Assessing inspiratory drive and effort in critically ill
patients at the bedside
Critical Care volume 29,
Article number: 339, Published: 31 July 2025
Abstract
Monitoring inspiratory drive and effort may aid proper
selection and setting of respiratory support in patients with acute respiratory
failure (ARF), whether they are intubated or not. Although diaphragmatic
electrical activity (EAdi) and esophageal manometry can be considered the
reference methods for assessing respiratory drive and inspiratory effort,
respectively, various alternative techniques exist, each with distinct
advantages and limitations. This narrative review provides a comprehensive
overview of bedside methods to assess respiratory drive and effort, with a
primary focus on patients with ARF. First, EAdi and esophageal manometry are
described and discussed as reference techniques. Then, alternative methods are
categorized along the neuromechanical pathway from inspiratory drive to
muscular effort into three groups: (1) techniques assessing the respiratory
drive: airway occlusion pressure (P0.1), mean inspiratory flow (Vt/Ti) and
respiratory muscle surface electromyography (sEMG); (2) techniques assessing
the respiratory muscle effort: whole-breath occlusion pressure (ΔPocc),
pressure-muscle index (PMI), nasal pressure swing (ΔPnose), diaphragm
ultrasonography (USdi), central venous pressure swing (ΔCVP), breathing effort
(BREF) models, and flow index; (3) techniques and clinical parameters assessing
the consequences of effort: tidal volume (Vt), electrical impedance tomography
(EIT), dyspnea. For each, we summarize the physiological rationale, measurement
methodology, interpretation of results, and key limitations.
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