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Annals of Translational Medicine logoLink to Annals of Translational Medicine
. 2018 Jan;6(2):27. doi: 10.21037/atm.2017.12.07

Heart-lung interactions in acute respiratory distress syndrome: pathophysiology, detection and management strategies

Fernando Suarez Sipmann 1,2,3,, Arnoldo Santos 1,2, Gerardo Tusman 4
PMCID: PMC5799144  PMID: 29430444

Abstract

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is the most severe form of acute respiratory failure characterized by diffuse alveolar and endothelial damage. The severe pathophysiological changes in lung parenchyma and pulmonary circulation together with the effects of positive pressure ventilation profoundly affect heart lung interactions in ARDS. The term pulmonary vascular dysfunction (PVD) refers to the specific involvement of the vascular compartment in ARDS and is expressed clinically by an increase in pulmonary arterial (PA) pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance both affecting right ventricular (RV) afterload. When severe, PVD can lead to RV failure which is associated to an increased mortality. The effect of PVD on RV function is not only a consequence of increased pulmonary vascular resistance as afterload is a much more complex phenomenon that includes all factors that oppose efficient ventricular ejection. Impaired pulmonary vascular mechanics including increased arterial elastance and augmented wave-reflection phenomena are commonly seen in ARDS and can additionally affect RV afterload. The use of selective pulmonary vasodilators and lung protective mechanical ventilation strategies are therapeutic interventions that can ameliorate PVD. Prone positioning and the open lung approach (OLA) are especially attractive strategies to improve PVD due to their effects on increasing functional lung volume. In this review we will describe some pathophysiological aspects of heart-lung interactions during the ventilatory support of ARDS, its clinical assessment and discuss therapeutic interventions to prevent the occurrence and progression of PVD and RV failure.

Keywords: Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), pulmonary vascular dysfunction (PVD), pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR), lung protective ventilation, positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), pulmonary vascular mechanics, prone positioning, open lung approach (OLA)

Introduction

The acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is the most severe form of acute respiratory failure still linked to a high morbidity and mortality (1). One of the major advances in the management of ARDS has been the introduction of lung protective ventilation strategies which can be considered the first therapeutic intervention consistently improving outcomes (2,3). Based on the strict limitation of tidal volumes and inspiratory alveolar pressures these strategies aim at preventing ventilation induced lung injury (VILI) by minimizing tidal overdistension and recruitment (4). However, the heterogenous nature of the parenchymal lung involvement creates important regional differences that greatly amplify lung tissue strain that can trigger an inflammatory response in those areas receiving a disproportionately high local tidal volume (5). The ventilator management of ARDS has mainly focused on preventing the deleterious effects of mechanical ventilation on the alveolar compartment. Surprisingly, the effects on the vascular spaces have received much less attention, even though the pathophysiological involvement of the microcirculation and its effect on pulmonary hemodynamics and right ventricular (RV) function have been known for long (6-8). Furthermore, the close link between the airway and vascular spaces in the pathophysiology of VILI has been well established experimentally and is referred to as vascular VILI (9). Recently, a unifying parameter, the inspiratory driving pressure, has been identified as the single most relevant independent factor mediating outcome in ARDS (10). This easy to measure parameter, obtained by substracting total PEEP from plateau pressure, is closely related to the cyclic tidal strain imposed on the functional ventilated lung. Being an expression of the ratio between the delivered tidal volume and lung compliance, driving pressure integrates information on the effects of tidal volume, plateau pressure and PEEP. An elevated driving pressure is not only a risk factor for damaging the alveolar compartment but has also been recognized as the main independent ventilatory factor causing PVD (11).

In this report, we will discuss key pathophysiological aspects of the interaction between the lung, the pulmonary circulation and the right heart and discuss management strategies to prevent the negative impact of mechanical ventilation on this interaction in ARDS.

Pulmonary vascular dysfunction (PVD)

The pulmonary vascular involvement in ARDS was first described more than 40 years ago (6). Now referred to as PVD, this term encompasses the structural and functional pathophysiological changes affecting the vascular compartment and the RV in ARDS. These changes include pulmonary vasoconstriction induced by hypoxia and/or the release of vasoactive inflammatory mediators, microvascular thrombosis, reduction in functional lung volume, direct inflammatory endothelial damage and vascular remodeling phenomena (12). The clinical expression of PVD is an increase in pulmonary arterial (PA) pressure and vascular resistance (PVR). It should be considered as a continuum during the course of ARDS ranging from mild pulmonary hypertension, invariably present in most ARDS patients, to more severe pulmonary hypertension and ultimately RV failure (Figure 1). Although not unequivocally established (13) accumulating clinical data strongly suggest a prognostic link between PVD and outcome in ARDS (11,14). Furthermore, an elevated physiological dead-space, an indirect marker of PVD as it reflects early microvascular alterations, has been a consistent independent predictor of ARDS mortality (15,16). In nearly 25% of patients PVD evolves to its most severe form acute cor-pulmonale with overt RV failure (17) in which the reported associated mortality has been as high as 60–70% (11).

