Anaesthesiology Intensive Therapy (Apr 2022)

Respiratory decompensation with proning – when prone positioning can worsen respiratory mechanics

  • Marko Oydanich,
  • Rotem Naftalovich,
  • Andrew J. Iskander

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5114/ait.2022.113730
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54, no. 2
pp. 187 – 189

Abstract

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Prone positioning recently gain- ed more popularity from its use in COVID-19 management. It is gene­-rally considered to improve respiratory mechanics via increased lung compliance. In surgery, prone positioning is typically encountered when it is a necessity to access certain posterior anatomic structures. Though certain post-operative complications from prone positioning are well known (e.g., postoperative vision loss), the potential intraoperative complications that it can have for respiratory com­pliance and O2 saturation, in the setting of general anaesthesia, are perhaps less familiar, as only a few studies showed improved respiratory mechanics in the setting of ge­neral anaesthesia [1–3] and one study showed that prone positioning led to a 30–35% drop in respiratory compliance under general anaesthesia [4]. As the following case illustrates, proning is a critical point in the intraoperative course as it can sometimes lead to negative respiratory sequelae disrupting homeostasis.