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Curr Opin Crit Care · Jun 2016
ReviewAssessment of the effects of inspiratory load on right ventricular function.
- Xavier Repessé, Cyril Charron, and Antoine Vieillard-Baron.
- aAssistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, University Hospital Ambroise Paré, Intensive Care Unit, Section Thorax-Vascular Disease-Abdomen-Metabolism, Boulogne-Billancourt bUniversity of Versailles Saint-Quentin en Yvelines, Faculty of Medicine Paris Ile-de-France Ouest, Saint-Quentin en Yvelines cINSERM U-1018, CESP, Team 5 (EpReC, Renal and Cardiovascular Epidemiology), UVSQ, Villejuif, France.
- Curr Opin Crit Care. 2016 Jun 1; 22 (3): 254-9.
Purpose Of ReviewThe right ventricle (RV) plays a pivotal role during respiratory failure because of its high sensitivity to small loading changes during inspiration. Both RVs, preload and afterload, are altered during inspiration, either in spontaneous breathing or during mechanical ventilation. Some clinical situations especially affect RV load during inspiration, for example acute asthma and acute respiratory distress syndrome. The aim of this review is to explain and to summarize the different mechanisms leading to RV failure in these situations.Recent FindingsResearch has recently reemphasized the importance to well known physiology of the venous return which is a contributor of RV preload. Authors recently focused on the mean systemic filling pressure which is one of the determinants of venous return. Venous return may change in opposite direction according to the type of ventilation (spontaneous or assisted). Recent works have also demonstrated the crucial impact of lung inflation and driving pressure on RV afterload, and have confirmed the deleterious effect of severe RV failure, described as acute cor pulmonale. In most situations of RV overload induced by inspiration, significant pulse pressure variations are observed, either called 'pulsus paradoxus' in spontaneously breathing patients or 'reverse pulsus paradoxus' in mechanically ventilated patients.SummaryRV is very sensitive to abnormal inspiration, which is always responsible for an increase in its afterload. Pulse pressure variations, central venous pressure and especially echocardiography may monitor RV function in abnormal clinical situations. The pulmonary artery catheter was also proposed although now less used.
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