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Pediatric ARDS: Understanding It and Managing It James D. Fortenberry, MD Medical Director, Pediatric and Adult ECMO Medical Director, Critical Care Medicine Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Egleston

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Page 1: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Pediatric ARDS: Understanding It and

Managing It

Pediatric ARDS: Understanding It and

Managing ItJames D. Fortenberry, MD

Medical Director, Pediatric and Adult ECMO

Medical Director, Critical Care Medicine

Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Egleston

Page 2: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

New and ImprovedNew and Improved

Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Page 3: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

ARDS: New Definition

Criteria Acute onset Bilateral CXR infiltrates PA pressure < 18 mm Hg Classification

Acute lung injury - PaO2 : F1O2 < 300

Acute respiratory distress syndrome - PaO2 : F1O2 < 200

- 1994 American - European Consensus Conference

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Clinical Disorders Associated with ARDS

Direct Lung Injury Indirect Lung Injury

Common causes Common Causes

Pneumonia SepsisAspiration of gastriccontents

Severe trauma with shock ,multiple transfusions

Less common causes Less common causes

Pulmonary contusion Cardiopulmonary bypassFat emboli Drug overdoseNear-Drowning Acute pancreatitisI nhalational injury Transfusions of blood productsReperfusion pulmonaryedema

Page 5: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

The Problem: Lung Injury

Etiology In Children

Other 4%

Hemorrhage 5%

Trauma 5%

Noninfectious Pneumonia 14%

Cardiac Arrest 12%

Septic Syndrome 32%

Infectious Pneumonia 28%

Davis et al., J Peds 1993;123:35

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ARDS - Pathogenesis

Instigation

• Endothelial injury: increased permeability of alveolar - capillary barrier

• Epithelial injury : alveolar flood, loss of surfactant, barrier vs. infection

• Proinflammatory mechanisms

Page 7: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

ARDS Pathogenesis

Resolution

• Equally important

• Alveolar edema - resolved by active sodium transport

• Alveolar type II cells - re-epithelialize

• Neutrophil clearance needed

Page 8: Pediatric ards   fortenberry
Page 9: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

ARDS - Pathophysiology

•Decreased compliance

•Alveolar edema

•Heterogenous

•“Baby Lungs”

Page 10: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

ARDS:CT Scan View

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Phases of ARDS

• Acute - exudative, inflammatory

(0 - 3 days)

• Subacute - proliferative

(4 - 10 days)

• Chronic - fibrosing alveolitis

( > 10 days)

Page 12: Pediatric ards   fortenberry
Page 13: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

ARDS - Outcomes

• Most studies - mortality 40% to 60%; similar for children/adults

• Death is usually due to sepsis/MODS rather than primary respiratory

• Mortality may be decreasing

53/68 % 39/36 %

Page 14: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

ARDS - Principles of Therapy

•Provide adequate gas exchange

•Avoid secondary injury

Page 15: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Therapies for ARDS

Innovations:NOPLVProningSurfactantAnti-Inflammatory

Mechanical Ventilation Gentle

ventilation:

Permissive hypercapnia

Low tidal volume

Open-lung

HFOV

ECMOIVOX

IV gas exchange

AVCO2R

Total Implantable Artificial Lung

ARDS

Extrapulmonary Gas Exchange

Page 16: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

The Dangers of Overdistention

• Repetitive shear stress

• Injury to normal alveoli

• inflammatory response

• air trapping

• Phasic volume swings: volutrauma

Page 17: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

• compliance

• intrapulmonary shunt

• FiO2

• WOB

• inflammatory response

The Dangers of Atelectasis

Page 18: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

0

10

20

13 33 38

Airway Pressure (cmH20)

Lun

g V

olum

e (m

l/kg)

AtelectasisAtelectasis

““Sweet Sweet Spot”Spot”

OverdistentioOverdistentionn

Lung Injury Zones

Page 19: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

ARDS: George Bush Therapy

“Kinder, gentler” forms of ventilation:

•Low tidal volumes (6-8 vs.10-15 cc/kg)

•“Open lung”: Higher PEEP, lower PIP

•Permissive hypercapnia: tolerate higher pCO2

Page 20: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Lower Tidal Volumes for ARDS

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

Percent

Death

Ven

t freed

ays

Traditional Lower

*

*

* p < .001

ARDS Network,NEJM, 342: 2000

22% decrease

Page 21: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Is turning the ARDS patient “prone” to be

helpful?

Is turning the ARDS patient “prone” to be

helpful?

