Abstract

The Surviving Sepsis Campaign panel recently recom-mended that “mechanically ventilated patients with COVID-19 should be managed similarly to other patients with acute respiratory failure in the ICU [1].” Yet, COVID-19 pneumonia [2], despite falling in most of the circumstances under the Berlin definition of ARDS [3], is a specific disease, whose distinctive features are severe hypoxemia often associated with near normal respiratory system compliance (more than 50% of the 150 patients measured by the authors and further confirmed by several colleagues in Northern Italy). This remarkable combination is almost never seen in severe ARDS. These severely hypoxemic patients despite sharing a single eti-ology (SARS-CoV-2) may present quite differently from one another: normally breathing (“silent” hypoxemia) or remarkably dyspneic; quite responsive to nitric oxide or not; deeply hypocapnic or normo/hypercapnic; and either responsive to prone position or not. Therefore, the same disease actually presents itself with impressive non-uniformity. Based on detailed observation of several cases and discussions with colleagues treating these patients, we hypothesize that the different COVID-19 patterns found at presentation in the emergency department depend on the interaction between three factors: (1) the severity of the infection, the host response, physiological reserve and comorbidities; (2) the ventilatory responsiveness of the patient to hypoxemia; (3) the time elapsed between the onset of the disease and the observation in the hospital. The interaction between these factors leads to the devel-opment of a time-related disease spectrum within two primary “phenotypes”:

Keywords

MedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PneumoniaAnesthesiology2019-20 coronavirus outbreakPain medicineSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Respiratory systemBetacoronavirusIntensive care medicineEmergency medicineRespiratory diseaseInternal medicineVirologyAnesthesiaLungInfectious disease (medical specialty)Outbreak

MeSH Terms

Airway ResistanceBetacoronavirusCOVID-19ComorbidityCoronavirus InfectionsGuidelines as TopicHumansHypoxiaLungLung ComplianceOrgan SizePandemicsPhenotypePneumoniaViralRadiographyThoracicRespiratory Dead SpaceSARS-CoV-2Severity of Illness IndexVentilation-Perfusion Ratio

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Publication Info

Year
2020
Type
article
Volume
46
Issue
6
Pages
1099-1102
Citations
1880
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1880
OpenAlex
95
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Cite This

Luciano Gattinoni, Davide Chiumello, Pietro Caironi et al. (2020). COVID-19 pneumonia: different respiratory treatments for different phenotypes?. Intensive Care Medicine , 46 (6) , 1099-1102. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-020-06033-2

Identifiers

DOI
10.1007/s00134-020-06033-2
PMID
32291463
PMCID
PMC7154064

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%