The use of extracorporeal
CO2 removal in acute respiratory failure
by Raphaël Giraud, Carlo Banfi, Benjamin Assouline, Amandine
De Charrière, Maurizio Cecconi and Karim Bendjelid
Annals of Intensive Care volume 11,
Article number: 43 (2021)
Background
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation
and protective mechanical ventilation of acute respiratory distress syndrome
(ARDS) patients induce hypercapnic respiratory acidosis.
Main text
Extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal (ECCO2R) aims to
eliminate blood CO2 to fight against the adverse effects of hypercapnia
and related acidosis. Hypercapnia has deleterious extrapulmonary consequences,
particularly for the brain. In addition, in the lung, hypercapnia leads to:
lower pH, pulmonary vasoconstriction, increases in right ventricular afterload,
acute cor pulmonale. Moreover, hypercapnic acidosis may further damage the
lungs by increasing both nitric oxide production and inflammation and altering
alveolar epithelial cells. During an exacerbation of COPD, relieving the native
lungs of at least a portion of the CO2 could potentially reduce the
patient's respiratory work, Instead of mechanically increasing alveolar
ventilation with MV in an already hyperinflated lung to increase CO2 removal,
the use of ECCO2R may allow a decrease in respiratory volume and respiratory
rate, resulting in improvement of lung mechanic. Thus, the use of ECCO2R may
prevent noninvasive ventilation failure and allow intubated patients to be
weaned off mechanical ventilation. In ARDS patients, ECCO2R may be used to
promote an ultraprotective ventilation in allowing to lower tidal volume,
plateau (Pplat) and driving pressures, parameters that have identified as a
major risk factors for mortality. However, although ECCO2R appears to be
effective in improving gas exchange and possibly in reducing the rate of
endotracheal intubation and allowing more protective ventilation, its use may
have pulmonary and hemodynamic consequences and may be associated with
complications.
Conclusion
In selected patients, ECCO2R may be a promising adjunctive
therapeutic strategy for the management of patients with severe COPD
exacerbation and for the establishment of protective or ultraprotective
ventilation in patients with ARDS without prognosis-threatening hypoxemia.
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