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Patient-Self Inflicted Lung Injury: A Practical Review
- Source :
- Journal of Clinical Medicine, Vol 10, Iss 2738, p 2738 (2021), Journal of Clinical Medicine
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- MDPI AG, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Patients with severe lung injury usually have a high respiratory drive, resulting in intense inspiratory effort that may even worsen lung damage by several mechanisms gathered under the name “patient-self inflicted lung injury” (P-SILI). Even though no clinical study has yet demonstrated that a ventilatory strategy to limit the risk of P-SILI can improve the outcome, the concept of P-SILI relies on sound physiological reasoning, an accumulation of clinical observations and some consistent experimental data. In this review, we detail the main pathophysiological mechanisms by which the patient’s respiratory effort could become deleterious: excessive transpulmonary pressure resulting in over-distension; inhomogeneous distribution of transpulmonary pressure variations across the lung leading to cyclic opening/closing of nondependent regions and pendelluft phenomenon; increase in the transvascular pressure favoring the aggravation of pulmonary edema. We also describe potentially harmful patient-ventilator interactions. Finally, we discuss in a practical way how to detect in the clinical setting situations at risk for P-SILI and to what extent this recognition can help personalize the treatment strategy.
- Subjects :
- Artificial ventilation
medicine.medical_specialty
medicine.medical_treatment
patient-self inflicted lung injury
Review
Lung injury
Clinical study
03 medical and health sciences
ventilator induced lung injury
0302 clinical medicine
medicine
Respiratory effort
Intensive care medicine
Lung
acute respiratory failure
business.industry
030208 emergency & critical care medicine
artificial ventilation
General Medicine
acute respiratory distress syndrome
Pulmonary edema
medicine.disease
Pendelluft
medicine.anatomical_structure
030228 respiratory system
Medicine
business
Transpulmonary pressure
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 20770383
- Volume :
- 10
- Issue :
- 2738
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Clinical Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....60cb69064af6b24555c68fe58d2c9709