• Br J Anaesth · Dec 2020

    Physiologically variable ventilation in a rabbit model of asthma exacerbation.

    • André Dos Santos Rocha, Roberta Südy, Ferenc Peták, and Walid Habre.
    • Unit for Anaesthesiological Investigations, Department of Acute Medicine, University Hospitals of Geneva and University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
    • Br J Anaesth. 2020 Dec 1; 125 (6): 1107-1116.

    BackgroundMechanical ventilation during status asthmaticus is challenging and increases the risk of severe complications. We recently reported the value of physiologically variable ventilation (PVV) in healthy and acutely injured lungs. We investigated whether PVV provides benefits compared with pressure-controlled ventilation (PCV) in an experimental model of severe acute asthma.MethodsAllergen-sensitised rabbits were anaesthetised and randomised to either PCV (n=10) or PVV (n=12) during sustained bronchoconstriction induced by allergen and cholinergic stimuli for 6 h. The PVV pattern was generated from pre-recorded spontaneous breathing. Ventilation parameters, oxygenation index (PaO2/FiO2), and respiratory mechanics were measured hourly. Histological injury and inflammation were quantified after 6 h of ventilation.ResultsPVV resulted in lower driving pressures (13.7 cm H2O [12.5-14.9], mean [95% confidence interval]), compared with pressure-controlled ventilation (17.6 cm H2O [15.4-19.8]; P=0.002). PVV improved PaO2/FiO2 (PVV: 55.1 kPa [52-58.2]; PCV: 45.6 kPa [39.3-51.9]; P=0.018) and maintained tissue elastance (PVV: +8.7% [-0.6 to 18]; PCV: -11.2% [-17.3 to -5.1]; P=0.03). PVV resulted in less lung injury as assessed by lower histological injury score (PVV: 0.65 [0.62-0.65]; PCV: 0.71 [0.69-0.73]; P=0.003), cell count (PVV: 247 104 ml-1 [189-305]; PCV: 447 104 ml-1 [324-570]; P=0.005), and protein concentration in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (PVV: 0.14 μg ml-1 [0.10-0.18]; PCV: 0.21 μg ml-1 [0.15-0.27]; P=0.035).ConclusionsApplying physiological variable ventilation in a model of asthma exacerbation led to improvements in gas exchange, ventilatory pressures, and respiratory tissue mechanics, and reduced lung injury. A global reduction in lung shear stress and recruitment effects may explain the benefits of PVV in status asthmaticus.Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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