Chest wall loading in the ICU: pushes, weights, and positions
by John Selickman
and John J. Marini
Annals of
Intensive Care volume 12,
Article number: 103 (2022)
Clinicians monitor mechanical ventilatory support using
airway pressures—primarily the plateau and driving pressure, which are
considered by many to determine the safety of the applied tidal volume. These
airway pressures are influenced not only by the ventilator prescription, but
also by the mechanical properties of the respiratory system, which consists of
the series-coupled lung and chest wall. Actively limiting chest wall expansion
through external compression of the rib cage or abdomen is seldom performed in
the ICU. Recent literature describing the respiratory mechanics of patients
with late-stage, unresolving, ARDS, however, has raised awareness of the
potential diagnostic (and perhaps therapeutic) value of this unfamiliar and
somewhat counterintuitive practice. In these patients, interventions that
reduce resting lung volume, such as loading the chest wall through application
of external weights or manual pressure, or placing the torso in a more
horizontal position, have unexpectedly improved tidal compliance of the lung
and integrated respiratory system by reducing previously undetected end-tidal
hyperinflation. In this interpretive review, we first describe underappreciated
lung and chest wall interactions that are clinically relevant to both normal individuals
and to the acutely ill who receive ventilatory support. We then apply these
physiologic principles, in addition to published clinical observation, to
illustrate the utility of chest wall modification for the purposes of detecting
end-tidal hyperinflation in everyday practice.
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