Abstract

BackgroundInspiratory patient effort under assisted mechanical ventilation is an important quantity for assessing patient–ventilator interaction and recognizing over and under assistance. An established clinical standard is respiratory muscle pressure textit{P}_{mathrm{mus}}, derived from esophageal pressure (textit{P}_{mathrm{es}}), which requires the correct placement and calibration of an esophageal balloon catheter. Surface electromyography (sEMG) of the respiratory muscles represents a promising and straightforward alternative technique, enabling non-invasive monitoring of patient activity.MethodsA prospective observational study was conducted with patients under assisted mechanical ventilation, who were scheduled for elective bronchoscopy. Airway flow and pressure, esophageal/gastric pressures and sEMG of the diaphragm and intercostal muscles were recorded at four levels of pressure support ventilation. Patient efforts were quantified via the textit{P}_{mathrm{mus}}-time product ({mathrm{PTP}}_{mathrm{mus}}), the transdiaphragmatic pressure-time product ({mathrm{PTP}}_{mathrm{di}}) and the EMG-time products (ETP) of the two sEMG channels. To improve the signal-to-noise ratio, a method for automatically selecting the more informative of the sEMG channels was investigated. Correlation between ETP and {mathrm{PTP}}_{mathrm{mus}} was assessed by determining a neuromechanical conversion factor textit{K}_{mathrm{EMG}} between the two quantities. Moreover, it was investigated whether this scalar can be reliably determined from airway pressure during occlusion maneuvers, thus allowing to quantify inspiratory effort based solely on sEMG measurements.ResultsIn total, 62 patients with heterogeneous pulmonary diseases were enrolled in the study, 43 of which were included in the data analysis. The ETP of the two sEMG channels was well correlated with {mathrm{PTP}}_{mathrm{mus}} (textit{r}={0.79pm 0.25} and textit{r}={0.84pm 0.16} for diaphragm and intercostal recordings, respectively). The proposed automatic channel selection method improved correlation with {mathrm{PTP}}_{mathrm{mus}} (textit{r}={0.87pm 0.09}). The neuromechanical conversion factor obtained by fitting ETP to {mathrm{PTP}}_{mathrm{mus}} varied widely between patients (textit{K}_{mathrm{EMG}}= {4.32pm 3.73},{hbox {cm}hbox {H}_{2}hbox {O}/upmu hbox {V}}) and was highly correlated with the scalar determined during occlusions (textit{r}={0.95}, textit{p}<{.001}). The occlusion-based method for deriving {mathrm{PTP}}_{mathrm{mus}} from ETP showed a breath-wise deviation to {mathrm{PTP}}_{mathrm{mus}} of {0.43pm 1.73},{hbox {cm}hbox {H}_{2}hbox {O},hbox {s}} across all datasets.ConclusionThese results support the use of surface electromyography as a non-invasive alternative for monitoring breath-by-breath inspiratory effort of patients under assisted mechanical ventilation.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe work of breathing is shared between patient and ventilator

  • In assisted mechanical ventilation, the work of breathing is shared between patient and ventilator

  • A total of 62 patients were enrolled in the study, 43 of which were included in the data analysis

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Summary

Introduction

The work of breathing is shared between patient and ventilator. A new paradigm has been introduced, termed diaphragm-protective ventilation, advocating to closely monitor spontaneous breathing effort and to adjust ventilator settings such that an adequate division of the respiratory workload is reached [2,3,4]. A current clinical standard for quantifying inspiratory effort is to measure esophageal pressure Pes and derive an estimate of respiratory muscle pressure Pmus from this measurement, mainly by correcting for the influence of the chest wall elastance [3, 5]. Inspiratory patient effort under assisted mechanical ventilation is an important quantity for assessing patient–ventilator interaction and recognizing over and under assistance. An established clinical standard is respira‐ tory muscle pressure Pmus , derived from esophageal pressure ( Pes ), which requires the correct placement and calibra‐ tion of an esophageal balloon catheter. Surface electromyography (sEMG) of the respiratory muscles represents a promising and straightforward alternative technique, enabling non-invasive monitoring of patient activity

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