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"Jaber, Samir"
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Clinical strategies for implementing lung and diaphragm-protective ventilation: avoiding insufficient and excessive effort
2020
Mechanical ventilation may have adverse effects on both the lung and the diaphragm. Injury to the lung is mediated by excessive mechanical stress and strain, whereas the diaphragm develops atrophy as a consequence of low respiratory effort and injury in case of excessive effort. The lung and diaphragm-protective mechanical ventilation approach aims to protect both organs simultaneously whenever possible. This review summarizes practical strategies for achieving lung and diaphragm-protective targets at the bedside, focusing on inspiratory and expiratory ventilator settings, monitoring of inspiratory effort or respiratory drive, management of dyssynchrony, and sedation considerations. A number of potential future adjunctive strategies including extracorporeal CO2 removal, partial neuromuscular blockade, and neuromuscular stimulation are also discussed. While clinical trials to confirm the benefit of these approaches are awaited, clinicians should become familiar with assessing and managing patients’ respiratory effort, based on existing physiological principles. To protect the lung and the diaphragm, ventilation and sedation might be applied to avoid excessively weak or very strong respiratory efforts and patient-ventilator dysynchrony.
Journal Article
A Trial of Intraoperative Low-Tidal-Volume Ventilation in Abdominal Surgery
by
Constantin, Jean-Michel
,
Pereira, Bruno
,
Marret, Emmanuel
in
Abdomen - surgery
,
Abdominal surgery
,
Biological and medical sciences
2013
Low-tidal-volume ventilation with positive end-expiratory pressure is the standard of care in acute respiratory distress syndrome. In this trial, the use of protective ventilation during surgery, as compared with nonprotective ventilation, reduced postoperative complications.
Worldwide, more than 230 million patients undergoing major surgery each year require general anesthesia and mechanical ventilation.
1
Postoperative pulmonary complications adversely affect clinical outcomes and health care utilization,
2
so prevention of these complications has become a measure of the quality of hospital care.
3
Previous, large cohort studies have shown that 20 to 30% of patients undergoing surgery with general anesthesia are at intermediate to high risk for postoperative pulmonary complications.
4
,
5
Mechanical ventilation with the use of high tidal volumes (10 to 15 ml per kilogram of predicted body weight) has traditionally been recommended to prevent hypoxemia and atelectasis in . . .
Journal Article
Prone position in ARDS patients: why, when, how and for whom
In ARDS patients, the change from supine to prone position generates a more even distribution of the gas–tissue ratios along the dependent–nondependent axis and a more homogeneous distribution of lung stress and strain. The change to prone position is generally accompanied by a marked improvement in arterial blood gases, which is mainly due to a better overall ventilation/perfusion matching. Improvement in oxygenation and reduction in mortality are the main reasons to implement prone position in patients with ARDS. The main reason explaining a decreased mortality is less overdistension in non-dependent lung regions and less cyclical opening and closing in dependent lung regions. The only absolute contraindication for implementing prone position is an unstable spinal fracture. The maneuver to change from supine to prone and vice versa requires a skilled team of 4–5 caregivers. The most frequent adverse events are pressure sores and facial edema. Recently, the use of prone position has been extended to non-intubated spontaneously breathing patients affected with COVID-19 ARDS. The effects of this intervention on outcomes are still uncertain.
Journal Article
Obesity in the critically ill: a narrative review
2019
The World Health Organization defines overweight and obesity as the condition where excess or abnormal fat accumulation increases risks to health. The prevalence of obesity is increasing worldwide and is around 20% in ICU patients. Adipose tissue is highly metabolically active, and especially visceral adipose tissue has a deleterious adipocyte secretory profile resulting in insulin resistance and a chronic low-grade inflammatory and procoagulant state. Obesity is strongly linked with chronic diseases such as type 2 diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, dyslipidemia, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, chronic kidney disease, obstructive sleep apnea and hypoventilation syndrome, mood disorders and physical disabilities. In hospitalized and ICU patients and in patients with chronic illnesses, a J-shaped relationship between BMI and mortality has been demonstrated, with overweight and moderate obesity being protective compared with a normal BMI or more severe obesity (the still debated and incompletely understood “obesity paradox”). Despite this protective effect regarding mortality, in the setting of critical illness morbidity is adversely affected with increased risk of respiratory and cardiovascular complications, requiring adapted management. Obesity is associated with increased risk of AKI and infection, may require adapted drug dosing and nutrition and is associated with diagnostic and logistic challenges. In addition, negative attitudes toward obese patients (the social stigma of obesity) affect both health care workers and patients.
Journal Article
ARDS in Obese Patients: Specificities and Management
by
Verzilli, Daniel
,
De Jong, Audrey
,
Jaber, Samir
in
Adult respiratory distress syndrome
,
Bariatric surgery
,
Care and treatment
2019
This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2019. Other selected articles can be found online at
https://www.biomedcentral.com/collections/annualupdate2019
. Further information about the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine is available from
http://www.springer.com/series/8901
.
Journal Article
Timing of Renal-Replacement Therapy in Patients with Acute Kidney Injury and Sepsis
by
Mira, Jean-Paul
,
Quenot, Jean-Pierre
,
Louis, Guillaume
in
Acute Kidney Injury - complications
,
Acute Kidney Injury - mortality
,
Acute Kidney Injury - therapy
2018
A multicenter, randomized, controlled trial compared early with delayed strategies of renal-replacement therapy in patients with early-stage septic shock who had severe acute kidney injury. There was no significant between-group difference in overall mortality at 90 days.
Journal Article