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Heart-Protective Mechanical Ventilation in Postoperative Cardiosurgical Patients
Author(s) -
В. А. Мазурок,
I. Yu. Kasherininov,
А. Е. Баутин,
Olga Kulemina,
Ryta Rzheutskaya
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
critical care research and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.532
H-Index - 27
eISSN - 2090-1313
pISSN - 2090-1305
DOI - 10.1155/2021/6617809
Subject(s) - medicine , ventilation (architecture) , mechanical ventilation , anesthesia , mean airway pressure , oxygenation , tidal volume , positive end expiratory pressure , hemodynamics , artificial ventilation , cardiology , respiratory system , lung , respiratory disease , mechanical engineering , engineering
Background This study compared the hemodynamic effects and gas exchange under several different ventilator settings—with regard to tidal volume, respiratory rate, and end-expiratory pressure—in patients after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).Methods Prospective interventional cohort study with a controlled group in a single cardiosurgical ICU involving 119 patients following on-pump CABG surgery. During the 1st postoperative hour, the intervention group patients were ventilated with Vt 10 ml × kg −1 , RR 14/min, PEEP 5 cmH 2 O (“conventional ventilation”). During the 2nd hour, RR was reduced to 8/min (“reduced RR ventilation”). At 3 hrs, Vt was decreased to 6 ml × kg −1 , RR returned to 14/min, and PEEP increased to 10 cmH 2 O (“low Vt-high PEEP ventilation”).Results Patients in the “low Vt-high PEEP” ventilation period showed significantly lower alveolar ventilation and thoraco-pulmonary compliance than during “reduced RR” ventilation. Mean airway pressure and Vds/Vt peaked during low Vt-high PEEP ventilation; however, driving pressure was lower. Vt decrease and PEEP increase did not lead to oxygenation improvement and worsened CO 2 elimination. Hemodynamically, the study revealed significant cardiac output decrease during low Vt-high PEEP ventilation. In 23.2% of patients, catecholamine therapy was initiated.Conclusions In postoperative cardiosurgical patients, MV with Vt 6 ml × kg −1 and PEEP 10 cm H 2 O is characterized by worsened oxygenation and elimination of CO 2 and a less favorable hemodynamic profile than ventilation with Vt 10 ml × kg −1 and PEEP 5 cmH 2 O. New and Noteworthy . (i) Patients after CABG may be especially sensitive to low tidal volume and increased PEEP as it negatively affects hemodynamic profile by means of the right heart preload decrease and afterload increase. (ii) Mechanical ventilation settings aiming to minimize mean airway pressure reduce the negative effects of positive inspiratory pressure and are favorable for hemodynamics.

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