作者
Luca Salvatore Menga,Luca Delle Cese,Tommaso Rosà,Melania Cesarano,Scarascia Roberta,Teresa Michi,Daniele Guerino Biasucci,Ersilia Ruggiero,Antonio Maria Dell’Anna,Salvatore Lucio Cutuli,Eloisa Sofia Tanzarella,Gabriele Pintaudi,Gennaro De Pascale,Claudio Sandroni,Salvatore Maurizio Maggiore,Domenico Luca Grieco,Massimo Antonelli
摘要
Rationale: The respective effects of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) and pressure support delivered through the helmet interface in patients with hypoxemia need to be better understood. Objectives: To assess the respective effects of helmet pressure support (noninvasive ventilation [NIV]) and continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) compared with high-flow nasal oxygen (HFNO) on effort to breathe, lung inflation, and gas exchange in patients with hypoxemia (PaO2/FiO2 ⩽ 200). Methods: Fifteen patients underwent 1-hour phases (constant FiO2) of HFNO (60 L/min), helmet NIV (PEEP = 14 cm H2O, pressure support = 12 cm H2O), and CPAP (PEEP = 14 cm H2O) in randomized sequence. Measurements and Main Results: Inspiratory esophageal (ΔPES) and transpulmonary pressure (ΔPL) swings were used as surrogates for inspiratory effort and lung distension, respectively. Tidal Volume (Vt) and end-expiratory lung volume were assessed with electrical impedance tomography. ΔPES was lower during NIV versus CPAP and HFNO (median [interquartile range], 5 [3–9] cm H2O vs. 13 [10–19] cm H2O vs. 10 [8–13] cm H2O; P = 0.001 and P = 0.01). ΔPL was not statistically different between treatments. PaO2/FiO2 ratio was significantly higher during NIV and CPAP versus HFNO (166 [136–215] and 175 [158–281] vs. 120 [107–149]; P = 0.002 and P = 0.001). NIV and CPAP similarly increased Vt versus HFNO (mean change, 70% [95% confidence interval (CI), 17–122%], P = 0.02; 93% [95% CI, 30–155%], P = 0.002) and end-expiratory lung volume (mean change, 198% [95% CI, 67–330%], P = 0.001; 263% [95% CI, 121–407%], P = 0.001), mostly due to increased aeration/ventilation in dorsal lung regions. During HFNO, 14 of 15 patients had pendelluft involving >10% of Vt; pendelluft was mitigated by CPAP and further by NIV. Conclusions: Compared with HFNO, helmet NIV, but not CPAP, reduced ΔPES. CPAP and NIV similarly increased oxygenation, end-expiratory lung volume, and Vt, without affecting ΔPL. NIV, and to a lesser extent CPAP, mitigated pendelluft. Clinical trial registered with clinicaltrials.gov (NCT04241861).