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Pulmonary vascular dysfunction in ARDS. PAH, pulmonary artery hypertension; RV, right ventricular; MOD, multi-organ dysfunction; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome.

Pathophysiological aspects of pulmonary and RV hemodynamics

The effects of mechanical ventilation

The pulmonary circulation is a low pressure—low resistance circuit that together with the RV and the lung shares a common physical space in the thoracic cavity. Their operation and interaction are thus influenced by the pressure level surrounding these structures, the pleural pressure, and the cyclic changes in the lung distending pressure, the transpulmonary pressure (i.e., the alveolar minus pleural pressure). During normal breathing pleural and transpulmonary pressure swings are of very low magnitude, slightly above and below atmospheric levels minimizing lung stress, facilitating venous return and optimizing ventilation and perfusion matching. This balance is profoundly affected during positive pressure ventilation. The operating pressure is increased to a continuous level, the positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) which is transmitted to the right atrium directly reducing the pressure gradient for venous return. In addition, transpulmonary pressure swings above PEEP become significantly higher affecting RV afterload. Both, RV and pulmonary circulation can normally adapt to these changes. However, under pathological conditions such as ARDS, where higher than normal pressures are applied in a heterogeneously diseased lung, this adaptation capacity is critically challenged.

Pulmonary vascular mechanics

To accommodate the entire output of the RV, normal pulmonary vessels are highly distensible offering a low resistance to flow. This low PA elastance is essential to maintain RV efficiency, that is, the effective transfer of power from the ejecting ventricle to the pulmonary circulation at the lowest energetic cost. This critical dependency between RV and pulmonary vascular mechanics is represented by the concept of ventricular-vascular coupling (18). In patients with pulmonary hypertension, the increase in proximal arterial elastance, described as arterial stiffness, is believed to mark the beginning of the transition from a compensated to a non-compensated RV dysfunction and is a strong predictor of mortality (19,20). Increased proximal arterial elastance may also be an important early component of PVD during ARDS due to the predominant vasoconstrictive state caused by hypoxemia, hypercapnic and metabolic acidosis, vasoactive mediators and the reduction of functional lung volume (Figure 1). Most of these factors primarily affect medial and distal PA segments but result in dilation of proximal segments that become stiffer (21). It has been established that this increase in PA elastance is probably as important as an elevated PVR in increasing RV load (22). Another important but less studied factor that affects ventricular-vascular coupling is related to wave reflection phenomena. Ventricular systole generates a pressure and flow wave that travels through the pulmonary circulation and is reflected in the distally branching arterial tree. When the forward pressure and flow waves generated during RV systole meet the backward returning wave, pressure is increased and flow decreased. In the normal pulmonary circulation wave reflection phenomena are negligible as reflected waves arrive during the diastolic period. However, in pathological conditions with increased PA elastance and resistance, reflected waves are regularly present travel faster and thus arrive earlier during systole affecting RV ejection and efficiency (23). The site of the reflected wave arrival can often be seen by a notching in the ejective phase of the systolic portion of the PA waveform and the pressure increase above this point is the amplified load that the RV has to overcome. Pulmonary wave reflections have been documented in patients with pulmonary hypertension by time domain analysis of the pulmonary artery pressure waveform (24) but have not been evaluated in ARDS patients. In a recent experimental ARDS study PA wave reflections had an important contribution to RV afterload and could be modulated by the lung condition (23) (Figure 2).

Figure 2.

Figure 2

Correlates of functional lung volume and pulmonary vascular mechanics. A sequence of 3 different levels of PEEP performed during a decremental PEEP trial in an experimental porcine model of ARDS is presented. The sequence corresponds to the same animal in different moments of the protocol. For each PEEP level the corresponding CT image and the pulmonary arterial (PA) waveform are displayed. This example illustrates how the size of the functional (aerated) lung has a profound impact on pulmonary vascular mechanics: on the absolute pressure values (SPAP, systolic PA pressure), the pulmonary arterial pulse pressure (PAP), the effect of wave-reflection presented as the site of the incidence of the reflected wave seen as a distinctive notching in the systolic portion (Pi) and the augmented pressure due to the effect of the backward reflected pressure wave represented as ΔP. This augmented pressure is an additional load component that the RV must overcome during ejection due to wave reflection phenomena. Note that despite the lower levels of PEEP, RV afterload is greatly increased as shown by the higher PA values, higher PA pulse pressure and higher augmented pressure. PEEP, positive end-expiratory pressure; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; RV, right ventricular.

