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Inhaled nitric oxide in acute respiratory failure:...
Journal article

Inhaled nitric oxide in acute respiratory failure: Dose-response curves

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine the dose-response curve of inhaled nitric oxide (NO) in terms of pulmonary vasodilation and improvement in PaO2 in adults with severe acute respiratory failure.DesignProspective randomized study.SettingA 14-bed ICU in a teaching hospital.Patients6 critically ill patients with severe acute respiratory failure (lung injury severity score ≥2.5) and pulmonary hypertension.Interventions8 concentrations of inhaled NO were administered at random: 100, 400, 700, 1000, 1300, 1600, 1900 and 5000 parts per billion (ppb). Control measurements were performed before NO inhalation and after the last concentration administered. After an NO exposure of 15–20 min, hemodynamic parameters obtained from a fiberoptic Swan-Ganz catheter, blood gases, methemoglobin blood concentrations and intratracheal NO and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) concentrations, continuously monitored using a bedside chemiluminescence apparatus, were recorded on a Gould ES 1000 recorder. In 2 patients end-tidal CO2 was also recorded.ResultsThe administration of 100–2000 ppb of inhaled NO induced: i) a dose-dependent decrease in pulmonary artery pressure and in pulmonary vascular resistance (maximum decrease −25%); ii) a dose-dependent increase in PaO2 via a dose-dependent reduction in pulmonary shunt; iii) a slight but significant decrease in PaCO2 via a reduction in alveolar dead space; iv) a dose-dependent increase in mixed venous oxygen saturation (SVO2). Systemic hemodynamic variables and methemoglobin blood concentrations did not change. Maximum NO2 concentrations never exceeded 165 ppb. In 2 patients, 91% and 74% of the pulmonary vasodilation was obtained for inhaled NO concentrations of 100 ppb.ConclusionIn hypoxemic patients with pulmonary hypertension and severe acute respiratory failure, therapeutic inhaled NO concentrations are in the range 100–2000 ppb. The risk of toxicity related to NO inhalation is therefore markedly reduced. Continuous SVO2 monitoring appears useful at the bedside for determining optimum therapeutic inhaled NO concentrations in a given patient.

Authors

Puybasset L; Rouby JJ; Mourgeon E; Stewart TE; Cluzel P; Arthaud M; Poète P; Bodin L; Korinek AM; Viars P

Journal

Intensive Care Medicine, Vol. 20, No. 5, pp. 319–327

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

May 1, 1994

DOI

10.1007/bf01720903

ISSN

0342-4642

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