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The metabolic management of patients on cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is a complex process, involving several key biochemical and physiological parameters essential to maintaining homeostasis and reducing morbidity and mortality associated with CPB and cardiac surgery.There is movement toward goal directed perfusion (GDP), using indexed parameters such as carbon dioxide production, oxygen delivery and oxygen consumption to individualize perfusion strategies. This chapter provides an overview of the fundamental principles surrounding the metabolic management of the patient on CPB.
Patients with respiratory failure are usually mechanically ventilated, mostly with fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) > 0.21. Minimizing FiO2 is increasingly an accepted standard. In underserved nations and disasters, salvageable patients requiring mechanical ventilation may outstrip oxygen supplies.
Study Objective:
The hypothesis of the present study was that mechanical ventilation with FiO2 = 0.21 is feasible. This assumption was tested in an Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) model in pigs.
Methods:
Seventeen pigs were anesthetized, intubated, and mechanically ventilated with FiO2 = 0.4 and Positive End Expiratory Pressure (PEEP) of 5cmH2O. Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome was induced by intravenous (IV) oleic acid (OA) infusion, and FiO2 was reduced to 0.21 after 45 minutes of stable moderate ARDS. If peripheral capillary oxygen saturation (SpO2) decreased below 80%, PEEP was increased gradually until maximum 20cmH2O, then inspiratory time elevated from one second to 1.4 seconds.
Results:
Animals developed moderate ARDS (mean partial pressure of oxygen [PaO2]/FiO2 = 162.8, peak and mean inspiratory pressures doubled, and lung compliance decreased). The SpO2 decreased to <80% rapidly after FiO2 was decreased to 0.21. In 14/17 animals, increasing PEEP sufficed to maintain SpO2 > 80%. Only in 3/17 animals, elevation of FiO2 to 0.25 after PEEP reached 20cmH2O was needed to maintain SpO2 > 80%. Animals remained hemodynamically stable until euthanasia one hour later.
Conclusions:
In a pig model of moderate ARDS, mechanical ventilation with room air was feasible in 14/17 animals by elevating PEEP. These results in animal model support the potential feasibility of lowering FiO2 to 0.21 in some ARDS patients. The present study was conceived to address the ethical and practical paradigm of mechanical ventilation in disasters and underserved areas, which assumes that oxygen is mandatory in respiratory failure and is therefore a rate-limiting factor in care capacity allocation. Further studies are needed before paradigm changes are considered.
The applications of non-invasive ventilation (NIV) include: acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and cardiogenic pulmonary oedema, for immunocompromised patient, during failure to wean from ventilation. It is essential before NIV is initiated that arterial blood gas measurements be available. The patient should be established upon appropriate oxygen therapy and interpretation must be made in the context of the FiO2. Correct patient selection is essential for the success of NIV: it is a complementary not alternative therapy to IPPV. The successful instigation of NIV is very dependent upon establishing a good rapport with the patient and inspiring confidence in what will feel like a very unusual treatment. The complications of NIV include mild gastric distension, pressure effects of the mask and straps causing facial tissue damage, eye irritation, sinus pain or nasal congestion, and significant haemodynamic effects resulting from NIV that are unusual although hypotension may occur.
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