Mechanical ventilation in acute respiratory distress syndrome. 2001

S J Finney, and T W Evans
Unit of Critical Care, Imperial College School of Medicine, Royal Brompton Hospital, London, UK.

The acute respiratory distress syndrome occurs commonly in critical care. There is an increasing volume of clinical and experimental evidence that poor ventilatory technique that is injurious to the lungs can propagate the systemic inflammatory response and adversely affect mortality. Many ventilatory techniques have been hypothesized to 'protect' the lungs during mechanical ventilation, including tidal volume limitation, high positive end-expiratory pressure, pressure-controlled inverse ratio ventilation, and prone positioning. Experimental techniques include liquid ventilation, surfactant administration and extracorporeal gas exchange. Despite excellent rationale for their use, few techniques, apart from tidal volume limitation, have been shown to improve survival in randomized controlled trials.

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