Objectives: To examine the effects of pressure-support ventilation on recovery from acute diaphragmatic fatigue.
Design: Prospective laboratory trial.
Setting: Experimental laboratory.
Subjects: Twenty-one healthy, adult New Zealand white rabbits.
Interventions: Diaphragmatic fatigue was induced with 50-Hz phrenic nerve stimulation for 30 mins. Recovery was compared between pressure-support ventilation 0 cm H2O (SB), 10 cm H2O (P10), and 20 cm H2O (P20) for 90 mins immediately after the end of the fatigue inducing procedure.
Measurements and main results: After the fatigue-inducing procedure, pressure-support ventilation reduced transdiaphragmatic pressure and integrated diaphragmatic electromyogram both at P20 and P10, but not in SB. Recovery was assessed by airway occlusion pressure (Poccl) generated by high- (100 Hz) and low- (20 Hz) frequency phrenic nerve stimulation. Poccl at 100 Hz was lower in P10 and P20 than in SB (74.6 +/- 6.2 [SEM] %, 66.9 +/- 3.3%, and 94.8 +/- 3.6% of the baseline at 90 mins for P10, P20, and SB, respectively), while those at 20 Hz showed no differences between the three groups.
Conclusion: Recovery from acute diaphragmatic fatigue might be disturbed with pressure-support ventilation.