학술논문

Intra-tidal PaO2 oscillations associated with mechanical ventilation: a pilot study to identify discrete morphologies in a porcine model
Document Type
article
Source
Intensive Care Medicine Experimental, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2023)
Subject
Acute respiratory distress syndrome
Mechanical ventilation
Arterial oxygen tension
Oxygen oscillations
Functional principal component analysis
Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid
RC86-88.9
Language
English
ISSN
2197-425X
Abstract
Abstract Background Within-breath oscillations in arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) can be detected using fast responding intra-arterial oxygen sensors in animal models. These PaO2 signals, which rise in inspiration and fall in expiration, may represent cyclical recruitment/derecruitment and, therefore, a potential clinical monitor to allow titration of ventilator settings in lung injury. However, in hypovolaemia models, these oscillations have the potential to become inverted, such that they decline, rather than rise, in inspiration. This inversion suggests multiple aetiologies may underlie these oscillations. A correct interpretation of the various PaO2 oscillation morphologies is essential to translate this signal into a monitoring tool for clinical practice. We present a pilot study to demonstrate the feasibility of a new analysis method to identify these morphologies. Methods Seven domestic pigs (average weight 31.1 kg) were studied under general anaesthesia with muscle relaxation and mechanical ventilation. Three underwent saline-lavage lung injury and four were uninjured. Variations in PEEP, tidal volume and presence/absence of lung injury were used to induce different morphologies of PaO2 oscillation. Functional principal component analysis and k-means clustering were employed to separate PaO2 oscillations into distinct morphologies, and the cardiorespiratory physiology associated with these PaO2 morphologies was compared. Results PaO2 oscillations from 73 ventilatory conditions were included. Five functional principal components were sufficient to explain ≥ 95% of the variance of the recorded PaO2 signals. From these, five unique morphologies of PaO2 oscillation were identified, ranging from those which increased in inspiration and decreased in expiration, through to those which decreased in inspiration and increased in expiration. This progression was associated with the estimates of the first functional principal component (P