Acute respiratory distress syndrome

"ARDS" redirects here. For other uses, see ARD (disambiguation).
Acute respiratory distress syndrome

Chest x-ray of patient with ARDS
Classification and external resources
Specialty Critical care medicine
ICD-10 J80
ICD-9-CM 518.5, 518.82
DiseasesDB 892
MedlinePlus 000103
eMedicine article/165139
Patient UK Acute respiratory distress syndrome
MeSH D012128

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), previously known as respiratory distress syndrome (RDS), adult respiratory distress syndrome, or shock lung, is a medical condition occurring in critically ill patients characterized by widespread inflammation in the lungs. ARDS is not a particular disease, rather it is a clinical phenotype which may be triggered by various pathologies such as trauma, pneumonia and sepsis.

The hallmark of ARDS is diffuse injury to cells which form the alveolar barrier, surfactant dysfunction, activation of the innate immune response, and abnormal coagulation.[1] In effect, ARDS results in impaired gas exchange within the lungs at the level of the microscopic alveoli.

The syndrome is associated with a high mortality rate between 20 and 50%.[2] The mortality rate with ARDS varies widely based on severity, the patient's age, and the presence of other underlying medical conditions.

Although the terminology of "adult respiratory distress syndrome" has at times been used to differentiate ARDS from "infant respiratory distress syndrome" in neonates, international consensus is that "acute respiratory distress syndrome" is the best moniker because ARDS can affect those of all ages.[3]

Signs and symptoms

The signs and symptoms of ARDS often begin within two hours of an inciting event, but can occur after 1–3 days. Signs and symptoms may include shortness of breath, fast breathing, and a low oxygen level in the blood.[4][5] A chest x-ray frequently demonstrates generalized infiltrates or opacities in both lungs,[6] which represent fluid accumulation in the lungs.

Other signs and symptoms that occur in people with ARDS may be associated with the underlying disease process. For example, those with ARDS from sepsis may have low blood pressure and fever, while a person with pneumonia may have a cough.

Causes

The predisposing factors of ARDS are numerous and assorted. Common causes of ARDS include sepsis, pneumonia, trauma, multiple blood transfusions, babesiosis, lung contusion, aspiration of stomach contents, and drug abuse or overdose.[5][6] Other causes of ARDS include burns, pancreatitis, near drowning, or the inhalation of chemical irritants such as smoke, phosgene, or chlorine gas.

Some cases of ARDS are linked to large volumes of fluid used during post-trauma resuscitation.[7]

Diagnosis

The diagnostic criteria for ARDS have evolved over time, in step with an increasing understanding of both the pathophysiology and the limits of diagnostic capability in general practice. The international consensus criteria for ARDS were most recently updated in 2012 and are known as the "Berlin definition".[8][9] In addition to generally broadening the diagnostic thresholds, other notable changes from the prior 1994 consensus criteria[3] include discouraging the term "acute lung injury," and defining grades of ARDS severity according to degree of hypoxemia (see history).

According to the 2012 Berlin definition, ARDS is characterized by:

The 2012 "Berlin criteria" are a modification of the prior 1994 criteria:[10][3]

With these 1994 criteria, arterial blood gas analysis and chest X-ray were required for formal diagnosis. Although severe hypoxemia is generally included, the appropriate threshold defining abnormal PaO
2
has never been systematically studied. A severe oxygenation defect is not synonymous with ventilatory support. Any PaO
2
below 100 (generally saturation less than 100%) on a supplemental oxygen fraction of 50% meets criteria for ARDS. This can easily be achieved by high flow oxygen supplementation without ventilatory support.

CT scanning leads to more accurate images of the lung tissue in ARDS which aids in diagnosis, although it is not always necessary.

Pathophysiology

Micrograph of diffuse alveolar damage, the histologic correlate of ARDS. H&E stain.

