Critical Care

official impact factor 4.60

Review

Using heart-lung interactions to assess fluid responsiveness during mechanical ventilation

Frédéric Michard and Jean-Louis Teboul

Author Affiliations

Université Paris XI, Kremlin Bicêtre, France

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Critical Care 2000, 4:282-289 doi:10.1186/cc710

Published: 1 September 2000

Abstract

According to the Frank-Starling relationship, a patient is a 'responder' to volume expansion only if both ventricles are preload dependent. Mechanical ventilation induces cyclic changes in left ventricular (LV) stroke volume, which are mainly related to the expiratory decrease in LV preload due to the inspiratory decrease in right ventricular (RV) filling and ejection. In the present review, we detail the mechanisms by which mechanical ventilation should result in greater cyclic changes in LV stroke volume when both ventricles are 'preload dependent'. We also address recent clinical data demonstrating that respiratory changes in arterial pulse (or systolic) pressure and in Doppler aortic velocity (as surrogates of respiratory changes in LV stroke volume) can be used to detect biventricular preload dependence, and hence fluid responsiveness in critically ill patients.

Keywords:
acute circulatory failure; arterial pressure; fluid responsiveness; left ventricular stroke volume; mechanical ventilation; pleural pressure; preload; pulse pressure