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Creators/Authors contains: "Kollisch-Singule, Michaela"

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  1. Ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) is a potential threat to anyone receiving supportive mechanical ventilation for acute respiratory failure. Despite decades of research, however, the safest way to ventilate any given patient remains controversial. This makes fertile ground for novel concepts, and one that has arisen recently concerns the idea that a ventilator imparts potentially damaging mechanical energy to the lungs. The motivation for this concept is clear: energy transfer is involved when any structure becomes physically damaged. It may be intuitive, then, that the rate at which energy is delivered to the lungs by a ventilator, namely mechanical power, should be associated with VILI. Nevertheless, understanding the relationship between mechanical power and VILI requires clarity on the difference between stored versus dissipated energy regardless of whether ventilation is caused by positive pressure at the airway opening or negative pressure in the pleural space. 
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  2. Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) has a high mortality rate that is due in part to ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). Nevertheless, the majority of patients eventually recover, which means that their innate reparative capacities eventually prevail. Since there are currently no medical therapies for ARDS, minimizing its mortality thus amounts to achieving an optimal balance between spontaneous tissue repair versus the generation of VILI. In order to understand this balance better, we developed a mathematical model of the onset and recovery of VILI that incorporates two hypotheses: (1) a novel multi-hit hypothesis of epithelial barrier failure, and (2) a previously articulated rich-get-richer hypothesis of the interaction between atelectrauma and volutrauma. Together, these concepts explain why VILI appears in a normal lung only after an initial latent period of injurious mechanical ventilation. In addition, they provide a mechanistic explanation for the observed synergy between atelectrauma and volutrauma. The model recapitulates the key features of previously published in vitro measurements of barrier function in an epithelial monolayer and in vivo measurements of lung function in mice subjected to injurious mechanical ventilation. This provides a framework for understanding the dynamic balance between factors responsible for the generation of and recovery from VILI. 
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  3. Alysson Roncally Silva Carvalho (Ed.)
    Patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) have few treatment options other than supportive mechanical ventilation. The mortality associated with ARDS remains unacceptably high, and mechanical ventilation itself has the potential to increase mortality further by unintended ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). Thus, there is motivation to improve management of ventilation in patients with ARDS. The immediate goal of mechanical ventilation in ARDS should be to prevent atelectrauma resulting from repetitive alveolar collapse and reopening. However, a long-term goal should be to re-open collapsed and edematous regions of the lung and reduce regions of high mechanical stress that lead to regional volutrauma. In this paper, we consider the proposed strategy used by the full-term newborn to open the fluid-filled lung during the initial breaths of life, by ratcheting tissues opened over a series of initial breaths with brief expirations. The newborn’s cry after birth shares key similarities with the Airway Pressure Release Ventilation (APRV) modality, in which the expiratory duration is sufficiently short to minimize end-expiratory derecruitment. Using a simple computational model of the injured lung, we demonstrate that APRV can slowly open even the most recalcitrant alveoli with extended periods of high inspiratory pressure, while reducing alveolar re-collapse with brief expirations. These processes together comprise a ratchet mechanism by which the lung is progressively recruited, similar to the manner in which the newborn lung is aerated during a series of cries, albeit over longer time scales. 
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  4. Abstract A hallmark of ARDS is progressive shrinking of the ‘baby lung,’ now referred to as the ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) ‘vortex.’ Reducing the risk of the VILI vortex is the goal of current ventilation strategies; unfortunately, this goal has not been achieved nor has mortality been reduced. However, the temporal aspects of a mechanical breath have not been considered. A brief expiration prevents alveolar collapse, and an extended inspiration can recruit the atelectatic lung over hours. Time-controlled adaptive ventilation (TCAV) is a novel ventilator approach to achieve these goals, since it considers many of the temporal aspects of dynamic lung mechanics. 
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  5. In a large animal model of ARDS, recruitment/derecruitment caused greater VILI than overdistension, whereas both mechanisms together caused severe lung damage. These findings suggest that eliminating cyclic recruitment and derecruitment during mechanical ventilation should be a preeminent management goal for the patient with ARDS. The airway pressure release ventilation (APRV) mode of mechanical ventilation can achieve this if delivered with an expiratory duration (TLow) that is brief enough to prevent derecruitment at end expiration. 
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