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- Jerome Aboab, Lisbet Niklason, Leif Uttman, Laurent Brochard, and Björn Jonson.
- Medical Intensive Care Unit, Hospital Henri Mondor, AP-HP, 51 Avenue du Marechal de Lattre de Tassigny, 94010 Créteil, France.
- Crit Care. 2012 Jan 1; 16 (2): R39.
IntroductionThe inspiratory flow pattern influences CO₂ elimination by affecting the time the tidal volume remains resident in alveoli. This time is expressed in terms of mean distribution time (MDT), which is the time available for distribution and diffusion of inspired tidal gas within resident alveolar gas. In healthy and sick pigs, abrupt cessation of inspiratory flow (that is, high end-inspiratory flow (EIF)), enhances CO₂ elimination. The objective was to test the hypothesis that effects of inspiratory gas delivery pattern on CO₂ exchange can be comprehensively described from the effects of MDT and EIF in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).MethodsIn a medical intensive care unit of a university hospital, ARDS patients were studied during sequences of breaths with varying inspiratory flow patterns. Patients were ventilated with a computer-controlled ventilator allowing single breaths to be modified with respect to durations of inspiratory flow and postinspiratory pause (TP), as well as the shape of the inspiratory flow wave. From the single-breath test for CO₂, the volume of CO₂ eliminated by each tidal breath was derived.ResultsA long MDT, caused primarily by a long TP, led to importantly enhanced CO₂ elimination. So did a high EIF. Effects of MDT and EIF were comprehensively described with a simple equation. Typically, an efficient and a less-efficient pattern of inspiration could result in ± 10% variation of CO₂ elimination, and in individuals, up to 35%.ConclusionsIn ARDS, CO₂ elimination is importantly enhanced by an inspiratory flow pattern with long MDT and high EIF. An optimal inspiratory pattern allows a reduction of tidal volume and may be part of lung-protective ventilation.
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