Weaning from mechanical ventilation represents 50% of the time spent under mechanical ventilation (1). The risk factors identified in the failure to wean from mechanical ventilation are: * left heart dysfunction with LVEF \< 30%. * an ineffective cough * presence of resuscitation neuromyopathy * mechanical ventilation time \>7 days * presence of a delirium * age \>65 years old * abundant bronchial secretion * presence of underlying lung pathology An ineffective cough is found in 40% of patients requiring reintubation. However, cough assessment is most often approximate, based on a subjective assessment of cough strength by asking the patient to cough spontaneously on his or her tube). The objective evaluation of cough is based on the measurement of the peak expiratory flow rate at cough, commonly referred to as peak expiratory flow rate at cough (PEFD), the patient is asked to take a deep breath and then cough as hard as possible. Subjective cough assessment does not predict the occurrence of ventilatory withdrawal failure. Conversely, all studies that objectively assessed the strength of cough before extubation by measuring the PEFD found a significant association with the outcome of extubation: a low PEFD increases the risk of extubation failure by a factor of 5 to 9. The investigators hypothesize that the increase in parietal abdominal muscle contraction obtained by using a non-invasive ultrasound method indicates an effective cough. Conversely, an ineffective cough can be detected by this simple ultrasound criterion, which can be performed at the patient's bedside and extrapolated to all intensive care units equipped with an ultrasound scanner. This evaluation will be carried out before extubation: during the spontaneous ventilation test on a tube in a half-seated position (\>45°) and within 24 hours after extubation.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
44
Centre Chirurgical Marie Lannelongue
Le Plessis-Robinson, France
parietal ultrasound
compare parietal ultrasound with peak expiratory flow rate measurement (PEFD) in patients ventilated less than 48 hours after cardiac surgery with a sternal approach.
Time frame: 48 hours
peak expiratory flow rate
compare parietal ultrasound with peak expiratory flow rate measurement (PEFD) in patients ventilated less than 48 hours after cardiac surgery with a sternal approach.
Time frame: 48 hours
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