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- Title
Effects of pneumoperitoneal pressure and position changes on respiratory mechanics during laparoscopic colectomy.
- Authors
Jin Suk Park; Eun Jin Ahn; Duk Dong Ko; Hyun Kang; Hwa Yong Shin; Chong Hwa Baek; Yong Hun Jung; Young Cheol Woo; Jin Yun Kim; Gill Hoi Koo
- Abstract
Background: This study was designed to assess the effects of pneumoperitoneal pressure (PP) and positional changes on the respiratory mechanics during laparoscopy assisted colectomy. Methods: Peak inspiratory pressure, plateau pressure, lung compliance, and airway resistance were recorded in PP of 10 mmHg and 15 mmHg, with the position change in 5 steps: head-down at 20°, head-down at 10°, neutral position, head-up at 10° and head-up at 20°. Results: When the patient was placed head-down, the position change accentuated the effects of pneumoperitoneum on respiratory mechanics. However, when the patient was placed in a head-up position during pneumoperitoneum the results showed no pattern. In the 20° head-up position with the PP being 10 mmHg, the compliance increased from 30.6 to 32.6 ml/cmH2O compared with neutral position (P = 0.002). However with the PP being 15 mmHg, the compliance had not changed compared with neutral position (P = 0.989). In 20o head-down position with the PP of 10 mmHg, the compliance was measured as 24.2 ml/cmH2O. This was higher than that for patients in the 10o head-down position with a PP of 15 mmHg, which was recorded as 21.2 ml/cmH2O. Also in the airway resistance, the patient in the 20° head-down position with the PP of 10 mmHg showed 15.8 cmH2O/L/sec, while the patient in the 10o headdown position with the PP of 15 mmHg showed 16.2 cmH2O/L/sec of airway resistance. These results were not statistically significant but still suggested that the head-down position accentuated the effects of pneumoperitoneum on respiratory mechanics. Conclusions: Our results suggest that respiratory mechanics are affected by the patient position and the level of PP - the latter having greater effect.
- Subjects
COLECTOMY; LAPAROSCOPIC surgery; RESPIRATORY mechanics; PATIENT positioning; ARTIFICIAL pneumoperitoneum; PRESSURE; PATIENT compliance
- Publication
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology, 2012, Vol 63, Issue 5, p419
- ISSN
2005-6419
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.4097/kjae.2012.63.5.419