0 L), along with haemodynamics, gas exchange, and EELV. Compared with SR(BAS), pronation/SR(PP) resulted in reduced peak/plateau P(L) at V(T)s> or =0.6 L; static lung elastance and additional lung resistance decreased and chest wall elastance (in prone position) increased; EELV increased (23-33%); V(T)/EELV decreased (27-33%); arterial oxygen tension/inspiratory oxygen fraction and arterial carbon dioxide tension improved (21-43/10-14%, respectively), and shunt fraction/physiological dead space decreased (21-50/20-47%, respectively). In early/severe acute respiratory distress syndrome, pronation under positive end-expiratory pressure optimisation may reduce ventilator-induced lung injury risk. Pronation benefits may be maintained in post-prone semirecumbent position.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials
Miscellaneous