• Intensive care medicine · Aug 2022

    Review

    Imaging the acute respiratory distress syndrome: past, present and future.

    • Laurent Bitker, Daniel Talmor, and Jean-Christophe Richard.
    • Service de Médecine Intensive - Réanimation, Hôpital de la Croix Rousse, Hospices Civils de Lyon, 103 Grande Rue de la Croix Rousse, 69317, Lyon Cedex 04, France. laurent.bitker@chu-lyon.fr.
    • Intensive Care Med. 2022 Aug 1; 48 (8): 9951008995-1008.

    AbstractIn patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), lung imaging is a fundamental tool in the study of the morphological and mechanistic features of the lungs. Chest computed tomography studies led to major advances in the understanding of ARDS physiology. They allowed the in vivo study of the syndrome's lung features in relation with its impact on respiratory physiology and physiology, but also explored the lungs' response to mechanical ventilation, be it alveolar recruitment or ventilator-induced lung injuries. Coupled with positron emission tomography, morphological findings were put in relation with ventilation, perfusion or acute lung inflammation. Lung imaging has always been central in the care of patients with ARDS, with modern point-of-care tools such as electrical impedance tomography or lung ultrasounds guiding clinical reasoning beyond macro-respiratory mechanics. Finally, artificial intelligence and machine learning now assist imaging post-processing software, which allows real-time analysis of quantitative parameters that describe the syndrome's complexity. This narrative review aims to draw a didactic and comprehensive picture of how modern imaging techniques improved our understanding of the syndrome, and have the potential to help the clinician guide ventilatory treatment and refine patient prognostication.© 2022. Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

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