We found that ΔP was the ventilation variable that best stratified risk. Decreases in ΔP owing to changes in ventilator settings were strongly associated with increased survival. (Funded by Fundação de Amparo e Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo and others.).
Survivors of the acute respiratory distress syndrome have persistent functional disability one year after discharge from the intensive care unit. Most patients have extrapulmonary conditions, with muscle wasting and weakness being most prominent.
Survival among mechanically ventilated patients depends not only on the factors present at the start of mechanical ventilation, but also on the development of complications and patient management in the intensive care unit.
CUTE LUNG INJURY AND ACUTE respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS, the most severe form of acute lung injury), are potentially devastating complications of critical illness. 1 Arising in response to direct lung injury (eg, pneumonia) or intense systemic inflammation (eg, sepsis), 2 the pathogenesis involves pulmonary edema, diffuse cellular destruction, alveolar collapse, and disordered repair. Mortality and health care costs are high, 3 and long-term survivors experience serious morbidity. 4 See also pp 646, 691, and 693.
ROTECTING LUNGS FROM VENTIlation-induced injury is an important principle in the management of patients with acute lung injury or acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Although the critical care community has generally endorsed lower tidal volumes and inspiratory pressures, the optimal level of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) remains unestablished. 1,2 Experimental data suggest that PEEP levels exceeding traditional values of 5 to 12 cm H 2 O can minimize cyclical alveolar collapse and corresponding shearing injury to the lungs in patients with considerable edema and alveolar collapse. 3-5 For patients with relatively mild acute lung injury , however, potential adverse consequences of higher PEEP levels, including circulatory depression 6 or lung overdistension, 7 may outweigh the benefits. Several multicenter, randomized trials testing the incremental effect of higher levels See also p 883 and Patient Page.
A decrease in ARDS mortality was only seen in observational studies from 1984 to 1993. Mortality did not decrease between 1994 (when a consensus definition was published) and 2006, and is lower in RCTs than observational studies.
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