Journal of applied physiology
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Although mechanical ventilation (MV) is a life-saving intervention, prolonged MV can lead to deleterious effects on diaphragm function, including vascular incompetence and weaning failure. During MV, positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is used to maintain small airway patency and mitigate alveolar damage. We tested the hypothesis that increased intrathoracic pressure with high levels of PEEP would increase diaphragm vascular resistance and decrease perfusion. ⋯ These reductions in blood flow to the quiescent diaphragm during MV could predispose critically ill patients to weaning complications. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This is the first study, to our knowledge, demonstrating that mechanical ventilation, with low and high positive-end expiratory pressure (PEEP), increases vascular resistance and reduces total and regional diaphragm perfusion. The rapid reduction in diaphragm perfusion and increased vascular resistance may initiate a cascade of events that predispose the diaphragm to vascular and thus contractile dysfunction with prolonged mechanical ventilation.
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Reported incidence of postoperative opioid-induced respiratory depression (OIRD) ranges from 0.5-41% and is not reliably predicted by traditional risk factors. This study tests a new methodology to investigate ventilatory chemosensitivity as a new potential risk factor and explore OIRD distribution across sleep and wakefulness. Preoperative patient ventilatory chemosensitivity was quantified by hypercapnic ventilatory responses with (HCVRREMI, effect site concentration 0.7 or 2.0 ng/mL) and without (HCVRBL) remifentanil during hyperoxia and hypoxia. ⋯ NEW & NOTEWORTHY Our new and noteworthy methodology allows for exploration of preoperative ventilatory chemosensitivity, measured as the hypercapnic ventilatory response (HCVR), as a risk factor for postoperative opioid-induced respiratory depression (OIRD). This feasible and reliable methodology produced preliminary data that showed highly variable depression of HCVR by remifentanil, predominance of OIRD during light sleep, and potentially negative correlation between OIRD frequency generally and HCVR measurements when measured in the presence of remifentanil. Although the results are preliminary in nature, this novel methodology may guide future studies that can one day lead to effective clinical screening tools.