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Inducing oscillations in positive end-expiratory pressure improves assessment of cerebrovascular pressure reactivity in patients with traumatic brain injury

Authors :
Tas, Jeanette
Bos, Kirsten DJ
Le Feber, Joost
Beqiri, Erta
Czosnyka, Marek
Haeren, Roel
Van Der Horst, Iwan CC
Van Kuijk, Sander MJ
Strauch, Ulrich
Brady, Ken M
Smielewski, Peter
Aries, Marcel JH
Intensive Care
MUMC+: MA Medische Staf IC (9)
RS: MHeNs - R1 - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Neurochirurgie (9)
RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience
Neurochirurgie
MUMC+: MA Intensive Care (3)
RS: Carim - V04 Surgical intervention
Epidemiologie
MUMC+: KIO Kemta (9)
RS: CAPHRI - R2 - Creating Value-Based Health Care
TechMed Centre
Clinical Neurophysiology
Tas, Jeanette [0000-0002-8914-0960]
Le Feber, Joost [0000-0002-0605-1437]
Beqiri, Erta [0000-0002-8108-0000]
Czosnyka, Marek [0000-0003-2446-8006]
Haeren, Roel [0000-0003-1640-5013]
van der Horst, Iwan CC [0000-0003-3891-8522]
van Kuijk, Sander MJ [0000-0003-2796-729X]
Brady, Ken M [0000-0002-3260-0233]
Smielewski, Peter [0000-0001-5096-3938]
Aries, Marcel JH [0000-0001-5327-1275]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Journal of Applied Physiology, 133(3), 585-592. American Physiological Society, Journal of applied physiology, 133(3), 585-592. American Physiological Society
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Physiological Society, 2022.

Abstract

The cerebral pressure reactivity index (PRx), through intracranial pressure (ICP) measurements, informs clinicians about the cerebral autoregulation (CA) status in adult-sedated patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI). Using PRx in clinical practice is currently limited by variability over shorter monitoring periods. We applied an innovative method to reduce the PRx variability by ventilator-induced slow (1/min) positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) oscillations. We hypothesized that, as seen in a previous animal model, the PRx variability would be reduced by inducing slow arterial blood pressure (ABP) and ICP oscillations without other clinically relevant physiological changes. Patients with TBI were ventilated with a static PEEP for 30 min (PRx period) followed by a 30-min period of slow [1/min (0.0167 Hz)] +5 cmH2O PEEP oscillations (induced (iPRx period). Ten patients with TBI were included. No clinical monitoring was discontinued and no additional interventions were required during the iPRx period. The PRx variability [measured as the standard deviation (SD) of PRx] decreased significantly during the iPRx period from 0.25 (0.22-0.30) to 0.14 (0.09-0.17) (P = 0.006). There was a power increase around the induced frequency (1/min) for both ABP and ICP (P = 0.002). In conclusion, 1/min PEEP-induced oscillations reduced the PRx variability in patients with TBI with ICP levels

Details

ISSN :
15221601 and 87507587
Volume :
133
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Applied Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1f122db74bf5df26c03ecf1d77a9232c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00199.2022