Intensive Care Medicine | 2019

Lung ultrasound allows the diagnosis of weaning-induced pulmonary oedema

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


AbstractRationale Detecting weaning-induced pulmonary oedema (WIPO) is important because its treatment might prompt extubation. For this purpose, lung ultrasound might be an attractive tool, since it demonstrates pulmonary oedema through\n the appearance of B-lines.Objectives To test the ideal profile (increase in the number of B-lines) for diagnosing WIPO.Methods Before and at the end of 62 spontaneous breathing trials (SBT) performed in 42 patients, we prospectively assessed lung ultrasound on four anterior chest wall points. B-lines were counted before and at the end of SBT. We looked for the threshold of B-line increase (Delta-B-lines) that provided the best diagnostic accuracy, compared to the reference diagnosis of WIPO established by experts blinded to lung ultrasound.Results SBT failed in 33 cases. WIPO occurred in 17 cases and all failed. The best diagnostic accuracy was reached with a Delta-B-lines\u2009≥\xa06. Among WIPO, the number of B-lines increased by ≥\u20096 in 15 cases (including 13 cases with an increase of ≥\u20098 B-lines). Among the 16 cases with SBT failure but without WIPO, the Delta-B-lines was ≥\u20096 in two cases. Among the 33 cases with SBT failure, this profile diagnosed WIPO with a sensitivity of 88% (64–98) and a specificity of 88% (62–98) [area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 0.91 (0.75–0.98)]. Among the 29 cases with SBT success, a Delta-B-lines\u2009≥ 6 occurred in two cases.Conclusions This study suggests that a Delta-B-lines\u2009≥ \u20096 on four anterior points allows the diagnosis of WIPO with the best accuracy. This should be confirmed in larger populations.

Volume 45
Pages 601-608
DOI 10.1007/s00134-019-05573-6
Language English
Journal Intensive Care Medicine

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