ARDS is a form of noncardiogenic pulmonary edema provoked by an acute injury to the lungs that results in flooding of the lungs' microscopic air sacs responsible for the exchange of gases such as oxygen and carbon dioxide with capillaries in the lungs.[11] Additional common findings in ARDS include partial collapse of the lungs (atelectasis) and low levels of oxygen in the blood (hypoxemia). However, in ARDS, these changes are not due to heart failure. The clinical syndrome is associated with pathological findings including pneumonia, eosinophilic pneumonia, cryptogenic organizing pneumonia, acute fibrinous organizing pneumonia, and diffuse alveolar damage (DAD). Of these, the pathology most commonly associated with ARDS is DAD, which is characterized by a diffuse inflammation of lung tissue. The triggering insult to the tissue usually results in an initial release of chemical signals and other inflammatory mediators secreted by local epithelial and endothelial cells.

Neutrophils and some T-lymphocytes quickly migrate into the inflamed lung tissue and contribute in the amplification of the phenomenon. Typical histological presentation involves diffuse alveolar damage and hyaline membrane formation in alveolar walls. Although the triggering mechanisms are not completely understood, recent research has examined the role of inflammation and mechanical stress.

Inflammation

Inflammation, such as that caused by sepsis, causes endothelial dysfunction, fluid leakage from the capillaries and impaired drainage of fluid from the lungs. Elevated inspired oxygen concentration often becomes necessary at this stage, and may facilitate a 'respiratory burst' in immune cells. In a secondary phase, endothelial dysfunction causes cells and inflammatory exudate to enter the alveoli. This pulmonary edema increases the thickness of the alveolo-capillary space, increasing the distance the oxygen must diffuse to reach blood, which impairs gas exchange leading to hypoxia, increases the work of breathing and eventually induces fibrosis of the airspace.

Edema and decreased surfactant production by type II pneumocytes may cause whole alveoli to collapse or to completely flood. This loss of aeration contributes further to the right-to-left shunt in ARDS. Similar to a traditional right-to-left shunt which refers to blood passing from the right side of the heart to the left side, thus bypassing oxygenation, lung right-to-left shunting occurs within the lungs. As the alveoli contain progressively less gas, the blood flowing through the alveolar capillaries is progressively less oxygenated, resulting in massive intrapulmonary shunting. The collapse of alveoli and small airways interferes with the process of normal gas exchange. It is common to see patients with a PaO
2
of 60 mmHg (8.0 kPa) despite mechanical ventilation with 100% inspired oxygen.

The loss of aeration may follow different patterns depending upon the nature of the underlying disease and other factors. These are usually distributed to the lower lobes of the lungs, in their posterior segments, and they roughly correspond to the initial infected area. In sepsis or trauma-induced ARDS, infiltrates are usually more patchy and diffuse. The posterior and basal segments are always more affected, but the distribution is even less homogeneous. Loss of aeration also causes important changes in lung mechanical properties that are fundamental in the process of inflammation amplification and progression to ARDS in mechanically ventilated patients.

Mechanical stress

Mechanical ventilation is an essential part of the treatment of ARDS. As loss of aeration and the underlying disease progress, the end tidal volume grows to a level incompatible with life. Thus, mechanical ventilation is initiated to relieve respiratory muscles of their work and to protect the usually obtunded patient's airways. However, mechanical ventilation may constitute a risk factor for the developmentor the worseningof ARDS.[10] Aside from the infectious complications arising from invasive ventilation with tracheal intubation, positive-pressure ventilation directly alters lung mechanics during ARDS. When these techniques are used the result is higher mortality through barotrauma.[10]

In 1998, Amato et al. published a paper showing substantial improvement in the outcome of patients ventilated with lower tidal volumes (Vt) (6 mL·kg−1).[10][12] This result was confirmed in a 2000 study sponsored by the NIH.[13] Both studies were widely criticized for several reasons, and the authors were not the first to experiment with lower-volume ventilation, but they increased the understanding of the relationship between mechanical ventilation and ARDS.

This form of stress is thought to be applied by the transpulmonary pressure (gradient) (Pl) generated by the ventilator or, better, its cyclical variations. The better outcome obtained in patients ventilated with lower Vt may be interpreted as a beneficial effect of the lower Pl.

