长时间机械通气的 COVID-19 患者与其他病因导致的呼吸衰竭患者的通气比和机械力对比。

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q2 RESPIRATORY SYSTEM Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1177/17534666231155744
Alessandro Ghiani, Konstantinos Tsitouras, Joanna Paderewska, Kathrin Kahnert, Swenja Walcher, Lukas Gernhold, Claus Neurohr, Nikolaus Kneidinger
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:有证据表明,早期 COVID-19 肺炎和典型急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)的通气效率和呼吸力学存在差异,这些差异可通过通气比(VR,肺死腔分数的代用指标)或机械力(MP,受肺胸顺应性变化等因素的影响)等既定通气指标来衡量:本研究的目的是评估 COVID-19 肺炎患者在疾病晚期准备脱离呼吸机时的 VR 和 MP,并与其他病因引起的呼吸衰竭进行比较:对249例长期机械通气、气管切开、伴有或不伴有COVID-19相关呼吸衰竭的患者进行回顾性队列观察研究:我们分析了每组患者在断奶期间的 VR 和 MP 分布和轨迹[重复测量方差分析 (ANOVA)]。次要结果包括组间断奶失败率以及 VR 和 MP 预测断奶结果的能力(使用逻辑回归模型):分析比较了 53 例 COVID-19 和 196 例非 COVID-19 受试者。在断奶期间,两组患者的 VR 和 MP 均有所下降。在整个断奶过程中,COVID-19 患者的两个指标值都更高:中位数 VR 1.54 对 1.27(P 对 21.3 焦耳/分钟),P 对 1.24(P 对 20.1 焦耳/分钟),P 对 30% ,P 结论:COVID-19 患者与 COVID-19 患者的差异很大:COVID-19 患者在通气效率和呼吸力学方面与长期通气的患者有很大不同,VRs 和 MP 明显更高。MP 的差异与 COVID-19 患者较高的肺胸顺应性有关,这可能是断奶失败率较低的原因。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Ventilatory ratio and mechanical power in prolonged mechanically ventilated COVID-19 patients versus respiratory failures of other etiologies.

Background: Evidence suggests differences in ventilation efficiency and respiratory mechanics between early COVID-19 pneumonia and classical acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), as measured by established ventilatory indexes, such as the ventilatory ratio (VR; a surrogate of the pulmonary dead-space fraction) or mechanical power (MP; affected, e.g., by changes in lung-thorax compliance).

Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate VR and MP in the late stages of the disease when patients are ready to be liberated from the ventilator after recovering from COVID-19 pneumonia compared to respiratory failures of other etiologies.

Design: A retrospective observational cohort study of 249 prolonged mechanically ventilated, tracheotomized patients with and without COVID-19-related respiratory failure.

Methods: We analyzed each group's VR and MP distributions and trajectories [repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA)] during weaning. Secondary outcomes included weaning failure rates between groups and the ability of VR and MP to predict weaning outcomes (using logistic regression models).

Results: The analysis compared 53 COVID-19 cases with a heterogeneous group of 196 non-COVID-19 subjects. VR and MP decreased across both groups during weaning. COVID-19 patients demonstrated higher values for both indexes throughout weaning: median VR 1.54 versus 1.27 (p < 0.01) and MP 26.0 versus 21.3 Joule/min (p < 0.01) at the start of weaning, and median VR 1.38 versus 1.24 (p < 0.01) and MP 24.2 versus 20.1 Joule/min (p < 0.01) at weaning completion. According to the multivariable analysis, VR was not independently associated with weaning outcomes, and the ability of MP to predict weaning failure or success varied with lung-thorax compliance, with COVID-19 patients demonstrating consistently higher dynamic compliance along with significantly fewer weaning failures (9% versus 30%, p < 0.01).

Conclusion: COVID-19 patients differed considerably in ventilation efficiency and respiratory mechanics among prolonged ventilated individuals, demonstrating significantly higher VRs and MP. The differences in MP were linked with higher lung-thorax compliance in COVID-19 patients, possibly contributing to the lower rate of weaning failures observed.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
57
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: Therapeutic Advances in Respiratory Disease delivers the highest quality peer-reviewed articles, reviews, and scholarly comment on pioneering efforts and innovative studies across all areas of respiratory disease.
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