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Two ARDS patients not doing well in the micu right now....
PEEP is all the way up to 17. Is there a max on peep?
Can too much peep create dead space ventilation by creating such high alveolar pressure and ceasing flow in the arteries passing by?
Two ARDS patients not doing well in the micu right now....
PEEP is all the way up to 17. Is there a max on peep?
Can too much peep create dead space ventilation by creating such high alveolar pressure and ceasing flow in the arteries passing by?
Just a med student here but should you probably keep an eye on the cardiac output when increasing peep significantly?
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consider early ECMO or a transfer to a center which treats a lot of ARDS.
.........What you should be looking at is the MEAN airway pressure. You can have lower PEEP but higher MAPs secondary to adjustment in Inspiratory time or secondary to ventilator Flow characteristics (square wave versus decelerating flow). High MAP are the idea behind Oscillators (hopefully these last 2 NEJM articles put the technology back in the closet) and APRV.......
You are right, too much peep and you will loose the benefit of the decreased shunt secondary to increased dead space ventilation. I have personally also accomplished this with aggressive diuresis as well, leaving essential no perfusion to West Zones I,II.
Although ETCO2 is not accurate in ARDS it can be used as a sign of over distention and increasing dead space. Some ventilators you can have them do a "best" peep using this technology. Essentially you adjust peep until you see a dramatic decline in ETCO2 indicating that you have lost gas exchange secondary to over distention.
What you should be looking at is the MEAN airway pressure. You can have lower PEEP but higher MAPs secondary to adjustment in Inspiratory time or secondary to ventilator Flow characteristics (square wave versus decelerating flow). High MAP are the idea behind Oscillators (hopefully these last 2 NEJM articles put the technology back in the closet) and APRV.
Having said all that, i will echo what others say. Keep Plateau pressure around 25 or the Change in airway pressure (delta P, the difference between plateau and PEEP) somewhere around 15. Peep and improved Oxygenation have not been shown to improve mortality, so biggest thing you can do is to not further harm the patient. If the patient is young and otherwise healthy consider early ECMO or a transfer to a center which treats a lot of ARDS.
Seinfeld, can you elaborate a little bit on mean airway pressure. Either I am searching wrong or looking in the wrong places. I never got a good explanation of what mean airway pressure refers to, what factors go into it, and what to do with the information. It's usually just a one liner like you mentioned -- that maintaining a high mean airway is the idea behind oscillators. Do I need to pick up a NICU book? Can you point me to some resources?
Peak and plateau pressure I understand. That's usually covered fairly well in our anesthesia textbooks. Mean airway pressure is something that has eluded my understanding.
Thanks.
Seinfeld, can you elaborate a little bit on mean airway pressure. Either I am searching wrong or looking in the wrong places. I never got a good explanation of what mean airway pressure refers to, what factors go into it, and what to do with the information. It's usually just a one liner like you mentioned -- that maintaining a high mean airway is the idea behind oscillators. Do I need to pick up a NICU book? Can you point me to some resources?
Peak and plateau pressure I understand. That's usually covered fairly well in our anesthesia textbooks. Mean airway pressure is something that has eluded my understanding.
Thanks.
mean airway pressure is just what it sounds like. its the pressure in the airways over time, and the simplest depiction of it is
MawP = [(peak pressure * time at peak pressure or time in inspiration) +(PEEP * time at PEEP or time in expiration)] / time of one breath cycle
SO, if you spend 1 minute not ventilating but maintain a PEEP of 20 then your men is 20, if you have a PEEP of 20 and take 15 breaths at a pressure of 10 over PEEP and at a 1:3 ratio of in:ex then your mean is calculated this way
[(30 * 1) + (20 * 3)]/4 = 90/4 or 22.5
if you breathe at a 1:1 ratio but at the same pressures, then your mean goes up to
[(30 * 1) + (20 * 1)]/2 = 50/2 or 25, which makes sense since you spend half your time at 30 and half your time at 20, so your mean will be halfway between the two. so, this is why APRV and inverse ratio (or bi-level) ventilation augment your mean airway pressure without increasing your peak airway pressures, and why they are go-to maneuvers for challenging hypoxia.
the more subtle changes to mean pressures come from adjusting the waveform, or changing the slope of the rise up or down during ventilation. for instance if you spend more time decreasing your PIP down to PEEP during expiration (or slowing the expiratory phase) then you will functionally raise your mean airway pressure. important to remember that these maneuvers will often have a price to pay with retention of CO2 and this is why it is suggested that you tolerate hypercapnia to achieve oxygenation in all but the worse cases (i.e. severely raised ICP)
sorry if this is basic, its a good med student review
You are right, too much peep and you will loose the benefit of the decreased shunt secondary to increased dead space ventilation. I have personally also accomplished this with aggressive diuresis as well, leaving essential no perfusion to West Zones I,II."
Reading through west zones is exactly what provoked my question. Crazy too I had a Hall question that basically pointed out hypotension/too much lasix could lead to inc dead space.