The way Pl is applied on alveolar surface determines the shear stress to which lung units are exposed. ARDS is characterized by a usually inhomogeneous reduction of the airspace, and thus by a tendency towards higher Pl at the same Vt, and towards higher stress on less diseased units. The inhomogeneity of alveoli at different stages of disease is further increased by the gravitational gradient to which they are exposed and the different perfusion pressures at which blood flows through them.

The different mechanical properties of alveoli in ARDS may be interpreted as having varying time constantsthe product of alveolar compliance × resistance.

Slow alveoli are said to be "kept open" using PEEP, a feature of modern ventilators which maintains a positive airway pressure throughout the whole respiratory cycle. A higher mean pressure cycle-wide slows the collapse of diseased units, but it has to be weighed against the corresponding elevation in Pl/plateau pressure. Newer ventilatory approaches attempt to maximize mean airway pressure for its ability to "recruit" collapsed lung units while minimizing the shear stress caused by frequent openings and closings of aerated units.

Stress Index

Stress Index of an ARDS patient with different values of PEEP

Mechanical ventilation can exacerbate the inflammatory response in patients with ARDS by including cyclic tidal alveolar hyperinflation and/or recruiting/derecruiting.[14] Stress index is measured during constant-flow assist-control mechanical ventilation without changing the baseline ventilatory pattern. Identifying the steadiest portion of the inspiratory flow (F) waveform fit the corresponding portion of the airway pressure (Paw) waveform in the following power equation:

Paw = a × tb + c where the coefficient bthe Stress Indexdescribes the shape of the curve. The Stress Index depict a constant compliance if the value is around 1, an increasing compliance during the inspiration if the value is below 1, and a decreasing compliance if the value is above 1. Ranieri, Grasso, et al. set a strategy guided by the stress index with the following rules:

Alveolar hyperinflation in patients with focal ARDS ventilated with the ARDSnet protocol is attenuated by a physiologic approach to PEEP setting based on the stress index measurement.[15]

Progression

If the underlying disease or injurious factor is not removed, the quantity of inflammatory mediators released by the lungs in ARDS may result in a systemic inflammatory response syndrome or sepsis if there is lung infection.[10] The evolution towards shock or multiple organ dysfunction syndrome follows paths analogous to the pathophysiology of sepsis. This leads to the impaired oxygenation which is the central problem of ARDS, as well as to respiratory acidosiswhich is often caused by ventilation techniques such as permissive hypercapnia, which attempt to limit ventilator-induced lung injury in ARDS. The result is a critical illness in which the 'endothelial disease' of severe sepsis or SIRS is worsened by the pulmonary dysfunction, which further impairs oxygen delivery.

Treatment

Acute respiratory distress syndrome is usually treated with mechanical ventilation in the intensive care unit (ICU). Mechanical ventilation is usually delivered through oro-tracheal intubation, or by tracheostomy whenever prolonged ventilation (≥2 weeks) is deemed inevitable. The possibilities of non-invasive ventilation are limited to the very early period of the disease or to prevention in individuals with atypical pneumonias, lung contusion, or major surgery patients, who are at risk of developing ARDS. Treatment of the underlying cause is imperative. Appropriate antibiotic therapy must be administered as soon as microbiological culture results are available. Empirical therapy may be appropriate if local microbiological surveillance is efficient.

The origin of infection, when surgically treatable, must be operated on. When sepsis is diagnosed, appropriate local protocols should be enacted. Commonly used supportive therapy includes particular techniques of mechanical ventilation and pharmacological agents whose effectiveness with respect to the outcome has not yet been proven.

Mechanical ventilation

The overall goal is to maintain acceptable gas exchange and to minimize adverse effects in its application. The parameters PEEP (positive end-expiratory pressure, to maintain maximal recruitment of alveolar units), mean airway pressure (to promote recruitment and predictor of hemodynamic effects) and plateau pressure (best predictor of alveolar overdistention) are used.[16]

Conventional therapy aimed at tidal volumes (Vt) of 12–15 ml/kg (where the weight is ideal body weight rather than actual weight). Recent studies have shown that high tidal volumes can overstretch alveoli resulting in volutrauma (secondary lung injury). The ARDS Clinical Network, or ARDSNet, completed a trial that showed improved mortality when ventilated with a tidal volume of 6 ml/kg compared to the traditional 12 ml/kg. Low tidal volumes (Vt) may cause hypercapnia and atelectasis[10] because of their inherent tendency to increase physiologic shunt. Physiologic dead space cannot change as it is ventilation without perfusion. A shunt is perfusion without ventilation.

