1 / 34

One-Lung Ventilation: physiology and practical approach

One-Lung Ventilation: physiology and practical approach. Konstantin Balonov Department of Anesthesiology Boston Medical Center. Objectives. Indication/contraindication of OLV Physiology changes of OLV Selection of the methods for OLV

hunter
Download Presentation

One-Lung Ventilation: physiology and practical approach

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. One-Lung Ventilation: physiology and practical approach Konstantin Balonov Department of Anesthesiology Boston Medical Center

  2. Objectives • Indication/contraindication of OLV • Physiology changes of OLV • Selection of the methods for OLV • Management of common problems associated with OLV, especially hypoxemia

  3. Introduction • One-lung ventilation, OLV, means separation of the two lungs and each lung functioning independently by preparation of the airway • OLV provides: • Protection of healthy lung from infected/bleeding one • Diversion of ventilation from damaged airway or lung • Improved exposure of surgical field • OLV causes: • More manipulation of airway, more damage • Significant physiologic change and easily development of hypoxemia

  4. Absolute indication for OLV • Isolation of one lung from the other to avoid spillage or contamination • Infection • Massive hemorrhage • Control of the distribution of ventilation • Bronchopleural / - cutaneous fistula • Surgical opening of a major conducting airway • giant unilateral lung cyst or bulla • Tracheobronchial tree disruption • Life-threatening hypoxemia due to unilateral lung disease • Unilateral bronchopulmonary lavage

  5. Relative indication • Surgical exposure ( high priority) • Thoracic aortic aneurysm • Pneumonectomy • Upper lobectomy • Mediastinal exposure • Thoracoscopy • Surgical exposure (low priority) • Middle and lower lobectomies and subsegmental resections • Esophageal surgery • Thoracic spine procedure • Minimal invasive cardiac surgery (MID-CABG, TMR) • Postcardiopulmonary bypass status after removal of totally occluding chronic unilateral pulmonary emboli • Severe hypoxemia due to unilateral lung disease

  6. Physiology of the LDP • Upright position LDP, lateral decubitus position

  7. Physiology of LDP Awake/closed chest Anesthetized . V Q V Q V Q ND     D      

  8. Summary of V-Q relationships in the anesthetized, open-chest and paralyzed patients in LDP

  9. Physiology of OLV • The principle physiologic change of OLV is the redistribution of lung perfusion between the ventilated (dependent) and blocked (nondependent) lung • Many factors contribute to the lung perfusion, the major determinants of them are hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) and gravity.

  10. Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction • HPV is a physiological response of the lung to alveolar hypoxia, which redistributes pulmonary blood flow from areas of low oxygen partial pressure to areas of high oxygen availability. • The mechanism of HPV is not completely understood. Vasoactive substances released by hypoxia or hypoxia itself (activating K+, Ca++ and TRP channels) cause pulmonary artery smooth muscle contraction

  11. HPV: oxygen sensors

  12. HPV • HPV aids in keeping a normal V/Q relationship by diversion of blood from underventilated areas, responsible for the most lung perfusion redistribution in OLV • HPV is graded and limited, of greatest benefit when 30% to 70% of the lung is made hypoxic. • HPV is effective only when there are normoxic areas of the lung available to receive the diverted blood flow

  13. Factors affecting regional HPV • HPV is inhibited directly by volatile anesthetics (not N20), vasodilators (NTG, SNP, NO, dobutamine, many ß2-agonist), increased PVR (MS, MI, PE) and hypocapnia • HPV is indirectly inhibited by PEEP; vasoconstrictor drugs (epinephrine, norepinephrine, phenylephrine, dopamine) constrict normoxic lung vessels preferentially

  14. Gravity and V-Q • UprightLDP

  15. Shunt and OLV • Physiological (postpulmonary) shunt • About 2-5% CO, • Accounting for normal A-aD02, 10-15 mmHg • Including drainages from • Thebesian veins of the heart • The pulmonary bronchial veins • Mediastinal and pleural veins • Transpulmonary shunt increased due to continued perfusion of the atelectatic lung and A-aD02 may increase

  16. Two-lung ventilation and OLV

  17. Cardiac output and OLV • Decreased CO may reduce SvO2 and thus impair SpO2 in presence of significant shunt • Hypovolemia • Compression of heart or great vessels • Thoracic epidural sympathetic blockade • Air trapping and high PEEP • Increased CO increases PA pressures which increases perfusion of the non-ventilated lung → increase of shunt fraction

  18. Methods of OLV • Double-lumen endotracheal tube, DLT • Single-lumen ET with a built-in bronchial blocker, Univent Tube • Single-lumen ET with an isolated bronchial blocker • Arndt (wire-guided) endobronchial blocker set • Balloon-tipped luminal catheters • Endobronchial intubation of a single-lumen ET

