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British Journal of Anaesthesia, 2000, Vol. 85, No. 3 456-470
© 2000 The Board of Management and Trustees of the British Journal of Anaesthesia

Within-breath arterial PO2 oscillations in an experimental model of acute respiratory distress syndrome

E. M. Williams1, J. P. Viale2, R. M. Hamilton1, H. McPeak1, L. Sutton1 and C. E. W. Hahn1

1Nuffield Department of Anaesthetics, University of Oxford, Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford OX2 6HE, UK. 2Service Anesthésie Réanimation, Hopital de la Croix Rousse, 103 Grande-Rue de la Croix, Rousse, F-69317 Lyon Cedex 04, France*Corresponding author

Tidal ventilation causes within-breath oscillations in alveolar oxygen concentration, with an amplitude which depends on the prevailing ventilator settings. These alveolar oxygen oscillations are transmitted to arterial oxygen tension, PaO2, but with an amplitude which now depends upon the magnitude of venous admixture or true shunt, Q·S/Q·T. We investigated the effect of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on the amplitude of the PaO2 oscillations, using an atelectasis model of shunt. Blood PaO2 was measured on-line with an intravascular PaO2 sensor, which had a 2–4 s response time (10–90%). The magnitude of the time-varying PaO2 oscillation was titrated against applied PEEP while tidal volume, respiratory rate and inspired oxygen concentration were kept constant. The amplitude of the PaO2 oscillation, {Delta}PaO2, and the mean PaO2 value varied with the level of PEEP applied. At zero PEEP, both the amplitude and the mean were at their lowest values. As PEEP was increased to 1.5 kPa, both {Delta}PaO2 and the mean PaO2 increased to a maximum. Thereafter, the mean PaO2 increased but {Delta}PaO2 decreased. Clear oscillations of PaO2 were seen even at the lowest mean PaO2, 9.5 kPa. Conventional respiratory models of venous admixture predict that these PaO2 oscillations will be reduced by the steep part of the oxyhaemoglobin dissociation curve if a constant pulmonary shunt exists throughout the whole respiratory cycle. The facts that the PaO2 oscillations occurred at all mean PaO2 values and that their amplitude increased with increasing PEEP suggest that Q·S/Q·T, in the atelectasis model, varies between end-expiration and end-inspiration, having a much lower value during inspiration than during expiration.

Br J Anaesth 2000; 85: 456–9


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