A Rationale for Safe Ventilation With Inhalation Injury: An Editorial Review

Author:

Dries David J12,Tawfik Pierre N3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. HealthPartners Institute , Bloomington, MN , USA

2. Department of Critical Care & Acute Care Surgery , University of Minnesota, Minneapolis , USA

3. Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, Critical Care, & Sleep Medicine, University of Minnesota , Minneapolis , USA

Abstract

Abstract Lung injury from smoke inhalation manifests as airway and parenchymal damage, at times leading to the acute respiratory distress syndrome. From the beginning of this millennium, the approach to mechanical ventilation in the patient with acute respiratory distress syndrome was based on reduction of tidal volume to 6 ml/kg of ideal body weight, maintaining a ceiling of plateau pressure, and titration of driving pressure (plateau pressure minus PEEP). Beyond these broad constraints, there is little specification for the mechanics of ventilator settings, consideration of the metabolic impact of the disease process on the patient, or interaction of patient disease and ventilator settings. Various studies suggest that inhomogeneity of lung injury, which increases the risk of regional lung trauma from mechanical ventilation, may be found in the patient with smoke inhalation. We now appreciate that energy transfer principles may affect optimal ventilator management and come into play in damaged heterogenous lungs. Mechanical ventilation in the patient with inhalation injury should consider various factors. Self-injurious respiratory demand by the patient can be reduced using analgesia and sedation. Dynamic factors beginning with rate management can reduce the incidence of potentially damaging ventilation. Moreover, preclinical study is underway to examine the flow of gas based on the ventilator mode selected, which may also be a factor triggering regional lung injury.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

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