Background: In preterm infants receiving noninvasive ventilation, data about inspiratory effort (Delta P-es) and transpulmonary driving pressure (Delta P-L) are scarce. Electrical activity of the diaphragm (EAdi) can estimate Delta P-es and Delta P-L when patient size precludes more accurate measurements. This estimation may reveal new insights into respiratory pathophysiology and potential risk of self-inflicted lung injury in neonates receiving noninvasive support. Research Question: What are the characteristics of Delta P-es and Delta P-L in extremely preterm infants undergoing noninvasive ventilation? Study Design and Methods: Prospective, observational pilot cohort study, in which EAdi was recorded in neonates receiving noninvasive ventilation during recovery from respiratory distress syndrome (RDS), in those with evolving bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), and in term controls. EAdi was used to estimate Delta P-es and Delta P-L. In a subset of patients with RDS and BPD, diaphragmatic thickening fraction (TF) and peripheral oxygen saturation (Spo(2))/Fio(2) were recorded. Results: Ten patients with RDS, 25 patients with evolving BPD, and 5 control term neonates were studied. Average EAdi, Delta P-es, Delta P-L, and TF were similar between control infants and those with RDS and BPD. Inter-patient variability of Delta P-es (RDS, 24 [9]%; BPD, 28 [9]%; controls, 10 [6]%; P < .001) and Delta P-L (RDS, 25 [7]%; BPD, 27 [9]%; controls, 17 (7)%; P = .05) was higher in patients than in controls. Breaths with Delta P-es > 10 cm H2O occurred more often in BPD than in RDS patients (P = .035) and control infants (P = .006). Breaths with Delta P-L > 20 cm H2O occurred similarly in patients with BPD or RDS and more frequently than in control infants (P < .001). EAdi-based estimations correlated with TF, and Delta P-L had an inverse correlation with Spo(2)/Fio(2) (rho = -0.64; P = .018). Interpretation: Delta P-es and Delta P-L showed relevant variability in preterm infants. High Delta P-es was more common in patients with BPD than in those with RDS or control infants. High Delta P-L was observed in patients with BPD and RDS, occurred more often than in control infants, and correlated with the degree of oxygenation impairment.
De Luca, D., De La Rubia, S., Miselli, F., Emeriaud, G., Loi, B., Piastra, M., Conti, G., Antonelli, M., Grieco, D. L., Inspiratory Effort and Dynamic Transpulmonary Driving Pressure in Extremely Preterm Infants, <<CHEST>>, 2026; 169 (4): 968-976. [doi:10.1016/j.chest.2025.09.119] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/339968]
Inspiratory Effort and Dynamic Transpulmonary Driving Pressure in Extremely Preterm Infants
Piastra, Marco;Conti, Giorgio;Antonelli, Massimo;Grieco, Domenico Luca
2026
Abstract
Background: In preterm infants receiving noninvasive ventilation, data about inspiratory effort (Delta P-es) and transpulmonary driving pressure (Delta P-L) are scarce. Electrical activity of the diaphragm (EAdi) can estimate Delta P-es and Delta P-L when patient size precludes more accurate measurements. This estimation may reveal new insights into respiratory pathophysiology and potential risk of self-inflicted lung injury in neonates receiving noninvasive support. Research Question: What are the characteristics of Delta P-es and Delta P-L in extremely preterm infants undergoing noninvasive ventilation? Study Design and Methods: Prospective, observational pilot cohort study, in which EAdi was recorded in neonates receiving noninvasive ventilation during recovery from respiratory distress syndrome (RDS), in those with evolving bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), and in term controls. EAdi was used to estimate Delta P-es and Delta P-L. In a subset of patients with RDS and BPD, diaphragmatic thickening fraction (TF) and peripheral oxygen saturation (Spo(2))/Fio(2) were recorded. Results: Ten patients with RDS, 25 patients with evolving BPD, and 5 control term neonates were studied. Average EAdi, Delta P-es, Delta P-L, and TF were similar between control infants and those with RDS and BPD. Inter-patient variability of Delta P-es (RDS, 24 [9]%; BPD, 28 [9]%; controls, 10 [6]%; P < .001) and Delta P-L (RDS, 25 [7]%; BPD, 27 [9]%; controls, 17 (7)%; P = .05) was higher in patients than in controls. Breaths with Delta P-es > 10 cm H2O occurred more often in BPD than in RDS patients (P = .035) and control infants (P = .006). Breaths with Delta P-L > 20 cm H2O occurred similarly in patients with BPD or RDS and more frequently than in control infants (P < .001). EAdi-based estimations correlated with TF, and Delta P-L had an inverse correlation with Spo(2)/Fio(2) (rho = -0.64; P = .018). Interpretation: Delta P-es and Delta P-L showed relevant variability in preterm infants. High Delta P-es was more common in patients with BPD than in those with RDS or control infants. High Delta P-L was observed in patients with BPD and RDS, occurred more often than in control infants, and correlated with the degree of oxygenation impairment.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



