Daily, thousands of patients with respiratory failure are kept alive by mechanical ventilation (MV). Simultaneously, MV with positive pressure is unphysiological, and can traumatize lungs.
Some understanding of balancing the benefit:risk ratio of MV comes from experience with Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS), an extreme form of lung injury. ARDS results from the body’s excessive innate immune response to a pathological insult, causing a dysregulated inflammatory process that damages the alveolar-capillary membranes patchily throughout the lungs. (Thompson et al, 2017)
Chest radiographs show diffuse bilateral infiltrates, so early workers thought ARDS lungs were uniformly “stiff”, needing high inflation pressures. CT scans show instead that ARDS lungs are inhomogeneous, containing variable proportions of three populations of alveoli. First, many alveoli are densely consolidated with exudative pulmonary oedema, are functionally lost to the lung for gas exchange, and act as sites for the intrapulmonary shunting that causes the severe hypoxaemia of ARDS. Second, many other alveoli appear normal, and still function for gas exchange. Because of the patchy nature of the disease, “normal” and consolidated alveoli may lie adjacent. As the consolidated alveoli are functionally removed from the lung, remaining “normal” alveoli collectively constitute a small residual lung. Protecting this “small lung” requires ventilation with reduced volumes of air. A key realization in our understanding was that the ARDS lung is small, not “stiff”. The improved safety of ventilating ARDS lungs with smaller Tidal Volumes (VT) was demonstrated by the seminal ARDS Network study in 2000, where intended VT of 6mL/kg instead of 12mL/kg predicted-weight-for-height reduced mortality by around 22% (Brower et al, 2000). With lower VT, mild/moderate hypercarbia is inevitable, but (except for patients with brain injury, major trauma or severe metabolic acidosis) seems well-tolerated.
The third population of alveoli are those that are collapsed (atelectatic). Atelectasis in ARDS has many causes, including surfactant destruction by the inflammatory response, and absorption atelectasis from supplemental oxygen. Collapsed alveoli also serve as sites of shunting. The proportion of collapsed alveoli varies between ARDS patients. Preventing initially “normal” alveoli from collapsing is vital to preserve oxygenation. Using enough Positive End-Expiratory Pressure (PEEP) to prevent alveolar collapse during expiration is essential. ARDS lungs may need very high levels of PEEP. It can be difficult to find the right balance of PEEP to prevent alveolar collapse while not overdistending the “normal” alveoli. Analysis of compliance curves, measurement of the End-Expiratory Lung Volume at various PEEP levels, or determination of Transpulmonary Pressure via oesophageal pressure measurement may help. For already-collapsed alveoli, re-opening may be possible by controlled application of airway pressures in the 40-60mmHg range. This is called “recruitment”, and numerous “Recruitment Manoeuvres” (RM) are described. Not all patients have recruitable alveoli, and recruitment may damage normal alveoli, so recruitment attempts must be individualized. For lungs that prove to be recruitable, the “Open Lung” approach – opening collapsed alveoli with a RM, then keeping them open with high PEEP – seems logical to reduce shunting and improve oxygenation. Prone positioning is another effective RM and atelectasis-reduction strategy in patients with severe ARDS (Santos et al 2015).
In ARDS lungs, any junctions between aerated and non-aerated alveoli are zones of intense stress, and are particularly vulnerable to injury, which in turn drives further inflammation; recruitment may reduce the number of these junctions. With severe ARDS it is advisable to initially prevent spontaneous patient respiration, if necessary by using muscle relaxants (Papazian et al 2010), as spontaneous breathing effort may increase the stresses across vulnerable junction zones.
In severe ARDS the small lung maybe even smaller than expected, and VT of 6mL/kg may still be too great. The Driving Pressure (DP) (the difference between PEEP and maximum airway pressure in pressure-targeted modes of ventilation, or between PEEP and plateau pressure in volume-targeted modes) might be an additional safety limit. Patients with DP of 15cmH2O or higher do worse, so perhaps after best attempts at recruitment and PEEP optimization, VT should be restricted further to keep DP below 15cmH2O – this warrants further investigation (Bugedo et al, 2017). Oxygen supplementation should probably also be restricted to keep the arterial saturations in the low 90% range – excessive oxygen generates damaging free radicals. There is no clear data that any mode of ventilation is better than another for ARDS; addition of extracorporeal CO2 removal makes PaCO2 management easier with low VT; full Extra-Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation limits deaths from hypoxaemia, but adds other complications. (Thompson et al 2017)
Most ventilated patients do not have severe ARDS, but all are at risk of lung injury from ventilation, which might be minimized if clinicians routinely incorporated the lessons from ARDS – reducing unnecessary oxygen, recruiting any already-collapsed areas of lung, using enough PEEP to prevent lung collapse, and protecting aerated lung from trauma by using constrained Tidal Volumes and Driving Pressures.
References
Brower, R.G., Matthay, M.A., Morris, A. et al. (2000). Ventilation with lower tidal volumes as compared with traditional tidal volumes for Acute Lung Injury and the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome. N Engl J Med, 342: 1301-1308.
Bugedo, G., Retamal, J., Bruhn, A. (2017). Driving pressure: a marker of severity, a safety limit, or a goal for mechanical ventilation? Critical Care, 21: 199-203.
Papazian, L., Forel, J.M., Gacouin, A. et al. (2010). Neuromuscular blockers in early acute respiratory distress syndrome. N Engl J Med, 363: 1107-16.
Santos, R.S., Silva, P.L., Pelosi, P., Rocco, P.R.M. (2015). Recruitment maneuvers in acute respiratory distress syndrome: the safe way is the best way. World J Crit Care Med, 4: 278-286.
Thompson, B.T., Chambers, R.C., Liu, K.D. (2017). Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome. N Engl J Med, 377 : 562-572.