by R. S. P.
Warnaar, A. D. Cornet, A. Beishuizen, C. M. Moore, D. W. Donker and E. Oppersma
Critical Care volume 28,
Article number: 195, Published: 09 June 2024
Background
Respiratory effort
should be closely monitored in mechanically ventilated ICU patients to avoid
both overassistance and underassistance. Surface electromyography of the
diaphragm (sEMGdi) offers a continuous and non-invasive modality to assess
respiratory effort based on neuromuscular coupling (NMCdi). The sEMGdi derived
electrical activity of the diaphragm (sEAdi) is prone to distortion by
crosstalk from other muscles including the heart, hindering its widespread use
in clinical practice. We developed an advanced analysis as well as quality
criteria for sEAdi waveforms and investigated the effects of clinically
relevant levels of PEEP on non-invasive NMCdi.
Methods
NMCdi was derived
by dividing end-expiratory occlusion pressure (Pocc) by sEAdi, based on three
consecutive Pocc manoeuvres at four incremental (+ 2 cmH2O/step) PEEP levels in stable ICU
patients on pressure support ventilation. Pocc and sEAdi quality was assessed
by applying a novel, automated advanced signal analysis, based on tolerant and
strict cut-off criteria, and excluding inadequate waveforms. The coefficient of
variations (CoV) of NMCdi after basic manual and automated advanced quality
assessment were evaluated, as well as the effect of an incremental PEEP trial
on NMCdi.
Results
593 manoeuvres were
obtained from 42 PEEP trials in 17 ICU patients. Waveform exclusion was
primarily based on low sEAdi signal-to-noise ratio (Ntolerant = 155,
37%, Nstrict = 241, 51% waveforms excluded), irregular or
abrupt cessation of Pocc (Ntolerant = 145, 35%, Nstrict = 145,
31%), and high sEAdi area under the baseline (Ntolerant = 94,
23%, Nstrict = 79, 17%). Strict automated assessment
allowed to reduce CoV of NMCdi to 15% from 37% for basic quality assessment. As
PEEP was increased, NMCdi decreased significantly by 4.9 percentage point per
cmH2O.
Conclusion
Advanced signal
analysis of both Pocc and sEAdi greatly facilitates automated and well-defined
identification of high-quality waveforms. In the critically ill, this approach
allowed to demonstrate a dynamic NMCdi (Pocc/sEAdi) decrease upon PEEP
increments, emphasising that sEAdi-based assessment of respiratory effort
should be related to PEEP dependent diaphragm function. This novel,
non-invasive methodology forms an important methodological foundation for more
robust, continuous, and comprehensive assessment of respiratory effort at the
bedside.
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