Low tidal volume ventilation was the primary independent variable associated with reduced mortality in the NIH-sponsored ARDSnet trial of tidal volume in ARDS. Plateau pressure less than 30 cm H
2
O
was a secondary goal, and subsequent analyses of the data from the ARDSnet trial and other experimental data demonstrate that there appears to be no safe upper limit to plateau pressure; regardless of plateau pressure, patients fare better with low tidal volumes.[17]

Airway pressure release ventilation

No particular ventilator mode is known to improve mortality in Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).

Some practitioners favor airway pressure release ventilation when treating ARDS. Well documented advantages to APRV ventilation[18] include: decreased airway pressures, decreased minute ventilation, decreased dead-space ventilation, promotion of spontaneous breathing, almost 24-hour-a-day alveolar recruitment, decreased use of sedation, near elimination of neuromuscular blockade, optimized arterial blood gas results, mechanical restoration of FRC (functional residual capacity), a positive effect on cardiac output[19] (due to the negative inflection from the elevated baseline with each spontaneous breath), increased organ and tissue perfusion and potential for increased urine output secondary to increased kidney perfusion.

A patient with ARDS, on average, spends between 8 and 11 days on a mechanical ventilator; APRV may reduce this time significantly and conserve valuable resources.

Positive end-expiratory pressure

Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is used in mechanically ventilated patients with ARDS to improve oxygenation. In ARDS, three populations of alveoli can be distinguished. There are normal alveoli which are always inflated and engaging in gas exchange, flooded alveoli which can never, under any ventilatory regime, be used for gas exchange, and atelectatic or partially flooded alveoli that can be "recruited" to participate in gas exchange under certain ventilatory regimens. The recruitable alveoli represent a continuous population, some of which can be recruited with minimal PEEP, and others which can only be recruited with high levels of PEEP. An additional complication is that some alveoli can only be opened with higher airway pressures than are needed to keep them open, hence the justification for maneuvers where PEEP is increased to very high levels for seconds to minutes before dropping the PEEP to a lower level. PEEP can be harmful; high PEEP necessarily increases mean airway pressure and alveolar pressure, which can damage normal alveoli by overdistension resulting in DAD. A compromise between the beneficial and adverse effects of PEEP is inevitable.

The 'best PEEP' used to be defined as 'some' cmH
2
O
above the lower inflection point (LIP) in the sigmoidal pressure-volume relationship curve of the lung. Recent research has shown that the LIP-point pressure is no better than any pressure above it, as recruitment of collapsed alveoliand more importantly the overdistension of aerated unitsoccur throughout the whole inflation. Despite the awkwardness of most procedures used to trace the pressure-volume curve, it is still used by some to define the minimum PEEP to be applied to their patients. Some new ventilators can automatically plot a pressure-volume curve.

PEEP may also be set empirically. Some authors suggest performing a 'recruiting maneuver'a short time at a very high continuous positive airway pressure, such as 50 cmH
2
O
(4.9 kPa)to recruit or open collapsed units with a high distending pressure before restoring previous ventilation. The final PEEP level should be the one just before the drop in PaO
2
or peripheral blood oxygen saturation during a step-down trial.

Intrinsic PEEP (iPEEP) or auto-PEEPfirst described by John Marini of St. Paul Regions Hospitalis a potentially unrecognized contributor to PEEP in patients. When ventilating at high frequencies, its contribution can be substantial, particularly in patients with obstructive lung disease. iPEEP has been measured in very few formal studies on ventilation in ARDS patients, and its contribution is largely unknown. Its measurement is recommended in the treatment of ARDS patients, especially when using high-frequency (oscillatory/jet) ventilation.

