Journal of Clinical Medicine (Aug 2022)

Utility of Initial Arterial Blood Gas in Neuromuscular versus Non-Neuromuscular Acute Respiratory Failure in Intensive Care Unit Patients

  • Ahmad R. Abuzinadah,
  • Asma Khaled Almalki,
  • Rinad Zuwaimel Almuteeri,
  • Rahaf Hassan Althalabi,
  • Hanin Abdullah Sahli,
  • Fatima Abdulrahman Hayash,
  • Rahaf Hamed Alrayiqi,
  • Seraj Makkawi,
  • Alaa Maglan,
  • Loujen O. Alamoudi,
  • Noof M. Alamri,
  • Maha H. Alsaati,
  • Aysha A. Alshareef,
  • Sultan Saeed Aljereish,
  • Ahmed K. Bamaga,
  • Faris Alhejaili,
  • Ahmad Abdulaziz Abulaban,
  • Mohammed H. Alanazy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11164926
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 16
p. 4926

Abstract

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Background: The arterial blood gas (ABG) parameters of patients admitted to intensive care units (ICUs) with acute neuromuscular respiratory failure (NMRF) and non-NMRF have not been defined or compared in the literature. Methods: We retrospectively collected the initial ABG parameters (pH, PaCO2, PaO2, and HCO3) of patients admitted to ICUs with acute respiratory failure. We compared ABG parameter ranges and the prevalence of abnormalities in NMRF versus non-NMRF and its categories, including primary pulmonary disease (PPD) (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma, and bronchiectasis), pneumonia, and pulmonary edema. Results: We included 287 patients (NMRF, n = 69; non-NMRF, n = 218). The difference between NMRF and non-NMRF included the median (interquartile range (IQR)) of pH (7.39 (7.32–7.43), 7.33 (7.22–7.39), p 2 (86.9 (71.4–123), 79.6 (64.6–99.1) mmHg, p = 0.02), and HCO3 (24.85 (22.9–27.8), 23.4 (19.4–26.8) mmol/L, p = 0.006). We found differences in the median of PaCO2 in NMRF (41.5 mmHg) versus PPD (63.3 mmHg), PaO2 in NMRF (86.9 mmHg) versus pneumonia (74.3 mmHg), and HCO3 in NMRF (24.8 mmol/L) versus pulmonary edema (20.9 mmol/L) (all p p p Conclusions: The ranges of ABG changes in NMRF patients differed from those of non-NMRF patients, with a greater reduction in PaO2 in non-NMRF than in NMRF patients. Combined hypoxemia and hypercarbia were most frequent in PPD patients, whereas isolated high bicarbonate was most frequent in NMRF patients.

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