The use of protective mechanical ventilation during extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for the treatment of acute respiratory failure

Perfusion. 2024 Jan 19:2676591241227167. doi: 10.1177/02676591241227167. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTAcute respiratory failure (ARF) strikes an estimated two million people in the United States each year, with care exceeding US$50 billion. The hallmark of ARF is a heterogeneous injury, with normal tissue intermingled with a large volume of low compliance and collapsed tissue. Mechanical ventilation is necessary to oxygenate and ventilate patients with ARF, but if set inappropriately, it can cause an unintended ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). The mechanism of VILI is believed to be overdistension of the remaining normal tissue known as the 'baby' lung, causing volutrauma, repetitive collapse and reopening of lung tissue with each breath, causing atelectrauma, and inflammation secondary to this mechanical damage, causing biotrauma. To avoid VILI, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) can temporally replace the pulmonary function of gas exchange without requiring high tidal volumes (VT) or airway pressures. In theory, the lower VT and airway pressure will minimize all three VILI mechanisms, allowing the lung to 'rest' and heal in the collapsed state. The optimal method of mechanical ventilation for the patient on ECMO is unknown. The ARDSNetwork Acute Respiratory Management Approach (ARMA) is a Rest Lung Approach (RLA) that attempts to reduce the excessive stress and strain on the remaining normal lung tissue and buys time for the lung to heal in the collapsed stat...
Source: Perfusion - Category: Cardiovascular & Thoracic Surgery Authors: Source Type: research