Prone position

Distribution of lung infiltrates in acute respiratory distress syndrome is non-uniform. Repositioning into the prone position (face down) might improve oxygenation by relieving atelectasis and improving perfusion. If this is done early in the treatment of severe ARDS, it confers a mortality benefit of 26% compared to supine ventilation.[20]

Fluid management

Several studies have shown that pulmonary function and outcome are better in patients that lost weight or pulmonary wedge pressure was lowered by diuresis or fluid restriction.[10]

Corticosteroids

An NIH-sponsored multicenter ARDSnet study of corticosteroids that ran from August 1997 to November 2003 titled LaSRS for ARDS demonstrated that despite an improvement in cardiovascular physiology, methylprednisone is not efficacious in treatment for ARDS.[21][22]

Nitric oxide

Inhaled nitric oxide (NO) potentially acts as selective pulmonary vasodilator which allows for more gas exchange. However, despite evidence of increased oxygenation status, there is no evidence that inhaled nitric oxide decreases morbidity and mortality in ARDS patients.[23] Furthermore, nitric oxide may cause kidney damage and is not recommended as therapy for ARDS regardless of severity.[24]

Surfactant therapy

To date, no prospective controlled clinical trial has shown a significant mortality benefit of exogenous surfactant in adult ARDS.[10]

ECMO (Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation)

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation is mechanically applied prolonged cardiopulmonary support. There are two types of ECMO: Venovenous which provides respiratory support and venoarterial which provides respiratory and hemodynamic support. Patients with ARDS who do not require cardiac support typically undergo venovenous ECMO. Multiple studies have shown the effectiveness of ECMO in acute respiratory failure.[25][26][27] Specifically, the CESAR (Conventional ventilatory support versus Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for Severe Acute Respiratory failure) trial[28] demonstrated that a group referred to an ECMO center demonstrated significantly increased survival compared to conventional management (63% to 47%).[29]

Complications

Since ARDS is an extremely serious condition which requires invasive forms of therapy it is not without risk. Complications to be considered are:[10]

Epidemiology

The annual incidence of ARDbsdS is 13-23 people per 100,000 in the general population.[30] Its incidence in the mechanically ventilated population in intensive care units is much higher. According to Brun-Buisson et al (2004), there is a prevalence of acute lung injury (ALI) of 16.1% percent in ventilated patients admitted for more than 4 hours.

Worldwide, severe sepsis is the most common trigger causing ARDS.[31] Other triggers include mechanical ventilation, sepsis, pneumonia, Gilchrist's disease, circulatory shock, aspiration, traumaespecially pulmonary contusionmajor surgery, massive blood transfusions,[32] smoke inhalation, drug reaction or overdose, fat emboli and reperfusion pulmonary edema after lung transplantation or pulmonary embolectomy. Pneumonia and sepsis are the most common triggers, and pneumonia is present in up to 60% of patients and may be either causes or complications of ARDS. Alcohol excess appears to increase the risk of ARDS.[33] Diabetes was originally thought to decrease the risk of ARDS, but this has shown to be due to an increase in the risk of pulmonary edema.[34][35] Elevated abdominal pressure of any cause is also probably a risk factor for the development of ARDS, particularly during mechanical ventilation.

The death rate varies from 25–40% in centers using up-to-date ventilatory strategies and up to 58% in all centers.[36][37][38][39]

History

Acute respiratory distress syndrome was first described in 1967 by Ashbaugh et al.[10][40] Initially there was no clearly established definition, which resulted in controversy regarding the incidence and death of ARDS.

In 1988, an expanded definition was proposed, which quantified physiologic respiratory impairment.

1994 American-European Consensus Conference on ARDS

In 1994, a new definition was recommended by the American-European Consensus Conference Committee (AECC).[10][3] It is simple to use and it recognizes that severity of pulmonary injury varies.[41] ARDS was defined as the ratio of arterial partial oxygen tension (PaO
2
) as fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO
2
)
below 200 mmHg in the presence of bilateral infiltrates on the chest x-ray. These infiltrates may appear similar to those of left ventricular failure, but the cardiac silhouette appears normal in ARDS. Also, the pulmonary capillary wedge pressure is normal (less than 18 mmHg) in ARDS, but raised in left ventricular failure. A PaO
2
/FiO
2
ratio less than 300 mmHg with bilateral infiltrates indicates acute lung injury (ALI). Although formally considered different from ARDS, ALI is usually a precursor to ARDS.

