• Anaesthesiol Intensive Ther · Jul 2013

    Review

    Ventilator-associated lung injury.

    • Katarzyna Kuchnicka and Dariusz Maciejewski.
    • Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Therapy, District Hospital in Bielsko-Biała, Poland Chair of Nursing and Emergency Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, Technical-Humanistic Academy, Bielsko-Biała, Poland. dmaciejewski@hospital.com.pl.
    • Anaesthesiol Intensive Ther. 2013 Jul 1;45(3):164-70.

    AbstractMechanical ventilation of disease-affected lungs, as well as being an inadequate mode of ventilation for initially healthy lungs, can cause significant changes in their structure and function. In order to differentiate these processes, two terms are used: ventilator-associated lung injury (VALI) and ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). In both cases, lung injury primarily results from differences in transpulmonary pressure - a consequence of an imbalance between lung stress and strain. This paper focuses on changes in lung structure and function due to this imbalance. Moreover, in this context, barotrauma, volutrauma and atelectrauma are interpreted, and the importance of signal transduction as a process inducing local and systemic inflammatory responses (biotrauma), is determined. None of the assessed methods of reducing VALI and VILI has been found to be entirely satisfactory, yet studies evaluating oscillatory ventilation, liquid ventilation, early ECMO, super-protective ventilation or noisy ventilation and administration of certain drugs are under way. Low tidal volume ventilation and adequately adjusted PEEP appear to be the best preventive measures of mechanical ventilation in any setting, including the operating theatre. Furthermore, this paper highlights the advances in VILI/VALI prevention resulting from better understanding of pathophysiological phenomena.

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