4.5 Article

Cardiorespiratory coupling in mechanically ventilated patients studied via synchrogram analysis

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11517-023-02784-4

Keywords

Mechanical ventilation; Cardiorespiratory coupling; Heart rate variability; Respiratory sinus arrhythmia; Autonomic nervous system; Critical care unit

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The study aimed to differentiate the impact of three ventilatory modes on cardiorespiratory phase coupling in critically ill patients. The highest synchronization was found during PCV ventilation, while the lowest was observed with NAVA. PCV induced a significant amount of cardiorespiratory phase synchronization, while patient-driven ventilatory modes had weaker synchronization, reaching the minimum with NAVA.
Respiration and cardiac activity are strictly interconnected with reciprocal influences. They act as weakly coupled oscillators showing varying degrees of phase synchronization and their interactions are affected by mechanical ventilation. The study aims at differentiating the impact of three ventilatory modes on the cardiorespiratory phase coupling in critically ill patients. The coupling between respiration and heartbeat was studied through cardiorespiratory phase synchronization analysis carried out via synchrogram during pressure control ventilation (PCV), pressure support ventilation (PSV), and neurally adjusted ventilatory assist (NAVA) in critically ill patients. Twenty patients were studied under all the three ventilatory modes. Cardiorespiratory phase synchronization changed significantly across ventilatory modes. The highest synchronization degree was found during PCV session, while the lowest one with NAVA. The percentage of all epochs featuring synchronization regardless of the phase locking ratio was higher with PCV (median: 33.9%, first-third quartile: 21.3-39.3) than PSV (median: 15.7%; first-third quartile: 10.9-27.8) and NAVA (median: 3.7%; first-third quartile: 3.3-19.2). PCV induces a significant amount of cardiorespiratory phase synchronization in critically ill mechanically ventilated patients. Synchronization induced by patient-driven ventilatory modes was weaker, reaching the minimum with NAVA. Findings can be explained as a result of the more regular and powerful solicitation of the cardiorespiratory system induced by PCV.

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