1. Physiological effects and subjective tolerability of prone positioning in COVID-19 and healthy hypoxic challenge
- Author
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Chen Zhang, Fangyue Chen, Renee Ma, Anna Wood, Iain M. Goodhart, Holly Pavey, Jonathan Fuld, Helen Lin-Jia-Qi, Frances Early, Kate Fitzpatrick, Josh Cara, Mayurun Selvan, Louise H Jordon, Celine Goh, Andrew Ying, Souradip Mookerjee, Marie Fisk, Vaitehi Nageshwaran, Akhilesh Jha, Sam Mann, Dariusz Wozniak, Catherine Oxley, Timothy Old, Daniel Cunningham, Randa Abu-Youssef, Ravi Shah, Jha, Akhilesh [0000-0002-8413-7738], Shah, Ravi [0000-0002-3212-7706], Lin-Jia-Qi, Helen [0000-0001-8491-558X], Mookerjee, Souradip [0000-0003-4904-1324], Old, Timothy [0000-0003-2564-2555], Jordon, Louise [0000-0002-0066-4750], Wood, Anna [0000-0002-2678-6369], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Supine position ,Respiratory rate ,business.industry ,32 Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,3 Good Health and Well Being ,Pneumonia ,medicine.disease ,Prone position ,Tolerability ,Clinical Research ,Interquartile range ,Anesthesia ,Heart rate ,Pneumonia & Influenza ,Breathing ,Medicine ,Original Research Article ,business ,3202 Clinical Sciences ,Lung - Abstract
BackgroundProne positioning has a beneficial role in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients receiving ventilation but lacks evidence in awake non-ventilated patients, with most studies being retrospective, lacking control populations and information on subjective tolerability.MethodsWe conducted a prospective, single-centre study of prone positioning in awake non-ventilated patients with COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 pneumonia. The primary outcome was change in peripheral oxygenation in prone versus supine position. Secondary outcomes assessed effects on end-tidal CO2, respiratory rate, heart rate and subjective symptoms. We also recruited healthy volunteers to undergo proning during hypoxic challenge.Results238 hospitalised patients with pneumonia were screened; 55 were eligible with 25 COVID-19 patients and three non-COVID-19 patients agreeing to undergo proning – the latter insufficient for further analysis. 10 healthy control volunteers underwent hypoxic challenge. Patients with COVID-19 had a median age of 64 years (interquartile range 53–75). Proning led to an increase in oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry (SpO2) compared to supine position (difference +1.62%; p=0.003) and occurred within 10 min of proning. There were no effects on end-tidal CO2, respiratory rate or heart rate. There was an increase in subjective discomfort (p=0.003), with no difference in breathlessness. Among healthy controls undergoing hypoxic challenge, proning did not lead to a change in SpO2 or subjective symptom scores.ConclusionIdentification of suitable patients with COVID-19 requiring oxygen supplementation from general ward environments for awake proning is challenging. Prone positioning leads to a small increase in SpO2 within 10 min of proning though is associated with increased discomfort.
- Published
- 2021