Physiological dissociation between ventilatory ratio and ventilatory efficiency in patients with ARDS
Martín H. Benites, Fernando Suarez‑Sipmann, Arnoldo Santos, Jaime Retamal

TL;DR
This study finds that the ventilatory ratio does not reliably reflect ventilatory efficiency in ARDS patients when respiratory mechanics change.
Contribution
The study demonstrates a physiological dissociation between ventilatory ratio and ventilatory efficiency in ARDS patients.
Findings
VR did not significantly change with increases or decreases in tidal volume.
Alveolar ventilation ratio significantly increased and then decreased with tidal volume changes.
No significant relationship was found between VR and alveolar ventilation ratio.
Abstract
The ventilatory ratio (VR) is frequently used as a surrogate marker of ventilatory efficiency in patients with ARDS. However, its ability to reflect changes in alveolar ventilation (V̇Talv/VT) when respiratory mechanics are modified remains unknown. This study aimed to evaluate the relationship between VR and V̇Talv/VT during sequential changes in respiratory mechanics=, tidal volume (VT), and minute ventilation (V̇E) in patients with ARDS. This was a secondary analysis of a quasi-experimental, repeated-measures study conducted in a single-center adult ICU. Twenty-two patients with ARDS were evaluated across three sequential 60 min controlled periods, during which trunk inclination was adjusted to induce changes in VT. At the end of each period, VR was calculated, and V̇Talv/VT was measured using volumetric capnography. A total of 66 paired measurements were analyzed in this study. By…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory Support and Mechanisms · Intensive Care Unit Cognitive Disorders · Sepsis Diagnosis and Treatment