2012 Berlin Definition

In 2012, the Berlin Definition of ARDS was devised by the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine, and was endorsed by the American Thoracic Society and the Society of Critical Care Medicine. These recommendations were an effort to both update classification criteria in order to improve clinical usefulness, and to clarify terminology. Notably, the Berlin guidelines discourage the use of the term "acute lung injury" or ALI, as the term was commonly being misused to characterize a less severe degree of lung injury. Instead, the committee proposes a classification of ARDS severity as mild, moderate or severe according to arterial oxygen saturation.[42] The Berlin definitions represent the current international consensus guidelines for both clinical and research classification of ARDS.

See also

References

  1. Fanelli, Vito; Ranieri, V. Marco (2015-03-01). "Mechanisms and clinical consequences of acute lung injury". Annals of the American Thoracic Society. 12 Suppl 1: S3–8. doi:10.1513/AnnalsATS.201407-340MG. ISSN 2325-6621. PMID 25830831.
  2. Rubenfeld, Gordon D.; Caldwell, Ellen; Peabody, Eve; Weaver, Jim; Martin, Diane P.; Neff, Margaret; Stern, Eric J.; Hudson, Leonard D. (20 October 2005). "Incidence and Outcomes of Acute Lung Injury". New England Journal of Medicine 353 (16): 1685–1693. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa050333.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Bernard G, Artigas A, Brigham K, Carlet J, Falke K, Hudson L, Lamy M, Legall J, Morris A, Spragg R (1994). "The American-European Consensus Conference on ARDS. Definitions, mechanisms, relevant outcomes, and clinical trial coordination". Am J Respir Crit Care Med 149 (3 Pt 1): 818–24. doi:10.1164/ajrccm.149.3.7509706. PMID 7509706.
  4. Bakowitz, Magdalena (August 2012). "Acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome in the injured patient". Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine 20: 54. doi:10.1186/1757-7241-20-54.
  5. 1 2 Marino (2006), pp 435
  6. 1 2 Melmed 2011, pp. 636
  7. Cherkas, David (Nov 2011). "Traumatic Hemorrhagic Shock: Advances In Fluid Management". Emergency Medicine Practice 13 (11).
  8. Ranieri VM, Rubenfeld GD, Thompson BT, Ferguson ND, Caldwell E, Fan E, Camporota L, Slutsky AS (Jun 2012). "Acute respiratory distress syndrome: the Berlin Definition. ARDS Definition Task Force". JAMA. 307 (23): 2526–33. doi:10.1001/jama.2012.5669. PMID 22797452.
  9. Ferguson ND, Fan E, Camporota L, Antonelli M, Anzueto A, Beale R, Brochard L, Brower R, Esteban A; et al. (Oct 2012). "The Berlin definition of ARDS: an expanded rationale, justification, and supplementary material". Intensive Care Med. 38 (10): 1573–82. doi:10.1007/s00134-012-2682-1. PMID 22926653. Erratum in: Intensive Care Med. 2012 Oct;38(10):1731-2. PMID 22926653
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Irwin RS, Rippe JM (2003). Irwin and Rippe's Intensive Care Medicine (5th ed.). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. ISBN 0-7817-3548-3.
  11. Boyle, AJ; Mac Sweeney, R; McAuley, DF (August 2013). "Pharmacological treatments in ARDS; a state-of-the-art update". BMC Med 11: 166. doi:10.1186/1741-7015-11-166. PMC 3765621. PMID 23957905.
  12. Amato M, Barbas C, Medeiros D, Magaldi R, Schettino G, Lorenzi-Filho G, Kairalla R, Deheinzelin D, Munoz C, Oliveira R, Takagaki T, Carvalho C (1998). "Effect of a protective-ventilation strategy on mortality in the acute respiratory distress syndrome". N Engl J Med 338 (6): 347–54. doi:10.1056/NEJM199802053380602. PMID 9449727.
  13. MacIntyre N (2000). "Mechanical ventilation strategies for lung protection". Semin Respir Crit Care Med 21 (3): 215–22. doi:10.1055/s-2000-9850. PMID 16088734.
