Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2021 Jul;18(7):1098-1105. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.202011-1376CME.
The ongoing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has been unprecedented on many levels, not least of which are the challenges in understanding the pathophysiology of these new critically ill patients. One widely reported phenomenon is that of a profoundly hypoxemic patient with minimal to no dyspnea out of proportion to the extent of radiographic abnormality and change in lung compliance. This apparently unique presentation, sometimes called "happy hypoxemia or hypoxia" but better described as "silent hypoxemia," has led to the speculation of underlying pathophysiological differences between COVID-19 lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) from other causes. We explore three proposed distinctive features of COVID-19 that likely bear on the genesis of silent hypoxemia, including differences in lung compliance, pulmonary vascular responses to hypoxia, and nervous system sensing and response to hypoxemia. In the context of known principles of respiratory physiology and neurobiology, we discuss whether these particular findings are due to direct viral effects or, equally plausible, are within the spectrum of typical ARDS pathophysiology and the wide range of hypoxic ventilatory and pulmonary vascular responses and dyspnea perception in healthy people. Comparisons between lung injury patterns in COVID-19 and other causes of ARDS are clouded by the extent and severity of this pandemic, which may underlie the description of "new" phenotypes, although our ability to confirm these phenotypes by more invasive and longitudinal studies is limited. However, given the uncertainty about anything unique in the pathophysiology of COVID-19 lung injury, there are no compelling pathophysiological reasons at present to support a therapeutic approach for these patients that is different from the proven standards of care in ARDS.
当前的冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行在许多方面都是前所未有的,尤其是在理解这些新的重症患者的病理生理学方面存在挑战。一个广泛报道的现象是,一些严重低氧血症的患者几乎没有呼吸困难,与影像学异常和肺顺应性改变的程度不成比例。这种明显独特的表现,有时被称为“愉快性低氧血症或缺氧”,但更准确地描述为“沉默性低氧血症”,这导致了人们推测 COVID-19 肺损伤与急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)之间存在潜在的病理生理学差异,而后者的病因是其他原因。我们探讨了 COVID-19 的三个可能导致沉默性低氧血症的独特特征,包括肺顺应性、肺血管对缺氧的反应以及神经系统对低氧血症的感知和反应的差异。根据已知的呼吸生理学和神经生物学原理,我们讨论这些特定发现是否是由于直接的病毒作用,或者同样合理的是,它们是否处于典型 ARDS 病理生理学的范围内,以及健康人群中低氧性通气和肺血管反应以及呼吸困难感知的广泛范围。由于 COVID-19 和其他 ARDS 病因的肺损伤模式的范围和严重程度,将两者进行比较是复杂的,这可能是导致“新”表型描述的原因,尽管我们通过更具侵袭性和纵向研究来确认这些表型的能力受到限制。然而,鉴于 COVID-19 肺损伤的病理生理学方面是否存在任何独特之处尚不确定,目前尚无令人信服的病理生理学理由支持针对这些患者的治疗方法与 ARDS 的既定护理标准不同。