4.5 Article

Regional tidal lung strain in mechanically ventilated normal lungs

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 121, Issue 6, Pages 1335-1347

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00861.2015

Keywords

anesthesia; computed tomography; mechanical ventilation; regional ventilation; strain measurements

Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Grant [RO1 HL-121228]
  2. Research Support Foundation of the State of Rio de Janeiro
  3. Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development
  4. German Research Foundation

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Parenchymal strain is a key determinant of lung injury produced by mechanical ventilation. However, imaging estimates of volumetric tidal strain (epsilon = regional tidal volume/reference volume) present substantial conceptual differences in reference volume computation and consideration of tidally recruited lung. We compared current and new methods to estimate tidal volumetric strains with computed tomography, and quantified the effect of tidal volume (V-T) and positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on strain estimates. Eight supine pigs were ventilated with V-T = 6 and 12 ml/kg and PEEP = 0, 6, and 12 cmH(2)O. End-expiratory and end-inspiratory scans were analyzed in eight regions of interest along the ventral-dorsal axis. Regional reference volumes were computed at end-expiration (with/without correction of regional VT for intratidal recruitment) and at resting lung volume (PEEP = 0) corrected for intratidal and PEEP-derived recruitment. All strain estimates demonstrated vertical heterogeneity with the largest tidal strains in middependent regions (P < 0.01). Maximal strains for distinct estimates occurred at different lung regions and were differently affected by V-T-PEEP conditions. Values consistent with lung injury and inflammation were reached regionally, even when global measurements were below critical levels. Strains increased with VT and were larger in middependent than in nondependent lung regions. PEEP reduced tidal-strain estimates referenced to end-expiratory lung volumes, although it did not affect strains referenced to resting lung volume. These estimates of tidal strains in normal lungs point to middependent lung regions as those at risk for ventilator-induced lung injury. The different conditions and topography at which maximal strain estimates occur allow for testing the importance of each estimate for lung injury.

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