• Br J Anaesth · Dec 1993

    Re-expansion of atelectasis during general anaesthesia: a computed tomography study.

    • H U Rothen, B Sporre, G Engberg, G Wegenius, and G Hedenstierna.
    • Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden.
    • Br J Anaesth. 1993 Dec 1;71(6):788-95.

    AbstractFormation of atelectasis is one mechanism of impaired gas exchange during general anaesthesia. We have studied manoeuvres to re-expand such atelectasis in 16 consecutive, anaesthetized adults with healthy lungs. In group 1 (10 patients), the lungs were inflated stepwise to an airway pressure (Paw) of 10, 20, 30 and 40 cm H2O. In group 2 (six patients), three repeated inflations up to Paw = 30 cm H2O were followed by one inflation to 40 cm H2O. Atelectasis was assessed by analysis of computed x-ray tomography (CT). In group 1 the mean area of atelectasis in the CT scan at the level of the right diaphragm was 6.4 cm2 at Paw = 0 cm H2O, 5.9 cm2 at 20 cm H2O, 3.5 cm2 at 30 cm H2O and 0.8 cm2 at 40 cm H2O. A Paw of 20 cm H2O corresponds approximately to inflation with twice the tidal volume. In group 2 the mean area of atelectasis was 9.0 cm2 at Paw = 0 cm H2O and 4.2 cm2 after the first inflation to 30 cm H2O. Repeated inflations did not add to re-expansion of atelectasis. The final inflation (Paw = 40 cm H2O) virtually eliminated the atelectasis. We conclude that, after induction of anaesthesia, the amount of atelectasis was not reduced by inflation of the lungs with a conventional tidal volume or with a double tidal volume ("sigg"). An inflation to vital capacity (Paw = 40 cm H2O), however, re-expanded virtually all atelectatic lung tissue.

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