Circulation, Vol 69, 815-821, Copyright © 1984 by American Heart Association
RV Ditchey
To test the hypothesis that the effects of positive end-expiratory airway
pressure (PEEP) on intracavitary left ventricular end-diastolic pressure
(LVEDP) depend on the ventricular filling conditions under which PEEP is
applied, the effects of PEEP on pressure in and around the left ventricle
were determined before and after stepwise expansion of intravascular blood
volume in 10 closed-chest dogs. Over a range of 0 to 20 cm of water, PEEP
progressively increased both intrapericardial and intracavitary right
ventricular end-diastolic pressures. These increases in pressure around the
left ventricle were approximately linear and were relatively unaffected by
volume loading. At the same time, PEEP always decreased transmural LVEDP by
decreasing ventricular filling. However, transmural LVEDP fell more when
ventricular volume was initially large, due to the nonlinear relationship
between left ventricular transmural pressure and volume. As a result,
intracavitary LVEDP (which reflected the sum of decreased transmural LVEDP
and increased external pressure) increased when baseline ventricular volume
was small and decreased when baseline ventricular volume was large. At
intermediate volumes the fall in transmural pressure equaled the rise in
external pressure, and intracavitary LVEDP did not change. These findings
demonstrate that changes due to PEEP in intracavitary LVEDP are a complex
function of increased intrathoracic pressure, decreased ventricular
filling, and the operative level of left ventricular compliance.
ARTICLES
Volume-dependent effects of positive airway pressure on intracavitary left ventricular end-diastolic pressure
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