  14. Slutsky AS (May 2005). "Ventilator-induced lung injury: from barotrauma to biotrauma" (PDF). Respir Care 50 (5): 646–59. PMID 15912625.
  15. Grasso S, Stripoli T, De Michele M; et al. (October 2007). "ARDSnet ventilatory protocol and alveolar hyperinflation: role of positive end-expiratory pressure". Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 176 (8): 761–7. doi:10.1164/rccm.200702-193OC. PMID 17656676.
  16. Malhotra A (2007). "Low-tidal-volume ventilation in the acute respiratory distress syndrome". N Engl J Med 357 (11): 1113–20. doi:10.1056/NEJMct074213. PMC 2287190. PMID 17855672.
  17. Hager et al., American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2005
  18. Frawley P. Milo, Habashi Nader M. "Airway Pressure Release Ventilation: Theory and Practice" (PDF). AACN Clinical Issues 12 (2): 234–246. doi:10.1097/00044067-200105000-00007. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 5, 2009. (archived from the original on 2009-03-05)
  19. a positive effect on cardiac output
  20. Sud S, Friedrich JO, Adhikari NK; et al. (8 Jul 2014). "Effect of prone positioning during mechanical ventilation on mortality among patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis". CMAJ 186 (10): E381–90. doi:10.1503/cmaj.140081. PMC 4081236. PMID 24863923.
  21. Steinberg, KP; Hudson, LD; Goodman, RB; Hough, CL; Lanken, PN; Hyzy, R; Thompson, BT; Ancukiewicz, M; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) Clinical Trials, Network (20 April 2006). "Efficacy and safety of corticosteroids for persistent acute respiratory distress syndrome.". The New England Journal of Medicine 354 (16): 1671–84. doi:10.1056/nejmoa051693. PMID 16625008.
  22. Hough, CL (December 2014). "Steroids for acute respiratory distress syndrome?". Clinics in chest medicine 35 (4): 781–95. doi:10.1016/j.ccm.2014.08.014. PMC 4297198. PMID 25453425.
  23. Adhikari, NK; Burns, KE; Friedrich, JO; Granton, JT; Cook, DJ; Meade, MO (14 April 2007). "Effect of nitric oxide on oxygenation and mortality in acute lung injury: systematic review and meta-analysis". BMJ (Clinical research ed.) 334 (7597): 779. doi:10.1136/bmj.39139.716794.55. PMC 1852043. PMID 17383982.
  24. Adhikari, NK; Dellinger, RP; Lundin, S; Payen, D; Vallet, B; Gerlach, H; Park, KJ; Mehta, S; Slutsky, AS; Friedrich, JO (February 2014). "Inhaled nitric oxide does not reduce mortality in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome regardless of severity: systematic review and meta-analysis". Critical Care Medicine (Systematic Review & Meta-Analysis) 42 (2): 404–12. doi:10.1097/CCM.0b013e3182a27909. PMID 24132038.
  25. Makdisi, G; Wang, IW (July 2015). "Extra Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) review of a lifesaving technology.". Journal of thoracic disease 7 (7): E166–76. doi:10.3978/j.issn.2072-1439.2015.07.17. PMC 4522501. PMID 26380745.
  26. Hemmila, MR; Rowe, SA; Boules, TN; Miskulin, J; McGillicuddy, JW; Schuerer, DJ; Haft, JW; Swaniker, F; Arbabi, S; Hirschl, RB; Bartlett, RH (October 2004). "Extracorporeal life support for severe acute respiratory distress syndrome in adults.". Annals of Surgery 240 (4): 595–605; discussion 605–7. doi:10.1097/01.sla.0000141159.90676.2d. PMC 1356461. PMID 15383787.
  27. Brogan, TV; Thiagarajan, RR; Rycus, PT; Bartlett, RH; Bratton, SL (December 2009). "Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in adults with severe respiratory failure: a multi-center database.". Intensive Care Medicine 35 (12): 2105–14. doi:10.1007/s00134-009-1661-7. PMID 19768656.
