• Critical care clinics · Oct 1998

    Review

    Mechanical ventilation of patients with acute lung injury.

    • C N Sessler.
    • Department of Internal Medicine, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, USA. csessler@gems.vcu.edu
    • Crit Care Clin. 1998 Oct 1;14(4):707-29, vii.

    AbstractVentilatory management of patients with acute lung injury (ALI), particularly its most severe subset, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), is complex. Newer lung protective strategies emphasize measures to enhance alveolar recruitment and avoid alveolar overdistention, thus minimizing the risk of ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). Key components of such strategies include the use of smaller-than-conventional tidal volumes which maintain peak transpulmonary pressure below the pressure associated with overdistention, and titration of positive end-expiratory pressure to promote maximal alveolar recruitment. Novel techniques, including prone positioning, inverse ratio ventilation, tracheal gas insufflation, and high frequency ventilation, are considerations in severe ARDS. No single approach is best for all patients; adjustment of ventilatory parameters to individual characteristics, such as lung mechanics and gas exchange, is required.

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