Abstract
The critical care management of pleural air leaks can be challenging in all patients, but particularly in patients on mechanical ventilation. To investigate the effect of central airway pressure and pleural pressure on pulmonary air leaks, we studied orotracheally intubated mice with pleural injuries. We used clinically relevant variables – namely, airway pressure and pleural pressure – to investigate flow through peripheral air leaks. The model studied the pleural injuries using a pressure‐decay maneuver. The pressure‐decay maneuver involved a 3 sec ramp to 30 cmH20 followed by a 3 sec breath hold. After pleural injury, the pressure‐decay maneuver demonstrated a distinctive airway pressure time history. Peak inflation was followed by a rapid decrease to a lower plateau phase. The decay phase of the inflation maneuver was influenced by the injury area. The rate of pressure decline with multiple injuries (28 ± 8 cmH20/sec) was significantly greater than a single injury (12 ± 3 cmH2O/sec) (P < 0.05). In contrast, the plateau phase pressure was independent of injury surface area, but dependent upon transpulmonary pressure. The mean plateau transpulmonary pressure was 18 ± 0.7 cm H2O. Finally, analysis of the inflation ramp demonstrated that nearly all volume loss occurred at the end of inflation (P < 0.001). We conclude that the air flow through peripheral lung injuries was greatest at increased lung volumes and limited by peripheral airway closure. In addition to suggesting an intrinsic mechanism for limiting flow through peripheral air leaks, these findings suggest the utility of positive end‐expiratory pressure and negative pleural pressure to maintain lung volumes in patients with pleural injuries.
Highlights
Pleural air leak leading to pneumothorax is an important clinical issue for neonates, children, and adults
The inflation maneuver resulted in a distinctive airway pressure (Paw) time history; that is, peak inflation was followed by a rapid decrease to a lower plateau phase at 15–18 cmH20 (Fig. 2D)
Air flow through a pleural air leak has been commonly considered an interaction of pleural hole size, local lung compliance, airway pressure, relative airway resistance and transpulmonary pressure (Roth et al 1988) – a complex interaction likely to preclude a practical understanding of its pathophysiology
Summary
Pleural air leak leading to pneumothorax is an important clinical issue for neonates, children, and adults. The incidence of pneumothorax in infants on positive pressure ventilation ranges from 22% to 41% with subsequent mortality rates as high as 31–70% (Sly and Drew 1984; Yu et al 1986; Klingenberg et al 2017). In both spontaneously breathing and mechanically ventilated patients, air leaks are a potentially life-threatening complication in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) (Flume et al 2010), idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) (Iwasawa et al 2010), and lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) (Almoosa et al 2006).
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