Acute respiratory distress syndrome

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), also known as respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) or adult respiratory distress syndrome (in contrast with IRDS) is a serious reaction to various forms of injuries to the lung, leading to impaired gas exchange and inflammation. It requires mechanical ventilation and intensive care admission.

Contents

General description

ARDS is a severe lung disease caused by a variety of direct and indirect insults. It is characterized by inflammation of the lung parenchyma, leading to impaired gas exchange, systemic inflammation and possibly multiple organ failure and death, due both to hypoxia and the release of inflammatory mediators.

It was formerly most commonly known as adult respiratory distress syndrome to differentiate it from infant respiratory distress syndrome premature infants. However, as ARDS also occurs in children, ARDS has gradually shifted to mean acute rather than adult. The differences with the typical infant syndrome remain.

Epidemiology

The annual incidence of ARDS is between 1.5 to 13.5 people per 100,000 in the general population. Its incidence in the intensive care unit (ICU), mechanically ventilated population is much higher. Brun-Buisson et al. (2004) reported a prevalence of acute lung injury (ALI) (see below) of 16.1% percent in ventilated patients admitted for more than 4 hours. More than half these patients may develop ARDS.

Mechanical ventilation, sepsis, pneumonia, shock, aspiration, trauma (especially pulmonary contusion), major surgery, massive transfusions and smoke inhalation may all trigger ARDS. Pneumonia and sepsis are the most common triggers and pneumonia, is present in up to 60% of patients. Pneumonia and sepsis may be either causes or complications of ARDS.

Elevated abdominal pressure of any cause is also probably a risk factor for the development of ARDS, particularly during mechanical ventilation.

Mortality varies from 30% to 60%. Usually, randomized controlled trials in the literature show lower death rates, both in control and treatment patients. This is thought to be due to stricter enrollment criteria. Observational studies generally report 50%-60% mortality.

Patient presentation and diagnosis

ARDS usually occurs within 24 to 48 hours of the initial injury or illness. The patient usually presents with shortness of breath, tachypnea, and symptoms related to the underlying cause.

An arterial blood gas analysis and a chest x-ray allow formal diagnosis. History and a thorough review of comorbid conditions are invariably needed to effectively treat the patient.

The American and European Consensus Conference criteria (1) define ARDS as a ratio of arterial partial oxygen tension (PaO2) to fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) below 200 mmHg in the presence of bilateral alveolar infiltrates on the chest x-ray. These infiltrates may appear similar to those of left ventricular failure, but the cardiac silhouette appears normal in ARDS. Also, the pulmonary capillary wedge pressure is normal (less than 18 mmHg) in ARDS, but raised in left ventricular failure.

A PaO2/FiO2 ratio less than 300 mmHg with bilateral infiltrates indicates acute lung injury (ALI). Although formally considered different from ARDS, ALI is usually just a precursor to ARDS.

Pathophysiology

ARDS is characterized by a diffuse inflammation of lung parenchyma. The triggering insult to the parenchyma usually results in an initial release of cytokines and other inflammatory mediators, secreted by local epithelial and endothelial cells.

Neutrophils and some T-lymphocytes quickly migrate into the inflamed lung parynchema and contribute in the amplification of the phenomenon.

Although the triggering mechanisms are not completely understood, recent research has examined the role of inflammation and mechanical stress.

Inflammation

Inflammation alone, as in sepsis, causes endothelial dysfunction, fluid extravasation from the capillaries and impaired drainage of fluid from the lungs. Dysfunction of type I pulmonary epithelial cells may also be present, with a reduction in surfactant production. Elevated inspired oxygen concentration often become necessary at this stage, and they may facilitate a 'respiratory burst' in immune cells.

In a secondary phase, endothelial dysfunction causes cells and inflammatory exudate to enter the alveoli. This pulmonary edema increases the thickness of the alveolo-capillary space, increasing the distance the oxygen must diffuse to reach blood. This impairs gas exchange leading to hypoxia, increases the work of breathing, eventually induces fibrosis of the airspace.

Moreover, edema and decreased surfactant production by type I pneumocytes may cause whole alveoli to collapse, or to completely flood. This loss of aeration, is contributes further to the right-to-left shunt in ARDS. As the alveoli contain progressively less gas, more blood flows through them without being oxygenated.

Collapsed alveoli (and small bronchi) do not allow gas exchange. It is not uncommon to see patients with a PaO2 of 60 mmHg (8.0 kPa) despite mechanical ventilation with 100% inspired oxygen.

The loss of aeration may follow different patterns according to the nature of the underlying disease, and other factors. In pneumonia-induced ARDS, for example, large, more commonly causes relatively compact areas of alveolar infiltrates. These are usually distributed to the lower lobes, in their posterior segments, and they roughly correspond to the initial infected area.

In sepsis or trauma-induced ARDS, infiltrates are usually more patchy and diffuse. The posterior and basal segments are always more affected, but the distribution is even less homogeneous.

Loss of aeration also causes important changes in lung mechanical properties. These alterations are fundamental in the process of inflammation amplification and progression to ARDS in mechanically ventilated patients.

Mechanical stress

Mechanical ventilation is an essential part of the treatment of ARDS. As loss of aeration (and the underlying disease) progress, the work of breathing (WOB) eventually grows to a level incompatible with life. Thus, mechanical ventilation is initiated to relieve respiratory muscles of their work, and to protect the usually obtunded patient's airways.

However, mechanical ventilation may constitute a risk factor for the development, or the worsening, of ARDS.

Aside from the infectious complicances arising from invasive ventilation with tracheal intubation, positive-pressure ventilation directly alters lung mechanics during ARDS. The result is higher mortality, when injudicious techniques are used.

In 1998, Amato et al published a paper showing substantial improvement in the outcome of patients ventilated with lower tidal volumes (Vt) (6 mL·kg-1) (2). This result was confirmed in a 2000 study sponsored by the NIH (3). Although both these studies were widely criticized for several reasons, and although the authors were not the first to experiment lower-volume ventilation, they shed new light on the relationship between mechanical ventilation and ARDS.

One authoritative opinion is that the forces applied to the lung by the ventilator may work as a lever to induce further damage to lung parenchyma. It appears that shear stress at the interface between collapsed and aerated units may result in the breakdown of aerated units, which inflate asymmetrically due to the 'stickiness' of surrounding flooded alveoli. The fewer such interfaces around an alveolus, the lesser the stress.

Indeed, even relatively low stress forces may induce signal transduction systems at the cellular level, thus inducing the release of inflammatory mediators.

This form of stress is thought to be applied by the transpulmonary pressure (gradient) (Pl) generated by the ventilator or, better, its cyclical variations. The better outcome obtained in patients ventilated with lower Vt may be interpreted as a beneficial effect of the lower Pl. Transpulmonary pressure, is an indirect function of the Vt setting on the ventilator, and only trial patients with plateau pressures (a surrogate for the actual Pl) were less than 32 cmH2O (3.1 kPa) had improved survival.

The way Pl is applied on alveolar surface determines the shear stress to which lung units are exposed. ARDS is characterized by an usually inhomogeneous reduction of the airspace, and thus by a tendency towards higher Pl at the same Vt, and towards higher stress on less diseased units.

The inhomogeneity of alveoli at different stages of disease is further increased by the gravitational gradient to which they are exposed, and the different perfusion pressures at which blood flows through them. Finally, abdominal pressure exerts an additional pressure on infero-posterior lung segments, favoring compression and collapse of those units.

The different mechanical properties of alveoli in ARDS may be interpreted as having varying time constants (the product of alveolar compliance × resistance). A long time constant indicates an alveolus which opens slowly during tidal inflation, as a consequence of contrasting pressure around it, or altered water-air interface inside it (loss of surfactant, flooding).

Slow alveoli are said to be 'kept open' using positive end-expiratory pressure, a feature of modern ventilators which maintains a positive airway pressure throughout the whole respiratory cycle. A higher mean pressure cycle-wide slows the collapse of diseased units, but it has to be weighed against the corresponding elevation in Pl/plateau pressure.

The prone position also reduces the inhomogeneity in alveolar time constants induced gravity and edema.

Progression

If the underlying disease or injurious factor is not removed, the amount of inflammatory mediators released by the lungs in ARDS may result in a systemic inflammatory response syndrome (or sepsis if there is lung infection). The evolution towards shock and/or multiple organ failure follows paths analogous to the pathophysiology of sepsis.

This adds up to the impaired oxygenation, the real mainstay of ARDS, and respiratory acidosis, often caused by the ventilation techniques indicated in ARDS.

The result is a critical illness in which the 'endothelial disease' of severe sepsis/SIRS is worsened by the pulmonary dysfunction, which further impairs oxygen delivery.

Treatment

General

ARDS is usually treated with mechanical ventilation in the ICU. Ventilation is usually delivered through oro-tracheal intubation, or tracheostomy whenever prolonged ventilation (≥2 weeks) is deemed inevitable.

The possibilities of non-invasive ventilation are limited to the very early period of the disease or, better, to prevention in individuals at risk for the development of the disease (atypical pneumonias, pulmonary contusion, major surgery patients).