Clinical assessment of pulmonary hemodynamics and RV function

Pulmonary artery catheter

One of the reasons of the reduced attention devoted to PVD in ARDS may be related to the intrinsic difficulty to properly assess pulmonary circulation and RV function at the bedside. The pulmonary artery catheter was essential in the detection and first description of PVD (6) but, its current clinical use has declined significantly. It provides a direct continuous monitoring of pulmonary artery pressure waveforms and it measures PA occlusion pressure and RV cardiac output by thermodilution. This allows to calculate pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR), i.e., the ratio of mean transpulmonary arterial pressure drop to cardiac output, the main clinical estimate of RV afterload. By using mean values however, PVR represents only the steady-state opposition to ventricular output neglecting the pulsatile nature of pulmonary flow and pressure which can significantly contribute to RV load. The calculation of PVR is also based on assumptions, such as that flow occurs through a rigid tube without branching and ignores the role of inertance and blood viscosity, that are not met in the pulmonary circulation. In fact, RV afterload is a much more complex concept that should include all the factors that oppose efficient ventricular ejection including vascular stiffness and ventricular-vascular coupling phenomena that better describe the dynamically changing conditions in which the RV must operate. More specific methods to assess total RV load and pulmonary circulation such as PA impedance and its components, arterial elastance and advanced instantaneous flow and pressure waveform analysis would be needed to more comprehensively assess RV afterload. Although such methods have provided very useful mechanistic insights in the pathophysiology of heart-lung interactions they are not available for clinical use.

Echocardiography

Echocardiography has become a very useful first line bedside diagnostic tool to assess RV function (25) and to detect the presence of PVD (17). It informs about RV dimensions and function and can provide estimates of RV outflow, PA pressure and assess preload dependency. It also evaluates parameters that describe the interaction between RV and pulmonary circulation such as an estimate of PVR (26), RV ejection efficiency (27) and speckle tracking (28). Echocardiography provides the currently accepted diagnostic criteria for moderate PVD: pulmonary artery systolic pressure >40 mmHg and severe PVD: RV to left ventricular end-diastolic area ratio <0.6 and end-systolic paradoxical septum motion (11). However, echocardiographic assessment of PVD is not always easy due to the complex RV shape and the quality of the acoustic window often compromised in ventilated patients. In addition, echocardiography only offers intermittent evaluations precluding the longitudinal assessment over time and during specific interventions or changing conditions.

Management strategies to improve heart-lung interactions in ARDS

Whether the clinical expression of PVD remains as a mild pulmonary hypertension or evolves to acute cor-pulmonale depends on the extent of the intrinsic vascular involvement related to ARDS, but also on the clinical and ventilatory management. General therapeutic interventions such as the specific treatment of the precipitating cause of ARDS, adequate hemodynamic management with judicious fluid administration, especially in the post-resuscitation phase and correction of gas exchange abnormalities are mandatory. Implementing therapeutic strategies directly aimed at improving or reversing factors related to the development of PVD would be of particular interest (Figure 1).

Pulmonary vasodilators

Selective pulmonary vasodilators such as inhaled nitric oxide (iNO), prostacyclin and epoprostenol are attractive therapeutic options for PVD as they directly reduce PA pressure and PVR without systemic hemodynamic effects (29). Data on the most studied agent, iNO are inconclusive and clinical trials have not demonstrated any outcome benefit (30). However, the study protocols tested to date have not been specifically targeted to improve PVD which may require different doses and therapeutic strategies. Interestingly iNO is still a commonly used rescue therapy in ARDS patients (31). The role of other vasodilators such as phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors or endothelin-receptor antagonists in the treatment of PVD in ARDS is not known.

Lung protective ventilation strategies

The role of mechanical ventilation is of particular interest as it constitutes a potentially modifiable factor that, with the appropriate settings, can modulate heart-lung interactions. The use of high tidal volumes, plateau and driving pressures have shown to directly cause (11,32) or worsen PVD (33). Lung protective ventilation strategies have therefore an important role in the prevention of the occurrence and progression of PVD and RV failure (34). Recently described RV protective ventilation strategies recommend the limitation of plateau and driving pressures by using low tidal volumes and moderate levels of PEEP (35). The importance of functional lung volume is also increasingly recognized and is well explained by the u-shaped relation between lung volume and PVR. At high lung volumes compression of alveolar vessels directly increases PVR. At low volumes the lung tends to collapse triggering hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction, affecting extra-alveolar vessels’ geometry and causing capillary de-recruitment. Collapse also increases lung heterogeneity and reduces the size of the functional lung that participates in tidal ventilation. In this condition, and depending on the amount of lung collapse which can be extensive in ARDS (36,37), even recommended lower tidal volumes can cause significant lung overdistension (38) with obvious negative consequences for both air and vascular spaces. This may explain, at least in part, why the reported incidence of PVD in the era of lung protective ventilation is still high (11,14).

