Abstract

BackgroundElectrical impedance tomography (EIT) has been used for functional lung imaging of regional air distributions during mechanical ventilation in intensive care units (ICU). From numerous clinical and animal studies focusing on specific lung functions, a consensus about how to use the EIT technique has been formed lately. We present an integrated EIT system implementing the functions proposed in the consensus. The integrated EIT system could improve the usefulness when monitoring of mechanical ventilation for lung protection so that it could facilitate the clinical acceptance of this new technique.MethodsUsing a custom-designed 16-channel EIT system with 50 frames/s temporal resolution, the integrated EIT system software was developed to implement five functional images and six EIT measures that can be observed in real-time screen view and analysis screen view mode, respectively. We evaluated the performance of the integrated EIT system with ten mechanically ventilated porcine subjects in normal and disease models.ResultsQuantitative and simultaneous imaging of tidal volume (TV), end-expiratory lung volume change (triangleEELV), compliance, ventilation delay, and overdistension/collapse images were performed. Clinically useful parameters were successfully extracted including anterior/posterior ventilation ratio (A/P ratio), center of ventilation ({mathrm{CoV}}_{{x}}, {mathrm{CoV}}_{{y}}), global inhomogeneity (GI), coefficient of variation (CV), ventilation delay and percentile of overdistension/collapse. The integrated EIT system was demonstrated to suggest an optimal positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) for lung protective ventilation in normal and in the disease model of an acute injury. Optimal PEEP for normal and disease model was 2.3 and 7.9 , {mathrm{cmH}}_{2}mathrm{O}, respectively.ConclusionsThe proposed integrated approach for functional lung ventilation imaging could facilitate clinical acceptance of the bedside EIT imaging method in ICU. Future clinical studies of applying the proposed methods to human subjects are needed to show the clinical significance of the method for lung protective mechanical ventilation and mechanical ventilator weaning in ICU.

Highlights

  • Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) has been used for functional lung imaging of regional air distributions during mechanical ventilation in intensive care units (ICU)

  • Tidal volume changes in normal porcine lungs During volume-controlled mechanical ventilation for 10 normal pigs, tidal volume (TV) was adjusted at 6 different levels from 100 to 600 mL at 0 cmH2O positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP)

  • The Bland–Altman plot indicates that the calibrated TV image implemented in the integrated EIT system can be used as a reliable measure of the true tidal volume

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Summary

Introduction

Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) has been used for functional lung imaging of regional air distributions during mechanical ventilation in intensive care units (ICU). From numerous clinical and animal studies focusing on specific lung functions, a consensus about how to use the EIT technique has been formed lately. Time-difference EIT has been used for real-time bedside imaging and monitoring of a mechanically ventilated patient in intensive care units (ICU) [6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. Proper interpretation of functional lung ventilation images is essential to search for an optimal patient-specific ventilator setting including respiration rate (RR), airway pressure, tidal volume (TV), positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), end-expiratory lung volume (EELV), global and regional lung compliances, posture, and other respiratory mechanics parameters [13, 14]. Following the significant efforts of several concerted actions [19, 22,23,24,25], the interdisciplinary group called TRanslational EIT developmeNt stuDy (TREND) was recently formed and built a consensus for clinical applications of lung EIT by comparing and analyzing related studies over the past 30 years [26]

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