Assessing Diaphragmatic Function
- PMID: 32457172
- DOI: 10.4187/respcare.07410
Assessing Diaphragmatic Function
Abstract
The diaphragm is vulnerable to injury during mechanical ventilation, and diaphragm dysfunction is both a marker of severity of illness and a predictor of poor patient outcome in the ICU. A combination of factors can result in diaphragm weakness. Both insufficient and excessive diaphragmatic contractile effort can cause atrophy or injury, and recent evidence suggests that targeting an appropriate amount of diaphragm activity during mechanical ventilation has the potential to mitigate diaphragm dysfunction. Several monitoring tools can be used to assess diaphragm activity and function during mechanical ventilation, including pressure-derived parameters, electromyography, and ultrasound. This review details these techniques and presents the rationale for a diaphragm-protective ventilation strategy.
Keywords: diagnostic techniques; diaphragm; diaphragm dysfunction; effort-induced lung injury; intensive care; muscle weakness; respiratory muscles; respiratory system.
Copyright © 2020 by Daedalus Enterprises.
Conflict of interest statement
Dr Schepens is supported in part by the European Respiratory Society, Fellowship STRF October 2018. Dr Goligher is supported by an Early Career Investigator Award from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and he has disclosed a relationship with Getinge. Ms Fard has disclosed no conflicts of interest.
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