  28. Peek, GJ; Mugford, M; Tiruvoipati, R; Wilson, A; Allen, E; Thalanany, MM; Hibbert, CL; Truesdale, A; Clemens, F; Cooper, N; Firmin, RK; Elbourne, D; CESAR trial, collaboration (17 October 2009). "Efficacy and economic assessment of conventional ventilatory support versus extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for severe adult respiratory failure (CESAR): a multicentre randomised controlled trial.". Lancet (London, England) 374 (9698): 1351–63. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(09)61069-2. PMID 19762075.
  29. editors, Fabio Sangalli, Nicolò Patroniti, Antonio Pesenti, (2014). ECMO-- extracorporeal life support in adults. ISBN 978-88-470-5427-1.
  30. Lewandowski K, Lewandowski M (2006). "Epidemiology of ARDS". Minerva Anestesiol 72 (6): 473–7.
  31. Goldman, Lee (2011). Goldman's Cecil Medicine (24th ed.). Philadelphia: Elsevier Saunders. p. 635. ISBN 1437727883.
  32. Vlaar AP, Binnekade JM, Prins D; et al. (2010). "Risk factors and outcome of transfusion-related acute lung injury in the critically ill: a nested case-control study". Crit Care Med 38 (3): 7718. doi:10.1097/CCM.0b013e3181cc4d4b. PMID 20035217.
  33. Moss M, Bucher B, Moore FA, Moore EE, Parsons PE. (1996). "The role of chronic alcohol abuse in the development of acute respiratory distress syndrome in adults". JAMA 275 (1): 504. doi:10.1001/jama.1996.03530250054027.
  34. Moss M, Guidot DM, Steinberg KP; et al. (2000). "Diabetic patients have a decreased incidence of acute respiratory distress syndrome". Crit Care Med 28 (7): 218792.
  35. Koh GC, Vlaar AP, Hofstra JJ; et al. (2012). "In the critically ill patient, diabetes predicts mortality independent of statin therapy but is not associated with acute lung injury: A cohort study". Crit Care Med 40 (6): 18351843. doi:10.1097/CCM.0b013e31824e1696. PMC 3379571. PMID 22488007.
  36. The Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Network (May 2000). "Ventilation with lower tidal volumes as compared with traditional tidal volumes for acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome". N Engl J Med 342 (18): 1301–8. doi:10.1056/NEJM200005043421801. PMID 10793162.
  37. Wiedemann HP, Wheeler AP, Bernard GR; et al. (2006). "; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) Clinical Trials Network. Comparison of two fluid-management strategies in acute lung injury". N Engl J Med 354: 2564–2575. doi:10.1056/nejmoa062200.
  38. Wheeler AP, Bernard GR, Thompson BT; et al. (2006). "; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) Clinical Trials Network. Pulmonary-artery versus central venous catheter to guide treatment of acute lung injury". N Engl J Med 354: 2213–2224. doi:10.1056/nejmoa061895.
  39. Brun-Buisson C, Minelli C, Bertolini G; et al. (2004). "; ALIVE Study Group. Epidemiology and outcome of acute lung injury in European intensive care units. Results from the ALIVE study". Intensive Care Med. 30: 51–61.
  40. Ashbaugh D, Bigelow D, Petty T, Levine B (1967). "Acute respiratory distress in adults". Lancet 2 (7511): 319–23. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(67)90168-7. PMID 4143721.
  41. Ware L, Matthay M (2000). "The acute respiratory distress syndrome". N Engl J Med 342 (18): 1334–49. doi:10.1056/NEJM200005043421806. PMID 10793167.
  42. CV. Marco Ranieri, MD (2012). "The ARDS Definition Task Force*. Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome: The Berlin Definition". JAMA 307 (23): 2526–2533. doi:10.1001/jama.2012.5669. PMID 22797452.

Further reading

External links

The Wikibook Intensive Care Medicine has a page on the topic of: ARDS
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, May 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.