Affiliation:
1. Department of Anesthesiology, Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China
Abstract
Many studies have confirmed that applying positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) to the dependent lung during one-lung ventilation (OLV) improves oxygenation. Our purpose was to investigate the best time and level of PEEP application. Thirty patients undergoing thoracic surgery were randomised into three groups. After 20 minutes of two-lung ventilation (TL V) in the lateral position, all patients received OL V for one hour. During OLV, 0, 5, 10 cmH2O PEEP were applied in order in group A, with each level sustained for 20 minutes. Group B had 5 cmH2O PEEP applied and maintained for one hour. Patients in group C received PEEP with levels set in the opposite order to that of group A. The ventilation model was then converted to TLV.PaO2, PaCO2 and respiratory mechanical variables were compared at five different time points among groups, 20 minutes after TLV (T1), 20 (T2), 40 (T3) and 60 minutes (T4) after OLV, and 20 minutes after conversion to TL V (T5). We found that PaO2 was lower in group A than the other two groups at T2 (P <0.05). PaO2 decreased significantly at T5 compared with T1 (P <0.05) in group A only. When PEEP was set to 10 cmH2O, the airway pressure increased significantly (P <0.05). These findings indicate that PEEP applied at the initial time of OLV improves oxygenation most beneficially. Five cmH2O PEEP may produce this beneficial effect without the increase in airway pressure associated with 10 cmH2O PEEP.
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Cited by
11 articles.
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