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1 November 1993 | Volume 119 Issue 9 | Pages 887-894
Objective: To determine the effect of the presence of a patent foramen ovale on the right-to-left shunt in patients with respiratory failure who receive positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP).
Design: Convenience sample with randomized application of PEEP.
Setting: General intensive care unit of a university teaching hospital.
Patients: A total of 46 mechanically ventilated patients with respiratory failure requiring an inspired oxygen concentration of at least 50% and a PEEP of at least 5 cm of H2O.
Intervention: Randomized application of PEEP (0 and 10 cm of H2O).
Measurements: A patent foramen ovale was detected by saline contrast transesophageal echocardiography. The alveolar-to-arterial oxygen difference and the right-to-left shunt were calculated from arterial and venous blood gas sampling.
Results: In patients without a patent foramen ovale (n =39), the alveolar-to-arterial oxygen difference and the shunt fraction decreased ( 50 mm Hg [95% CI, 21 to 67]and 0.05[CI, 0.03 to 0.07],respectively) after adding PEEP (10 cm of H2O). In patients with a patent foramen ovale (n = 7), minimal changes were noted in the alveolar-to-arterial oxygen difference (4 mm Hg, P > 0.2), but the shunt fraction increased (0.05, CI, 0 to 0.09). Adding PEEP (10 cm of H2O) increased the shunt fraction in 6 of 7 (86%) patients with a patent foramen ovale, whereas the shunt increased in only 7 of 39 (18%) patients without a patent foramen ovale (P < 0.007).
Conclusions: A patent foramen ovale was found in 7 of 46 patients (15%; CI, 6% to 29%) with acute respiratory failure. This condition is a common cause of lack of improvement in oxygenation with the addition of PEEP in the mechanically ventilated patient. In patients with a patent foramen ovale, the right-to-left shunt is usually increased by using PEEP.
Author and Article Information
From the Royal University Hospital, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N 0X0 Canada.
ARTICLE
Positive End-Expiratory Pressure Increases the Right-to-Left Shunt in Mechanically Ventilated Patients with Patent Foramen Ovale
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Requests for Reprints: Bibiana Cujec, MD, Division of Cardiology, Royal University Hospital, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada S7N OXO.
Acknowledgments: The authors thank the staff of the Royal University Hospital Intensive Care Unit for their assistance in this project and Anita Zacharias and Helen Reid for preparing the manuscript.
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