Treatment of the underlying cause is imperative.

Appropriate antibiotic therapy must be administered as soon as microbiological culture results are available. Empirical therapy may be appropriate if local microbiological surveillance is efficient. More than 60% ARDS patients experience a (nosocomial) pulmonary infection either before or after the onset of lung injury.

The origin of infection, when surgically treatable, must be operated on. When sepsis is diagnosed, appropriate protocols should be enacted.

Commonly used supportive therapy includes particular techniques of mechanical ventilation and pharmacological agents whose effectiveness with respect to the outcome has not yet been proven. It is now debated whether mechanical ventilation is to be considered mere supportive therapy or actual treatment, since it may substantially affect survival.

Low tidal volumes (or plateau pressures)

A particular ventilation mode has yet to be proven more effective than others in ARDS, certain parameters have passed the test of science.

Ventilation with low Vt may improve survival in ARDS, although the real goal seems to be a plateau pressure = 32 mmHg (4.3 kPa). To date, further reductions in pressures have not yielded significant benefits, probably because of the associated, more severe respiratory acidosis. Although 6 mL·kg-1 were used in published trials, lower plateau pressures may be obtained at higher volumes (usually ≤ 10 mL·kg-1). There is no evidence that this higher range of Vt adversely affects outcome.

Volume-controlled intermittent mandatory ventilation has been the traditional, default mode of ventilation in ARDS patients. Pressure-controlled ventilation, biphasic positive airway pressure ventilation and newer modes may allow for better control of plateau pressures. This might prove especially true in patients who are not undergoing neuromuscular paralysis or very deep sedation.

Positive end-expiratory pressure

Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) must be used in mechanically-ventilated patients in order to contrast the tendency to collapse of affected alveoli.

Ideally, a 'perfect' PEEP would match the increased alveolar surface tension, caused by surfactant deficiency and external pressure (edema), thus restoring a normal time constant in all affected units.

However, because of the cited inherent inhomogeneity, surface tension varies, and so do PEEP requirements for the diseased units. PEEP should be kept Furthermore, high levels of PEEP may impair venous blood return to the right heart, although the actual impact of PEEP on hemodynamics is still debated.

The 'best PEEP' used to be defined as 'some' cmH2O above the lower inflection point (LIP) in the sigmoidal pressure-volume relationship curve of the lung. Recent research has shown that the LIP-point pressure is no better than any pressure above it, as recruitment of collapsed alveoli, and more importantly the overdistention of aerated units, occur throughout the whole inflation. Despite the awkwardness of most procedures used to trace the pressure-volume curve, it is still used by some to define the minimum PEEP to be applied to their patients. Some of the newest ventilators have the ability to automatically plot a pressure-volume curve. The possibility of having an 'instantaneous' tracing trigger might produce renewed interest in this analysis.

PEEP may also be set empirically. Some authors suggest performing a 'recruiting maneuver' (i.e., a short time at a very high continuous positive airway pressure, such as 50 cmH2O (4.9 kPa), to recruit, or open, collapsed unit with a high distending pressure) and then to increase PEEP to a rather high level before restoring previous ventilation. The final PEEP level should be the one just before the drop in PaO2 (or peripheral blood oxygen saturation) during a step-down trial.

It is important to remember that PEEP 'stacks up' to Pl during volume-controlled ventilation. Thus, at high levels, it may cause significant overdistension of (and injury to) compliant, aerated units, and higher plateau pressures at the same Vt.

Intrinsic PEEP (iPEEP) is not detected during normal ventilation. However, when ventilating at high frequencies, its contribution may be substantial, both in its positive and negative effects. There are 'underground', unproven claims that the Amato and NIH/ARDSNetwork studies got a positive result because of the high iPEEP levels reached by spontaneously breathing patients in low-volume assist-control ventilation. Whether or not that is true, it is a fact that iPEEP has been measured in very few formal studies on ventilation in ARDS patients, and its entity is largely unknown. Its measurement is recommended in the treatment of ARDS patients, especially when using high-frequency (oscillatory/jet) ventilation.

A compromise between the beneficial and adverse effects of PEEP is, as usual, inevitable.

Prone position

Nitric oxide

Surfactant therapy

Other drugs

References

  1. Bernard GR, Artigas A, Brigham KL, Carlet J, Falke K, Hudson L, Lamy M, Legall JR, Morris A, Spragg R. The American-European Consensus Conference on ARDS. Definitions, mechanisms, relevant outcomes, and clinical trial coordination. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1994;149:818-24. (Pubmed Link (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=7509706))
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