  19. DLT • Type: • Carlens, a left-sided + a carinal hook • White, a right-sided Carlens tube • Bryce-Smith, no hook but a slotted cuff/Rt • Robertshaw, most widely used • All have two lumina/cuffs, one terminating in the trachea and the other in the mainstem bronchus • Right-sided or left-sided available • Available size: 41,39, 37, 35, 28 French (ID=6.5, 6.0, 5.5, 5.0 and 4.5 mm respectively)

  20. Left DLT… • Most commonly used • The bronchial lumen is longer, and a simple round opening and symmetric cuff Better margin of safety than Rt DLT • Easy to apply suction and/or CPAP to either lung • Easy to deflate lung • Lower bronchial cuff volumes and pressures • Can be used • Left lung isolation: clamp bronchial + ventilate/ tracheal lumen • Right lung isolation: clamp tracheal + ventilate/bronchial lumen

  21. …Left DLT • More difficult to insert (size and curve, cuff) • Risk of tube change and airway damage if kept in position for post-op ventilation • Contraindication: • Presence of lesion along DLT pathway • Difficult/impossible conventional direct vision intubation • Critically ill patients with single lumen tube in situ who cannot tolerate even a short period of off mechanical ventilation • Full stomach or high risk of aspiration • Patients, too small (<25-35kg) or too young (< 8-12 yrs)

  22. Right DLT: bronchoscopic view

  23. Another indication for DLT: Reexpansion pulmonary edema

  24. Univent Tube... • Developed by Dr. Inoue • Movable blocker shaft in external lumen of a single-lumen ET tube • Easier to insert and properly position than DLT (diff airway, C-s injury, pedi or critical pts) • No need to change the tube for postop ventilation • Selective blockade of some lobes of the lung • Suction and delivery CPAP to the blocked lung

  25. ...Univent Tube • Slow deflation (need suction) and inflation (short PPV or jet ventilation) • Blockage of bronchial blocker lumen • Higher endobronchial cuff volumes +pressure (just-seal volume recommended) • Higher rate of intraoperative leak in the blocker cuff • Higher failure rate if the blocker advanced blindly

  26. Univent Tube

  27. Arndt Endobronchial Blocker set • Invented by Dr. Arndt, an anesthesiologist • Ideal for diff intubation, pre-existing ETT and postop ventilation needed • Requires ETT > or = 8.0 mm • Similar problems as Univent • Inability to suction or ventilate the blocked lung

  28. Other methods of OLV • Single-lumen ETT with a balloon-tipped catheter • Including Fogarty embolectomy catheter, Magill or Foley, and Swan-Ganz catheter (children < 10 kg) • Not reliable and may be more time-consuming • Inability to suction or ventilate the blocked lung • Endobronchial intubation of single-lumen ETT • The easiest and quickest way of separating one lung from the other bleeding one, esp. from left lung • More often used for pedi patients • More likely to cause serious hypoxemia or severe bronchial damage

  29. Management of OLV... • Maintain two-lung ventilation as long as possible • Start OLV with 100% O2 then start backing off the FiO2 if saturations are OK • Manual ventilation for the first few minutes of OLV to get a sense of pulmonary compliance / resistance • Be attentive to inspiratory pressures and tidal volumes and adjust the ventilator to optimize oxygenation and alveolar ventilation, with minimal barotrauma • Look at the surgical field to see if the non-dependent lung is collapsed

  30. ...Management of OLV • Tidal volume = 8-10 ml/kg • Adjust RR (increasing 20-30%) to keep PaCO2 = 40 mmHg • No PEEP (or very low PEEP, < 5 cm H2O) • Continuous monitoring of oxygenation and ventilation (SpO2, ABG and ET CO2)

  31. Management of hypoxemia during OLV • FiO2 = 1.0 • Manual ventilation • Check DLT position with FOB • Check hemodynamic status • CPAP (5-10 cm H2O, 5 L/min) to nondependent lung, most effective • PEEP (5-10 cm H2O) to dependent lung, least effective • Intermittent two-lung ventilation • Clamp pulmonary artery

  32. Other causes of hypoxemia in OLV • Mechanical failure of O2 supply or airway blockade • Hypoventilation • Resorption of residual O2 from the clamped lung • Factors that decrease SvO2 (CO, O2 consumption)

  33. Broncho-Cath CPAP system

  34. Summary • OLV widely used in cardiothoracic surgery • Many methods can be used for OLV. Optimal methods depends on indication, patientfactors, equipment, skills and level of training • FOB is the key equipment for OLV • Principle physiologic change of OLV is the redistribution of pulmonary blood flow to keep an appropriate V/Q match • Management of OLV is a challenge for the anesthesiologist, requiring knowledge, skill, vigilance, experience, and practice

More Related