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The Fundamentals of Respiratory Physiology to Manage the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Overview

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FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
卷 11, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2020.615690

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coronavirus disease-19; respiratory physiology; control of breathing; hypoxemia; respiratory failure

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During the COVID-19 crisis, healthcare systems worldwide are facing unprecedented challenges in managing critically ill patients, requiring caregivers to have a solid understanding of physiological principles to properly intubate, manage mechanical ventilation, and wean patients off ventilators in a timely manner. This review aims to assist healthcare providers in handling respiratory support based on recent knowledge in the pathophysiology of respiratory SARS-CoV-2 infection.
The growing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) crisis has stressed worldwide healthcare systems probably as never before, requiring a tremendous increase of the capacity of intensive care units to handle the sharp rise of patients in critical situation. Since the dominant respiratory feature of COVID-19 is worsening arterial hypoxemia, eventually leading to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) promptly needing mechanical ventilation, a systematic recourse to intubation of every hypoxemic patient may be difficult to sustain in such peculiar context and may not be deemed appropriate for all patients. Then, it is essential that caregivers have a solid knowledge of physiological principles to properly interpret arterial oxygenation, to intubate at the satisfactory moment, to adequately manage mechanical ventilation, and, finally, to initiate ventilator weaning, as safely and as expeditiously as possible, in order to make it available for the next patient. Through the expected mechanisms of COVID-19-induced hypoxemia, as well as the notion of silent hypoxemia often evoked in COVID-19 lung injury and its potential parallelism with high altitude pulmonary edema, from the description of hemoglobin oxygen affinity in patients with severe COVID-19 to the interest of the prone positioning in order to treat severe ARDS patients, this review aims to help caregivers from any specialty to handle respiratory support following recent knowledge in the pathophysiology of respiratory SARS-CoV-2 infection.

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