they were doing this in Italy early on and they were not getting the response to treatment that they expected; ie it was not working and they didn't know why.Just watching a news item from an ICU - they are turning patients onto their fronts regularly. Apparently that does help with lung function....
they were doing this in Italy early on and they were not getting the response to treatment that they expected; ie it was not working and they didn't know why.
I’m very worried about when the doctor says lying on your back is not good as it closes off a lot of the small airways. And he says to lie on your front. But I cannot lie on my front as I find it difficult to breathe lying on my front even at the best of times, and it also puts a lot of pressure on my gallbladder area which hurts too much.
Looking at the new thread about changing the ventilation protocol away from positive pressure and towards more oxygen what is clear is that so far doctors and physios are using what they have used for other things assuming it will work but it may turn out that Covid19 needs a very different approach. We need hard evidence. It sounds as if that may be obtained in the next week or so. It seems that an ARDS pressure protocol may not be right after all.
Change in posture does not make a lot of difference to airway pressure but can prevent small air passages collapsing down. It is more a case of moving around being good than one position better than another.
@Jonathan Edwards any thoughts on the use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). @wigglethemouse higlighted ECMO in a post recently.
From what I read it improves oxygen saturation. No idea how that works but that's the reason I've seen for ED physicians recommending it.Turning patients is a traditional method in physiotherapy as part of 'postural drainage'. I doubt that it is all that relevant to an acute lung problem like Covid19. The cough is dry. The purpose of postural drainage is largely to encourage flow of wet secretions in bronchi. Turning of patients immobilised on ventilators probably helps prevents alveolar collapse as well but the most important thing for that is adequate positive pressure inflation.