Basing intubation of acutely hypoxemic patients on physiologic principles
by Franco Laghi, Hameeda Shaikh and Nicola Caccani
Annals of
Intensive Care volume 14, Article number: 86, Published: 12
June 2024
Abstract
The decision to
intubate a patient with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure who is not in
apparent respiratory distress is one of the most difficult clinical decisions
faced by intensivists. A conservative approach exposes patients to the dangers
of hypoxemia, while a liberal approach exposes them to the dangers of inserting
an endotracheal tube and invasive mechanical ventilation. To assist
intensivists in this decision, investigators have used various thresholds of
peripheral or arterial oxygen saturation, partial pressure of oxygen, partial
pressure of oxygen-to-fraction of inspired oxygen ratio, and arterial oxygen
content. In this review we will discuss how each of these oxygenation indices
provides inaccurate information about the volume of oxygen transported in the
arterial blood (convective oxygen delivery) or the pressure gradient driving
oxygen from the capillaries to the cells (diffusive oxygen delivery). The
decision to intubate hypoxemic patients is further complicated by our nescience
of the critical point below which global and cerebral oxygen supply become
delivery-dependent in the individual patient. Accordingly, intubation requires
a nuanced understanding of oxygenation indexes. In this review, we will also
discuss our approach to intubation based on clinical observations and
physiologic principles. Specifically, we consider intubation when
hypoxemic patients, who are neither in apparent respiratory distress nor in
shock, become cognitively impaired suggesting emergent cerebral hypoxia.
When deciding to intubate, we also consider additional factors including
estimates of cardiac function, peripheral perfusion, arterial oxygen content
and its determinants. It is not possible, however, to pick an oxygenation
breakpoint below which the benefits of mechanical ventilation decidedly
outweigh its hazards. It is futile to imagine that decision making about
instituting mechanical ventilation in an individual patient can be condensed
into an algorithm with absolute numbers at each nodal point. In sum, an algorithm
cannot replace the presence of a physician well skilled in the art of clinical
evaluation who has a deep understanding of pathophysiologic principles.
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