Monitoring effort and respiratory drive in patients with acute respiratory failure
- PMID: 40205969
- DOI: 10.1097/MCC.0000000000001271
Monitoring effort and respiratory drive in patients with acute respiratory failure
Abstract
Purpose of review: Accurate monitoring of respiratory drive and inspiratory effort is crucial for optimizing ventilatory support during acute respiratory failure. This review evaluates current and emerging bedside methods for assessing respiratory drive and effort.
Recent findings: While electrical activity of the diaphragm and esophageal pressure remain the reference standards for assessing respiratory drive and effort, their clinical utility is largely limited to research. At the bedside, airway occlusion maneuvers are the most useful tools: P0.1 is a reliable marker of drive and detects abnormal inspiratory efforts, while occlusion pressure (Pocc) may outperform P0.1 in identifying excessive effort. The Pressure-Muscle-Index (PMI) can help detecting insufficient inspiratory effort, though its accuracy depends on obtaining a stable plateau pressure. Other techniques, such as central venous pressure swings (ΔCVP), are promising but require further investigation. Emerging machine learning and artificial intelligence based algorithms could play a pivotal role in automated respiratory monitoring in the near future.
Summary: Although Pes and EAdi remain reference methods, airway occlusion maneuvers are currently the most practical bedside tools for monitoring respiratory drive and effort. Noninvasive alternatives such as ΔCVP deserve further evaluation. Artificial intelligence and machine learning may soon provide automated solutions for bedside monitoring of respiratory drive and effort.
Keywords: P0.1; esophageal pressure; inspiratory effort; machine learning; respiratory drive.
Copyright © 2025 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
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