"Although ETCO2 is not accurate in ARDS it can be used as a sign of over distention and increasing dead space. Some ventilators you can have them do a "best" peep using this technology. Essentially you adjust peep until you see a dramatic decline in ETCO2 indicating that you have lost gas exchange secondary to over distention. "
This is really interesting we have end tidal monitors available. I'll try it out in the future if my attending allows me. Would it ever be prudent to do a recruitment maneuver before going to really high levels of peep to improve that you have recruit able alveoli and have a chance to improve shunting...I think the up to date article touched on this concept.
mean airway pressure is just what it sounds like. its the pressure in the airways over time, and the simplest depiction of it is
MawP = [(peak pressure * time at peak pressure or time in inspiration) +(PEEP * time at PEEP or time in expiration)] / time of one breath cycle
SO, if you spend 1 minute not ventilating but maintain a PEEP of 20 then your men is 20, if you have a PEEP of 20 and take 15 breaths at a pressure of 10 over PEEP and at a 1:3 ratio of in:ex then your mean is calculated this way
[(30 * 1) + (20 * 3)]/4 = 90/4 or 22.5
if you breathe at a 1:1 ratio but at the same pressures, then your mean goes up to
[(30 * 1) + (20 * 1)]/2 = 50/2 or 25, which makes sense since you spend half your time at 30 and half your time at 20, so your mean will be halfway between the two. so, this is why APRV and inverse ratio (or bi-level) ventilation augment your mean airway pressure without increasing your peak airway pressures, and why they are go-to maneuvers for challenging hypoxia.
the more subtle changes to mean pressures come from adjusting the waveform, or changing the slope of the rise up or down during ventilation. for instance if you spend more time decreasing your PIP down to PEEP during expiration (or slowing the expiratory phase) then you will functionally raise your mean airway pressure. important to remember that these maneuvers will often have a price to pay with retention of CO2 and this is why it is suggested that you tolerate hypercapnia to achieve oxygenation in all but the worse cases (i.e. severely raised ICP)
sorry if this is basic, its a good med student/resident review
An important goal in titrating PEEP in lung-injured patients is to optimize the balance between recruiting atelectatic lung units and thus avoiding the damage done by cyclic recruitment and derecruitment. Esophageal manometry (although still with its critics) has shown some promise as a surrogate marker of transpulmonary pressure thus allowing arguably more rational titration of PEEP. I've seen it used in both morbid obese patients requiring ventilation as well as ARDS patients with sometimes remarkable results. I would suspect most large ICUs are at least occasionally using esophageal manometry. I can't recall his name but a prominent Boston intensivist makes quite a compelling case for using this in the most challenging ARDS patients.
Cheers,
UBCmed09
i wouldnt use it routinely, but I can see how it might help in someone who is not responding as expected to appropriate Vt and PEEP. Honestly, I think knowing that someone had uncorrectably high intrathoracic pressures that you would have to overcome to oxygenate would help you decide to shift to VDR, go prone 🙂scared🙂, or go to ECMO quicker, although your supermorbid population in whom this is likely to provide beneficial information is also the population that will struggle with the last two modes of support
VDR? Volumetric Diffusive Respiration? People still use that?
Yes it is still used. I had a patient on it for about a week when I was in the ICU back in November.
In what pt population?

In what pt population?
Cancer pt s/p pneumonectomy who developed ARDS. Couldn't maintain his o2 sat despite increases in FiO2 and airway pressures.
Thats because your only ventialting one lung and that lung has develped ARDS. Hes toast my friend, use whatever modality you want.
I agree, this has been a nice and informative discussion. However, My shop has almost none of these nice toys available lol. it all translates to a transfer...can't wait for fellowship somewhere else 🙁
We all thought he was toast too. He was on VDR for about a week, switched back to a regular vent, and was weaned less than a week later.
We all thought he was toast too. He was on VDR for about a week, switched back to a regular vent, and was weaned less than a week later.
yeah thats a patient that i wouldnt even mess around with standard ventilation on, if they start to look bad they get VDR or ECMO if they are a reasonable ECMO candidate.
Adult patients with ARDS? Severe inhalational injuries? It provides for better airway mechanics and better gas exchange in a more dynamic environment without the severely high delta in pressures needed with conventional modes. It also allows for better mobilization of secretions, although you sometimes have to leave the cuff down which makes me all![]()
I don't think I've seen any data on VDR use in the pulm literature in the last 5 years and it only has a small blurb in tobin's. I'd bet that if placed to same level of scrutiny as HFOV it'll loose out to ARMA Protocol as well.
we typically use it only for those patients off pathway or for who traditional ARDS strategies arent working. ECMO and proning have no significant proven benefit either, but they have been advocated for as well.
Do you reserve this for failure for APRV as well? Or do you manage to get better minute ventilation using this so is it better in the pt population where HFOV and APRV would run a significant resp acidosis?
Can too much peep create dead space ventilation by creating such high alveolar pressure and ceasing flow in the arteries passing by?
My mental shortcut for thinking about Mean Airway Pressure is that it's the pressure "pushing" the oxygen molecules into the pulmonary capillaries. Raise the Pmaw, you increase the pressure "pushing" those molecules in, and improve oxygenation.
This isn't really how it works physiologically, but it's a quick and dirty explanation how high-Pmaw techniques like APRV, inverse-ratio, and high-PEEP conventional volume control assist with oxygenation.
This is why there's an "ideal" amount of lung distension with PEEP, where the tidal cycling is occurring between the Lower Inflection Point and the Upper Inflection Point on a pressure-volume curve.
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If you overdistend with too much PEEP, you get a system with lower-than-ideal compliance and predispose to volutrauma/barotrauma. Same thing with tidal cycling below the LIP, but here you get atelectrauma.
My question for the practicing ICU people out there, is anyone actually constructing pressure-volume loops on real patients? Or is that just some theoretical BS I read in books?
This is why there's an "ideal" amount of lung distension with PEEP, where the tidal cycling is occurring between the Lower Inflection Point and the Upper Inflection Point on a pressure-volume curve.
If you overdistend with too much PEEP, you get a system with lower-than-ideal compliance and predispose to volutrauma/barotrauma. Same thing with tidal cycling below the LIP, but here you get atelectrauma.
My question for the practicing ICU people out there, is anyone actually constructing pressure-volume loops on real patients? Or is that just some theoretical BS I read in books?