• Eur J Anaesthesiol · May 2021

    Observational Study

    Prediction of fluid responsiveness using lung recruitment manoeuvre in paediatric patients receiving lung-protective ventilation: A prospective observational study.

    • Eun-Hee Kim, Ji-Hyun Lee, Young-Eun Jang, Sang-Hwan Ji, Hee-Soo Kim, Sung-Ae Cho, and Jin-Tae Kim.
    • From the Department of Anaesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea (E-HK, J-HL, Y-EJ, S-HJ, H-SK, S-AC, J-TK).
    • Eur J Anaesthesiol. 2021 May 1; 38 (5): 452-458.

    BackgroundPressure-based dynamic variables are poor predictors of fluid responsiveness in children, and their predictability is expected to reduce further during lung-protective ventilation with a low tidal volume.ObjectiveWe hypothesised that lung recruitment manoeuvre (LRM)-induced changes in dynamic variables improve their ability to predict fluid responsiveness in children.DesignProspective observational study.SettingTertiary care children's hospital, single-centre study performed from June 2017 to May 2019.PatientsWe included patients less than 7 years of age undergoing cardiac surgery. Neonates and patients with pulmonary hypertension, significant dysrhythmia, ventricular ejection fraction of less than 30% or pulmonary disease were excluded.InterventionAll patients were provided with lung-protective volume-controlled ventilation (tidal volume 6 ml kg-1, positive end-expiratory pressure 6 cmH2O). A LRM was applied with a continuous inspiratory pressure of 25 cmH2O for 20 s.Main Outcome MeasureThe ability of dynamic variables to predict fluid responsiveness was evaluated by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [area under the curve (AUC)]. Fluid responsiveness was defined as an increase in the cardiac index by more than 15% with crystalloid administration (10 ml kg-1).ResultsThirty patients were included in the final analysis, of whom 19 were responders. The baseline pleth variability index (PVI) (AUC 0.794, 95% confidence interval 0.608 to 0.919, P < 0.001) and LRM-induced PVI (AUC 0.711, 95% confidence interval 0.517 to 0.861, P = 0.026) could predict fluid responsiveness. The respiratory variation of pulse oximetry photoplethysmographic waveform and pulse pressure variation did not predict fluid responsiveness regardless of the LRM.ConclusionThe PVI is effective in predicting fluid responsiveness in paediatric patients with lung-protective ventilation regardless of a LRM. However, the LRM did not improve the ability of the other dynamic variables to predict fluid responsiveness in these patients.Clinical Trial Registrationwww.clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT03184961.Copyright © 2020 European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited.

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