The role of PEEP

During mechanical ventilation lung volume is critically affected by the level of PEEP. In ARDS lungs normally aerated and non-dependent overinflated lung regions often coexist with dependent lung collapse. In such conditions, the theoretical beneficial effects of lower PEEP on pulmonary circulation and RV function can be offset by the negative consequences of collapse whereas high levels can be either beneficial when promoting recruitment or detrimental when contributing to further overdistension. In other words, how PEEP affects lung volume is a major determinant of its effects on afterload (Figure 2). A good example illustrating this comes from a recent study on the prevalence of PVD in which patients developing acute cor pulmonale were in fact ventilated with lower levels of PEEP (11).

Prone positioning

One effective way to reduce lung heterogeneity is prone positioning. By modulating the vertical pleural pressure gradient, proning homogenizes the regional distribution of transpulmonary pressures reexpanding dependent lung regions (39). This increase in functional lung volume by recruitment may well be one of the main mechanisms behind the described RV unloading effects of prone positioning (40,41).

In a recent randomized controlled trial in severe ARDS patients lung protective ventilation in the prone position resulted in a significant improvement in survival and interestingly in less cardiovascular dysfunction (42). Proning also usually results in better oxygenation and carbon dioxide elimination, which per se contributes to RV unloading.

The open lung approach (OLA)

A potentially more efficient way to reduce lung heterogeneity and prevent PVD is the OLA ventilation strategy. It aims at restoring the functional size of the lung by combining lung recruitment with an individualized selection of PEEP. Beneficial effects on PVD of such a strategy have been recently demonstrated in patients submitted to cardiac surgery (43). Recruitment immediately after bypass weaning resulted in improved RV function assessed by echocardiography. Figure 3 illustrates the effects of recruitment on PA pressures, pulsatility and waveform morphology in a cardiac surgery patient. Key to the OLA strategy is the appropriate individual selection of PEEP after lung recruitment. By using clinical parameters such as dynamic compliance a decremental PEEP trial aims at finding the minimum level i.e., the open lung PEEP that prevents lung collapse (44,45). By maintaining this level, ventilation can then be set at the minimum possible driving pressure to minimize tidal overdistension. When successfully applied in a responding patient this strategy places tidal ventilation at the nadir of the PVR-lung volume relationship and the individualized PEEP level represents the best compromise between lung collapse and overdistension. Open lung PEEP levels frequently reach initial values of 15 to 17 cmH2O that in a recent randomized controlled trial were not associated with negative hemodynamic effects when compared with the standard ARDSnet strategy (45). The effects of open lung PEEP on PVD has been recently evaluated in an experimental ARDS model by advanced analysis of pulmonary vascular mechanics. Open lung PEEP levels averaged 19 cmH2O and resulted in less wave refection phenomena and a lower PA effective elastance without affecting oxygen delivery and systemic hemodynamics when compared to 10 cmH2O PEEP a level commonly used in ARDS patients (23).

Figure 3.

Figure 3

Example of changes in airway, transpulmonary and pulmonary arterial pressure in response to lung recruitment. This example presents the simultaneous recording of airway, transpulmonary and pulmonary arterial pressures in a patient during cardiac surgery in which two consecutive maneuvers were performed. Clear systolic and pulse PA pressure changes occur after each maneuver. The circles highlight the condition reached after recruitment when final protective ventilator settings were adjusted with a PEEP level of 10 and a reduced driving pressure which corresponds to a reduced transpulmonary driving pressure and pulmonary artery pulse pressure. Also note that expiratory transpulmonary pressure remains positive after the first recruitment suggesting an open lung condition. In the lower panel selected individual PA waveforms from different moments of the sequence are presented. Note the different morphology and amplitude. PEEP, positive end-expiratory pressure; PA, pulmonary arterial.

Conclusions

ARDS is still associated to a high mortality and the importance of pulmonary vascular and RV involvement in its pathophysiology and prognosis is increasingly recognized. The way the heart and the lungs interact during mechanical ventilation in ARDS is complex and difficult to evaluate at the bedside. Classic hemodynamic assessment such as PVR has important limitations as RV afterload is dynamically affected by many other factors related to pulmonary vascular mechanics and ventricular vascular coupling. Better understanding the complex pathophysiology governing heart lung interactions during the mechanical ventilatory support of ARDS is essential to adequately implement therapeutic interventions to prevent the occurrence and progression of both pulmonary and vascular dysfunction. The adoption of these therapeutic interventions should be considered early in the course of ARDS in order to impact outcome.

Acknowledgements

None.

Footnotes

Conflicts of Interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

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