{"title":"Pathophysiological determinants of arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) in spontaneously breathing and mechanically ventilated patients","authors":"S. John, R. Ozanne, K. Ho","doi":"10.21037/JECCM-21-7","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"© Journal of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine. All rights reserved. J Emerg Crit Care Med 2021 | http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/jeccm-21-7 Changes in PaCO2 in hospitalised patients are common and associated with an increased risk of morbidity and mortality. Although many clinicians are aware of the physiological mechanisms for PaCO2 homeostasis, they often have difficulty understanding how different compensatory mechanisms interact, and why such interactions are not always successful in achieving normocapnia. Incorrect interpretation of PaCO2 level—even when it is within the normal range—can have dangerous consequences in a spontaneously breathing patient (1). In this correspondence, we briefly describe how we can visually interpret the interactions of different pathophysiological mechanisms in determining PaCO2 in a spontaneously breathing or mechanically ventilated patient. In a spontaneously breathing patient, there are two determinants of PaCO2. The respiratory drive from the brain is an active system (which can increase minute ventilation up to 10 L/min for every 3 mmHg PaCO2 increment unless PaCO2 is exceedingly high) (1); whilst the mathematical relationship between alveolar CO2 tension (or PaCO2 for simplicity), carbon dioxide production (VCO2 ~200 mL/min for an average adult that can increase up to 10 folds with vigorous exercise) and minute alveolar ventilation represents a passive system (Figure 1A) (2). Minute alveolar ventilation is equal to the minute ventilation minus the wasted ventilation due to the physiological dead space which is the sum of anatomical and alveolar dead space. The interaction between the active and passive systems defines the PaCO2. An increase in respiratory drive due to hypoxia or metabolic acidosis will increase the ‘slope’ of the active respiratory drive system, resulting in an increase in minute ventilation which will reduce PaCO2. As such, a PaCO2 within the normal range is actually abnormal in the presence of significant metabolic acidosis, and would signify concomitant respiratory drive depression (1). Respiratory depression due to opioids and sedatives will shift the active respiratory drive system to the right (Figure 1B), resulting in a lower minute ventilation and a higher PaCO2. An increase in VCO2 will shift the passive system upward, resulting in a higher PaCO2, until the active respiratory drive system shifts the slope upward to normalise the PaCO2 (Figure 1C). An increase in alveolar dead space—which can occur due to emphysema, reduced pulmonary blood flow without a corresponding reduction in ventilation or overventilating poorly perfused alveoli [i.e., ↑ overall ventilation to perfusion (V/Q) ratio], ↑ V/Q heterogeneity in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and pneumonia (3), or attenuation of the normal hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction due to oxygen supplementation)—will shift the passive system to the right, resulting in a higher PaCO2 (Figure 1D). Acute pulmonary embolism would theoretically increase alveolar dead space; an elevation of PaCO2 is, however, often not observed. This is because any increase in PaCO2 and reduction in arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) will be sensed by the medullary and carotid Letter to the Editor","PeriodicalId":73727,"journal":{"name":"Journal of emergency and critical care medicine (Hong Kong, China)","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-04-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of emergency and critical care medicine (Hong Kong, China)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.21037/JECCM-21-7","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
自主呼吸和机械通气患者动脉二氧化碳张力(PaCO2)的病理生理决定因素
©《急诊与重症医学杂志》。版权所有。住院患者PaCO2的变化是常见的,并与发病率和死亡率的增加相关。尽管许多临床医生都知道PaCO2体内平衡的生理机制,但他们往往难以理解不同的代偿机制如何相互作用,以及为什么这种相互作用并不总是成功地实现正常碳酸血症。对PaCO2水平的错误解读,即使在正常范围内,也会对自主呼吸患者产生危险的后果(1)。在本文中,我们简要描述了如何直观地解释不同病理生理机制在确定自主呼吸或机械通气患者PaCO2水平时的相互作用。在自主呼吸患者中,PaCO2有两个决定因素。来自大脑的呼吸驱动是一个活跃的系统(PaCO2每增加3mmhg可将分钟通气量增加到10l /min,除非PaCO2非常高)(1);而肺泡二氧化碳张力(或简单地称为PaCO2)、二氧化碳产量(平均成人VCO2 ~200 mL/min,剧烈运动可增加10倍)和肺泡分钟通气量之间的数学关系代表了一个被动系统(图1A)(2)。肺泡分钟通气量等于分钟通气量减去由于生理死空间(解剖和肺泡死空间的总和)而浪费的通气量。主动和被动系统之间的交互定义了PaCO2。由于缺氧或代谢性酸中毒导致的呼吸驱动增加会增加主动呼吸驱动系统的“斜率”,导致分钟通气量增加,从而降低PaCO2。因此,在存在明显代谢性酸中毒的情况下,PaCO2在正常范围内实际上是异常的,这可能意味着同时存在呼吸驱动抑制(1)。阿片类药物和镇静剂导致的呼吸抑制会使主动呼吸驱动系统向右移动(图1B),导致分钟通气量降低,PaCO2升高。VCO2的增加会使被动系统向上移动,导致PaCO2升高,直到主动呼吸驱动系统向上移动斜率使PaCO2正常化(图1C)。肺泡死亡空间的增加——可能是由于肺气肿、肺血流量减少而没有相应的通气减少或对灌注不良的肺泡过度通气而引起的[即,↑总通气与灌注(V/Q)比]、急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)和肺炎的↑V/Q异质性(3),或因补充氧气而导致的正常缺氧肺血管收缩的衰减)——将使被动系统向右移动。导致PaCO2升高(图1D)。急性肺栓塞理论上会增加肺泡死亡空间;然而,通常没有观察到PaCO2升高。这是因为任何PaCO2的升高和动脉血氧压(PaO2)的降低都会被髓动脉和颈动脉感知到
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