• Pediatr Crit Care Me · Oct 2021

    Driving Pressure and Normalized Energy Transmission Calculations in Mechanically Ventilated Children Without Lung Disease and Pediatric Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome.

    • Franco Díaz, Sebastián González-Dambrauskas, Federico Cristiani, Daniel R Casanova, and Pablo Cruces.
    • Unidad de Paciente Crítico Pediátrico, Departamento de Pediatría, Hospital El Carmen de Maipú, Santiago, Chile.
    • Pediatr Crit Care Me. 2021 Oct 1; 22 (10): 870878870-878.

    ObjectivesTo compare the new tools to evaluate the energy dissipated to the lung parenchyma in mechanically ventilated children with and without lung injury. We compared their discrimination capability between both groups when indexed by ideal body weight and driving pressure.DesignPost hoc analysis of individual patient data from two previously published studies describing pulmonary mechanics.SettingTwo academic hospitals in Latin-America.PatientsMechanically ventilated patients younger than 15 years old were included. We analyzed two groups, 30 children under general anesthesia (ANESTH group) and 38 children with pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome.InterventionsRespiratory mechanics were measured after intubation in all patients.Measurements And Main ResultsMechanical power and derived variables of the equation of motion (dynamic power, driving power, and mechanical energy) were computed and then indexed by ideal body weight. Driving pressure was higher in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome group compared with ANESTH group. Receiver operator curve analysis showed that driving pressure had the best discrimination capability compared with all derived variables of the equation of motion indexed by ideal body weight. The same results were observed when the subgroup of patients weighs less than 15 kg. There was no difference in unindexed mechanical power between groups.ConclusionsDriving pressure is the variable that better discriminates pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome from nonpediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome in children than the calculations derived from the equation of motion, even when indexed by ideal body weight. Unindexed mechanical power was useless to differentiate against both groups. Future studies should determine the threshold for variables of the energy dissipated by the lungs and their association with clinical outcomes.Copyright © 2021 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.

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