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ISSN: 1642-5758
Anaesthesiology Intensive Therapy
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2/2023
vol. 55
 
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Letter to the Editor

Commentary on “Integrated ultrasound protocol in predicting weaning success and extubation failure: a prospective observational study”

Jacobo Bacariza Blanco
1
,
Antonio Esquinas
2

  1. Hospital Garcia de Orta, Almada, Portugal
  2. Hospital General Universitario Morales Meseguer, Murcia, Spain
Anaesthesiol Intensive Ther 2023; 55, 2: 136–137
Online publish date: 2023/06/30
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Dear Editor,
We have read the paper by Kundu et al. [1] with great interest. In their prospective observational study, the authors suggest an integrated ultrasound (US) protocol to assist the clinician on the weaning process. The protocol focuses the US assessment on the three main, reversible, potential causes for the extubation failure: the lung, the heart, and the diaphragm. The evaluation is done before and after the spontaneous breathing test (SBT). Two groups were created based on extu­bation outcome: failure and success, with the latter showing better performance and lower ICU length of stay. In conclusion, they validated the protocol as a reliable predictive tool to avoid extubation failure.
First, we absolutely agree with the authors on the need for a wide-scope ultrasound protocol, to help the clinician during the weaning.
However, some considerations should be made.
From our point of view, it is all about focusing on three clinical assessment angles (lung, heart, and diaphragm) and three assessment timings: (before, during, and after the SBT), as previous papers have shown [2]. The point is to use each of the evaluations to clarify the proper time to proceed with the patient’s extubation. Through the angles, we can see the issues related to acute or chronic lung states, haemodynamic status, the cardiac potential as the “global body engine”, and finally the diaphragm, as the main respiratory muscle. Thanks to the separate timings, we can pay attention to the reversible conditions, the high-risk patients (before SBT), the lung and diaphragm capacity to overcome the weaning stress and later during SBT, and the cause for failing the extubation (after the SBT). However, the protocol of Kundu et al. [1] did not study “during SBT” and hence missed the chance to increase the accuracy of predicting weaning failure, assessing both diaphragm and lung.
The authors evaluate the heart using the left ventricular outflow tract velocity time integral (LVOT VTI) variation, while performing a passive leg raising (PLR) before the SBT. We agree with this. However, regarding the haemodynamic state assessment before the weaning, using PLR will just give us information about the heart’s responsiveness to fluids. But on the equation, we cannot forget the other side, namely the organism’s tolerance (or not) to fluids. The challenge during the weaning is not in the fluid-responsive patients, but in the intolerant ones (i.e. overloaded)....


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