Page 22: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Prone Positioning in ARDS

• Theory: let gravity improve matching perfusion to better ventilated areas

• Improvement immediate

• Uncertain effect on outcome

Page 23: Pediatric ards   fortenberry
Page 24: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Prone Positioning in Pediatric ARDS:Longer May Be Better

• Compared 6-10 hrs PP vs. 18-24 hrs PP

• Overall ARDS survival 79% in 40 pts.

Relvas et al., Chest 2003

Page 25: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Brief vs. Prolonged Prone Positioning in Children

0

5

10

15

20

25

Pre- PP Brief PP Prolonged PP

Oxygen

ati

on

In

dex

(OI)

- Relvas et al., Chest 2003

*

***

Page 26: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

High Frequency High Frequency Oscillation:Oscillation:A Whole Lotta A Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ Shakin’ Goin’ OnOn

Page 27: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

- Reese Clark- Reese Clark

It’s not absolute pressure, but volume or

pressure swings that promote lung injury or

atelectasis.

It’s not absolute pressure, but volume or

pressure swings that promote lung injury or

atelectasis.

Page 28: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

•Rapid rate

•Low tidal volume

•Maintain open lung

•Minimal volume swings

High Frequency Ventilation

Page 29: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

High Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation

Page 30: Pediatric ards   fortenberry
Page 31: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

HFOV is the easiest way to find the ventilation

“sweet spot”

Page 32: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

HFOV: Benefits Vs. Conventional Ventilation

Page 33: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

0

20

40

HFOV CV CV toHFOV

HFOV toCV

Sur

viva

l wit

h CL

D%

- - Arnold et al, Arnold et al, CCMCCM, , 19941994

**

HFOV vs. CMV in Pediatric Respiratory Failure

Page 34: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Surfactant in ARDS

• ARDS: surfactant deficiency surfactant present is

dysfunctional

• Surfactant replacement improves physiologic function

Page 35: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Surfactant in Pediatric ARDS

•Current randomized multi-center trial

•Placebo vs calf lung surfactant (Infasurf)

•Children’s at Egleston is a participating center-study closed, await results

Page 36: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Steroids in Unresolving ARDS

• Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

• Adult ARDS ventilated for > 7 days without improvement

• Randomized: Placebo Methylprednisolone 2 mg/kg/day x 4

days, tapered over 1 month

Meduri et al, JAMA 280:159, 1998

Page 37: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Steroids in Unresolving ARDS

0102030405060708090

100

ICUsurvival

Hospitalsurvival

Steroid Placebo

* *

p<.01*- Meduri et al., JAMA, 1998

Page 38: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Steroids in Unresolving ARDS

• Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

• ARDSNetwork-180 adults

• Randomized: Placebo Methylprednisolone No mortality difference Decreased ventilator-free days but

only if started 7-14 daysSteinberg, NEJM, 354:1671,2006

Page 39: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Inhaled Nitric Oxide in Respiratory Failure

Neonates Beneficial in term neonates with

PPHN Decreased need for ECMO

Adults/Pediatrics Benefits - lowers PA pressures,

improves gas exchange Randomized trials: No difference

in mortality or days of ventilation

Page 40: Pediatric ards   fortenberry
Page 41: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Inhaled NO and HFOV In Pediatric ARDS

5853

58

71

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Sur

viva

l %

Dobyns et al., Dobyns et al.,

J PedsJ Peds, 2000, 2000

*

Page 42: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Partial Liquid Ventilation

Page 43: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Partial Liquid Ventilation

Mechanisms of action oxygen reservoir recruitment of lung volume alveolar lavage redistribution of blood flow anti-inflammatory

Page 44: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Liquid Ventilation

Pediatric trials started in 1996 Partial: FRC (15 - 20 cc/kg)

Study halted 1999 due to lack of benefit

Adult study (2001): no effect on outcome

Page 45: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

ARDS- “Mechanical” Therapies

ARDS- “Mechanical” Therapies

Prone positioning - Unproven outcome benefit

Low tidal volumes - Outcome benefit in large study

Open-lung strategy - Outcome benefit in small study

HFOV -Outcome benefit in small study

ECMO - Proven in neonates unproven in children

Page 46: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

Pharmacologic Approaches to ARDS: Randomized Trials

Glucocorticoids

Fibrosing alveolitis - lowered mortality, small study

Surfactant - possible benefit in children

Inhaled NO - no benefit

Partial liquid ventilation - no benefit

Page 47: Pediatric ards   fortenberry

“…We must discard the old approach and continue to search for ways to improve mechanical ventilation. In the meantime, there is no substitute for the clinician standing by the ventilator…”

- Martin J. Tobin, MD

Page 48: Pediatric ards   fortenberry