RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT05826847

Prone Positioning and Abdominal Binding on Lung and Muscle Protection in ARDS Patients During Spontaneous Breathing

Effect of Prone Positioning and Abdominal Binding on Lung and Muscle Protection in ARDS Patients With ICU-acquired Weakness Transitioning From Controlled to Spontaneous Breathing


Sponsor

University of Chile

Enrollment

36 participants

Start Date

Dec 6, 2023

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Ventilator-induced diaphragmatic dysfunction and intensive care unit (ICU)-acquired weakness are two consequences of prolonged mechanical ventilation and critical illness in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Both complicate the process of withdrawing mechanical ventilation, increase hospital mortality and cause chronic disability in survivors. During transition from controlled to spontaneous breathing, these complications of critical illness favor an abnormal respiratory pattern and recruit accessory respiratory muscles which may promote additional lung and muscle injury. The type of ventilatory support and positioning may affect the muscle dysfunction and patient-self-inflicted lung injury at spontaneous breathing onset. In that regard, ARDS patients with ventilator-induced diaphragmatic dysfunction and ICU-acquired weakness who are transitioning from controlled to partial ventilatory support probably present an abnormal respiratory pattern which exacerbates lung and muscle injury. Physiological-oriented ventilatory approaches based on prone positioning or semi recumbent positioning with abdominal binding at spontaneous breathing onset, could decrease lung and muscle injury by favoring a better neuromuscular efficiency, and preventing intense inspiratory efforts and high transpulmonary driving pressures, as well as high-magnitude pendelluft. In the current project, in addition to perform a multimodal description of the severity of ventilator-induced diaphragmatic dysfunction and ICU-acquired weakness in prolonged mechanically ventilated ARDS patients, prone positioning and supine plus thoracoabdominal binding at spontaneous breathing onset will be evaluated.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 Years

Inclusion Criteria3

  • Adult ARDS patients with moderate-severe ARDS on controlled protective mechanical ventilation for more than 3 days
  • Stable hemodynamics
  • Level of consciousness enough to initiate spontaneous breathing

Exclusion Criteria7

  • Unstable hemodynamics
  • Tracheostomy
  • Abnormal level of consciousness
  • Central nervous system injury
  • Esophageal varices
  • Pregnancy
  • Contraindications for installation of electrical impedance tomography or ultrasound assessments

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Interventions

PROCEDUREProne Positioning

Prone positioning will be performed according to ICU local protocol with trained provider teams.

PROCEDUREThoracoabdominal Binding

Thoracoabdominal binding will be used in semi-recumbent position (supine at 45º) and titrated to obtain a 20-30% decrease in chest wall compliance and 1-3 cm H2O increase in end-expiratory gastric pressure during steady-state breathing

PROCEDUREControl

ARDS patients at spontaneous breathing onset on pressure support ventilation mode in supine position at 45º degrees, performed under standard PEEP according to ARDSNet strategy and individualized PEEP applied in random order.


Locations(1)

Hospital Clínico Universidad de Chile

Independencia, Chile

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NCT05826847


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