• Intensive care medicine · Jan 2008

    Review

    Ventilator-induced diaphragm dysfunction: the clinical relevance of animal models.

    • Theodoros Vassilakopoulos.
    • Evangelismos Hospital, Critical Care Department, 45-47 Ipsilandou Str, 10675 Athens, Greece. tvassil@med.uoa.gr
    • Intensive Care Med. 2008 Jan 1;34(1):7-16.

    AbstractExperimental evidence suggests that controlled mechanical ventilation (CMV) can induce dysfunction of the diaphragm, resulting in an early-onset and progressive decrease in diaphragmatic force-generating capacity, called ventilator-induced diaphragmatic dysfunction (VIDD). The mechanisms of VIDD are not fully elucidated, but include muscle atrophy (resulting from lysosomal, calpain, caspase and proteasome activation), oxidative stress, structural injury (disrupted myofibrils, increased numbers of lipid vacuoles, and abnormally small and disrupted mitochondria), myofiber remodeling and mitochondrial dysfunction. The major clinical implication of the VIDD is to limit the use of CMV to the extent possible. Partial (assisted) modes of ventilatory support should be used whenever feasible, since these modes attenuate the deleterious effects of mechanical ventilation on respiratory muscles.

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