Weaning from artificial respiration: value of continuous monitoring of mixed venous oxygen saturation |
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Authors: | A Armaganidis J F Dhainaut |
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Affiliation: | Service de Réanimation Médicale, Centre Hospitalo-Universitaire Cochin Port-Royal, Paris. |
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Abstract: | Weaning from mechanical ventilation is particularly difficult in patients with combined cardiac and respiratory failure. Continuous monitoring of mixed venous blood oxygen saturation (SvO2) redefines weaning in terms of tissue oxygenation. A stable SvO2 greater than 60% during weaning is a reliable index of weanability. However, further studies are required to establish a tolerance threshold for SvO2 during weaning. In the limited experience reported here, an immediate and abrupt fall in SvO2, when the patient started to breathe spontaneously was invariably associated with difficulties in weaning. In some patients, other signs of left ventricular dysfunction rapidly ensued, with a fall in cardiac index. Weaning remained possible if the treatment was capable of increasing cardiac output and normalizing SvO2. If, during spontaneous breathing, SvO2 remained stable in the 50-55% range, with no significant decrease in cardiac output, abrupt and unpredictable drops of SvO2 under 40% range occurred. Such falls always preceded signs of tissue hypoxia, leading to a resumption of controlled mechanical ventilation. However, further studies are required to fully delineate the role of SvO2 in the fine tuning of inotropic support and ventilatory assistance in the difficult weaning of patients recovering from cardio-respiratory failure. |
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