Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Acute respiratory distress syndrome remains a serious condition, with a mortality rate of between 30 and 50%. The use of mechanical ventilation with small tidal volumes, and by limiting the plateau pressure in the respiratory tract below 30 cm H2O has been shown to reduce mortality by approximately 10%, probably by reducing pulmonary hyperinflation and pulmonary lesions induced by mechanical ventilation. It is therefore now established that the respirator settings influence patient prognosis. However, around 30% of patients with ARDS ventilated with these settings supposedly protective continue to present signs of pulmonary hyperinflation on tomodensitometry, suggesting an additional reduction in the tidal volume could be required in certain patients. Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is a new imaging technique that gathers functional pulmonary information at bedside.
This technique also allows a regional analysis, allowing the complexity of the spatial distribution of ARDS pulmonary lesions to be understood. The hypothesis is that EIT is a reliable method to detect at-risk situations of lesions induced by mechanical ventilation among patients with ARDS.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Excessively serious respiration precluding the modifications to ventilation planned in the protocol
Contraindication for transport to the radiology department
Without reliable monitoring during transport of the patient to the radiology department
Intracranial hypertension
Impossible to apply EIT electrodes on the thorax of the patient (burns, dressings, ...)
Undrained pneumothorax or bronchopleural fistula
Scanner unavailable for the study (broken down, overloaded program, ...)
Contraindication esophageal balloon catheter
Patient previously included in the study
Vulnerable persons (as defined in laws L1121-5 to L1121-7, L1121-8 and L1122-1-2
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
3 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal