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Intensive care medicine · Aug 2000
Regional distribution of gas and tissue in acute respiratory distress syndrome. II. Physiological correlations and definition of an ARDS Severity Score. CT Scan ARDS Study Group.
- J J Rouby, L Puybasset, P Cluzel, J Richecoeur, Q Lu, and P Grenier.
- Réanimation Chirurgicale Pierre Viars, Department of Anesthesiology, Hôpital de la Pitié-Salpetrière, University Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France. jjrouby.pitie@invivo.edu
- Intensive Care Med. 2000 Aug 1;26(8):1046-56.
Objectives(a) To assess whether differences in lung morphology observed in patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are associated with differences in cardiorespiratory parameters, lung mechanics, and outcome. (b) To propose a new ARDS Severity Score to identify patients with a high mortality risk.DesignProspective study over a 53-month period.SettingFourteen-bed surgical intensive care unit of a university hospital.Patients And ParticipantsSeventy-one consecutive patients with early ARDS.Measurements And ResultsCardiorespiratory parameters were measured using a Swan-Ganz catheter, the pressure-volume (PV) curve was measured using the gross syringe method, and fast spiral computed tomography (CT) was performed. Patients with diffuse attenuations (n = 16) differed from patients with lobar attenuations (n = 26) regarding: (a) mortality rate (75% vs. 42%, p = 0.05), (b) incidence of primary ARDS (82% vs. 50%, p = 0.03), (c) respiratory compliance (47 +/- 12 vs. 64 +/- 16 ml per cmH2O(-1) p = 0.04), and (d) lower inflexion point (8.4 +/- 2.0 vs. 4.6 +/- 2.0 cmH2O, p = 0.001). A third group of patients with patchy attenuations (n = 29) had a mortality rate of 41 %, a respiratory compliance of 56 +/- 18 ml per cmH2O(-1) and a lower inflexion point of 6.3 +/- 2.7 cmH2O. The bedside chest radiograph accurately assessed lung morphology in only 42% of the patients. In contrast to the scores based on the bedside chest radiograph, a new ARDS Severity Score based on CT lung morphology and cardiorespiratory parameters identified a subgroup of patients with a high mortality rate (> or = 60%).ConclusionsIn patients with ARDS, differences in lung morphology are associated with differences in outcome and lung mechanics. A new ARDS Severity Score based on CT lung morphology and cardiorespiratory parameters accurately identified patients with the most severe forms of ARDS and a mortality rate above 60%.
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