医学
麻醉
膈式呼吸
重症监护室
重症监护
机械通风
振膜(声学)
外科
内科学
声学
物理
病理
扬声器
重症监护医学
替代医学
作者
Adrianna Lorraine Watson,Philip D. Hughes,Mark Harris,Nicholas Hart,R. J. Ware,Julia Wendon,Malcolm Green,John Moxham
标识
DOI:10.1097/00003246-200107000-00005
摘要
Objective In the critically ill, respiratory muscle strength usually has been assessed by measuring maximum inspiratory pressure. The maneuver is volitional, and results can be unreliable. The nonvolitional technique of bilateral anterolateral magnetic stimulation of the phrenic nerves, producing twitch transdiaphragmatic pressure, has been successful in normal subjects and ambulatory patients. In this study we used the technique in the intensive care unit and explored the measurement of twitch endotracheal tube pressure as a less invasive technique to assess diaphragmatic contractility. Design Clinical study to quantify diaphragm strength in the intensive care unit. Setting Patients from three London teaching hospital intensive care units and high-dependency units. Patients Forty-one intensive care patients were recruited. Of these, 33 (20 men, 13 women) were studied. Interventions Esophageal and gastric balloon catheters were passed through the anaesthetized nose, and an endotracheal tube occlusion device was placed in the ventilation circuit, next to the endotracheal tube. Two 43-mm magnetic coils were placed anteriorly on the patient’s neck, and the phrenic nerves were stimulated magnetically. Measurements and Main Results On phrenic nerve stimulation, twitch gastric pressure, twitch esophageal pressure, twitch transdiaphragmatic pressure, and twitch endotracheal tube pressure were measured. Forty-one consecutive patients consented to take part in the study, and twitch pressure data were obtained in 33 of these. Mean transdiaphragmatic pressure was 10.7 cm H2O, mean twitch esophageal pressure was 6.7 cm H2O, and mean twitch endotracheal tube pressure was 6.7 cm H2O. The mean difference between twitch esophageal pressure and twitch endotracheal tube pressure was 0.02 cm H2O. Correlation of the means of twitch endotracheal tube pressure to twitch esophageal pressure was 0.93, and that for twitch endotracheal tube pressure to transdiaphragmatic pressure was 0.78. Conclusions Transdiaphragmatic pressure can be measured in the critically ill to give a nonvolitional assessment of diaphragm contractility, but not all patients can be studied. At present, the relationship of twitch endotracheal tube pressure to transdiaphragmatic pressure is too variable to reliably represent a less invasive measure of diaphragm strength.
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