Prone position: how understanding and clinical application of a technique progress with time

Luciano Gattinoni, Serena Brusatori, Rosanna D’Albo, Roberta Maj, Mara Velati, Carmelo Zinnato, Simone Gattarello, Fabio Lombardo, Isabella Fratti, Federica Romitti, Leif Saager, Luigi Camporota, Mattia Busana
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Historical background

The prone position was first proposed on theoretical background in 1974 (more advantageous distribution of mechanical ventilation). The first clinical report on 5 ARDS patients in 1976 showed remarkable improvement of oxygenation after pronation. 

Pathophysiology

The findings in CT scans enhanced the use of prone position in ARDS patients. The main mechanism of the improved gas exchange seen in the prone position is nowadays attributed to a dorsal ventilatory recruitment, with a substantially unchanged distribution of perfusion. Regardless of the gas exchange, the primary effect of the prone position is a more homogenous distribution of ventilation, stress and strain, with similar size of pulmonary units in dorsal and ventral regions. In contrast, in the supine position the ventral regions are more expanded compared with the dorsal regions, which leads to greater ventral stress and strain, induced by mechanical ventilation.

Outcome in ARDS

The number of clinical studies paralleled the evolution of the pathophysiological understanding. The first two clinical trials in 2001 and 2004 were based on the hypothesis that better oxygenation would lead to a better survival and the studies were more focused on gas exchange than on lung mechanics. The equations better oxygenation = better survival was disproved by these and other larger trials (ARMA trial). However, the first studies provided signals that some survival advantages were possible in a more severe ARDS, where both oxygenation and lung mechanics were impaired. The PROSEVA trial finally showed the benefits of prone position on mortality supporting the thesis that the clinical advantages of prone position, instead of improved gas exchange, were mainly due to a less harmful mechanical ventilation and better distribution of stress and strain. In less severe ARDS, in spite of a better gas exchange, reduced mechanical stress and strain, and improved oxygenation, prone position was ineffective on outcome.

Prone position and COVID-19

The mechanisms of oxygenation impairment in early COVID-19 are different than in typical ARDS and relate more on perfusion alteration than on alveolar consolidation/collapse, which are minimal in the early phase. Bronchial shunt may also contribute to the early COVID-19 hypoxemia. Therefore, in this phase, the oxygenation improvement in prone position is due to a better matching of local ventilation and perfusion, primarily caused by the perfusion component. Unfortunately, the conditions for improved outcomes, i.e. a better distribution of stress and strain, are almost absent in this phase of COVID-19 disease, as the lung parenchyma is nearly fully inflated. Due to some contradictory results, further studies are needed to better investigate the effect of prone position on outcome in COVID-19 patients.

Graphical Abstract

俯卧位:对一项技术的理解和临床应用如何随着时间的推移而进步
历史背景1974 年,在理论上首次提出了俯卧位(更有利于机械通气的分布)。1976 年,关于 5 名 ARDS 患者的首份临床报告显示,采用俯卧位后氧合情况明显改善。病理生理学CT扫描的发现促进了俯卧位在 ARDS 患者中的应用。如今,俯卧位改善气体交换的主要机制归因于背侧通气招募,灌注分布基本不变。无论气体交换如何,俯卧位的主要影响是通气、压力和应变分布更均匀,背侧和腹侧区域的肺单位大小相似。相反,在仰卧位时,腹侧区域与背侧区域相比更加扩张,这导致机械通气引起的腹侧应力和应变更大。2001 年和 2004 年的头两项临床试验是基于 "更好的氧合会带来更好的存活率 "这一假设进行的,这些研究更侧重于气体交换而非肺力学。这些试验和其他更大规模的试验(ARMA 试验)推翻了 "更好的氧合=更好的生存 "这一公式。然而,首批研究提供的信号表明,在氧合和肺力学均受损的较严重 ARDS 中,一些生存优势是可能存在的。PROSEVA 试验最终证明了俯卧位对死亡率的益处,支持了以下论点:俯卧位的临床优势不是气体交换的改善,而主要是由于机械通气的危害更小以及压力和应变的分布更好。在不太严重的 ARDS 患者中,尽管俯卧位能改善气体交换、减少机械应力和应变、改善氧合,但对预后却没有影响。早期 COVID-19 的氧合障碍机制不同于典型的 ARDS,更多与灌注改变有关,而不是肺泡巩固/塌陷,后者在早期阶段微乎其微。支气管分流也可能导致 COVID-19 早期的低氧血症。因此,在这一阶段,俯卧位的氧合改善是由于局部通气和灌注更好地匹配,这主要是由灌注部分造成的。遗憾的是,在 COVID-19 疾病的这一阶段,由于肺实质几乎完全充气,因此几乎不存在改善预后的条件,即更好的应力和应变分布。由于存在一些相互矛盾的结果,需要进一步研究俯卧位对 COVID-19 患者预后的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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