Feasibility of asynchronous independent lung high-frequency oscillatory ventilation in the management of acute hypoxemic respiratory failure: A case report
- 1 August 2000
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Critical Care Medicine
- Vol. 28 (8) , 3075-3077
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00003246-200008000-00067
Abstract
To report the first case of the use of asynchronous independent lung high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (AIL-HFOV) in the management of acute hypoxemic respiratory failure in a large pediatric patient with markedly asymmetric lung disease. Case study. Tertiary pediatric intensive care unit in a pediatric teaching hospital. A 17-yr-old, 87-kg male patient with trisomy 21 and with respiratory failure and progressive hypoxemia because of pneumonia. Intubation with a 37-Fr double-lumen endobronchial tube and ventilation with two oscillatory ventilators for a total of 16 days. Hemodynamic data were obtained using a pulmonary artery catheter. Adequate oxygenation and ventilation were readily achieved after institution of AIL-HFOV. The F(IO2)/PaO2 ratio increased from 52 to 224, and the shunt fraction decreased from 40 to 9 after 30 mins of AIL-HFOV. F(IO2) was rapidly reduced from 1.0 to 0.4 on the right lung and to 0.6 on the left lung. Mean arterial pressure was maintained, the cardiac index increased from 3.5 to 5.4 L/min/m2, the systemic vascular resistance index decreased from 1513 to 1225 dyne x sec/cm5 x m2, and the pulmonary vascular resistance index decreased from 723 to 428 dyne x sec/cm5 x m2 without the need for additional fluid boluses or increases in inotropic support. No airleaks developed during the entire hospital stay. AIL-HFOV improved oxygenation and hemodynamic performance in this large patient. This case demonstrates that it is feasible to use two high-frequency oscillatory ventilators to independently ventilate the lungs of a large patient with markedly asymmetric lung disease. We believe that AIL-HFOV deserves future study and development for the treatment of large patients with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure and asymmetric lung disease when other choices are limited.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- High frequency oscillatory ventilation: theory and practice in paediatric patientsPediatric Anesthesia, 1996
- Independent Ventilation and ECMO for Severe Unilateral Pulmonary Edema After SLT for Primary Pulmonary HypertensionChest, 1995
- Independent right lung high frequency and left lung conventional ventilation in the management of severe air leak during ARDSPediatric Anesthesia, 1995
- Prospective, randomized comparison of high-frequency oscillatory ventilation and conventional mechanical ventilation in pediatric respiratory failureCritical Care Medicine, 1994
- Regional coupling between chest wall and lung expansion during HFV: a positron imaging studyJournal of Applied Physiology, 1993
- Simultaneous Independent Lung Ventilation in Pediatric PatientsCritical Care Clinics, 1992
- Independent Lung Ventilation Using High-frequency Ventilation in the Management of a Bronchopleural FistulaAnesthesiology, 1988
- One-lung high-frequency ventilation in the management of traumatic tear of bronchus in a childCritical Care Medicine, 1987
- Differential Mechanical Ventilation in Respiratory Failure Due to Severe Unilateral Lung DiseaseMayo Clinic Proceedings, 1984
- Asynchronous independent lung ventilation (AILV)Critical Care Medicine, 1980