plateau pressure


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pressure

 (P) [presh´ur]
force per unit area.
arterial pressure (arterial blood pressure) blood pressure (def. 2).
atmospheric pressure the pressure exerted by the atmosphere, usually considered as the downward pressure of air onto a unit of area of the earth's surface; the unit of pressure at sea level is one atmosphere. Pressure decreases with increasing altitude.
barometric pressure atmospheric p.
blood pressure
2. pressure of blood on walls of any blood vessel.
capillary pressure the blood pressure in the capillaries.
central venous pressure see central venous pressure.
cerebral perfusion pressure the mean arterial pressure minus the intracranial pressure; a measure of the adequacy of cerebral blood flow.
cerebrospinal pressure the pressure of the cerebrospinal fluid, normally 100 to 150 mm Hg.
continuous positive airway pressure see continuous positive airway pressure.
filling pressure see mean circulatory filling pressure.
high blood pressure hypertension.
intracranial pressure see intracranial pressure.
intraocular pressure the pressure exerted against the outer coats by the contents of the eyeball.
intrapleural pressure (intrathoracic pressure) pleural pressure.
intrinsic positive end-expiratory pressure elevated positive end-expiratory pressure and dynamic pulmonary hyperinflation caused by insufficient expiratory time or a limitation on expiratory flow. It cannot be routinely measured by a ventilator's pressure monitoring system but is measurable only using an expiratory hold maneuver done by the clinician. Its presence increases the work needed to trigger the ventilator, causes errors in the calculation of pulmonary compliance, may cause hemodynamic compromise, and complicates interpretation of hemodynamic measurements. Called also auto-PEEP and intrinsic PEEP.
maximal expiratory pressure maximum expiratory pressure.
maximal inspiratory pressure the pressure during inhalation against a completely occluded airway; used to evaluate inspiratory respiratory muscle strength and readiness for weaning from mechanical ventilation. A maximum inspiratory pressure above −25 cm H2O is associated with successful weaning.
maximum expiratory pressure (MEP) a measure of the strength of respiratory muscles, obtained by having the patient exhale as strongly as possible against a mouthpiece; the maximum value is near total lung capacity.
maximum inspiratory pressure (MIP) the inspiratory pressure generated against a completely occluded airway; used to evaluate inspiratory respiratory muscle strength and readiness for weaning from mechanical ventilation. A maximum inspiratory pressure above −25 cm H2O is associated with successful weaning.
mean airway pressure the average pressure generated during the respiratory cycle.
mean circulatory filling pressure a measure of the average (arterial and venous) pressure necessary to cause filling of the circulation with blood; it varies with blood volume and is directly proportional to the rate of venous return and thus to cardiac output.
negative pressure pressure less than that of the atmosphere.
oncotic pressure the osmotic pressure of a colloid in solution.
osmotic pressure the pressure required to stop osmosis through a semipermeable membrane between a solution and pure solvent; it is proportional to the osmolality of the solution. Symbol π.
partial pressure the pressure exerted by each of the constituents of a mixture of gases.
peak pressure in mechanical ventilation, the highest pressure that occurs during inhalation.
plateau pressure in mechanical ventilation, the pressure measured at the proximal airway during an end-inspiratory pause; a reflection of alveolar pressure.
pleural pressure the pressure between the visceral pleura and the thoracic pleura in the pleural cavity. Called also intrapleural or intrathoracic pressure.
positive pressure pressure greater than that of the atmosphere.
positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) a method of control mode ventilation in which positive pressure is maintained during expiration to increase the volume of gas remaining in the lungs at the end of expiration, thus reducing the shunting of blood through the lungs and improving gas exchange. A PEEP higher than the critical closing pressure prevents alveolar collapse and can markedly improve the arterial Po2 in patients with a lowered functional residual capacity, as in acute respiratory failure.
Effects of the application of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) on the alveoli. A, Atelectatic alveoli before PEEP application. B, Optimal PEEP application has reinflated alveoli to normal volume. C, Excessive PEEP application overdistends the alveoli and compresses adjacent pulmonary capillaries, creating dead space with its attendant hypercapnia. From Pierce, 1995.
pulmonary artery wedge pressure (PAWP) (pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP)) intravascular pressure, reflecting the left ventricular end diastolic pressure, measured by a swan-ganz catheter wedged into a small pulmonary artery to block the flow from behind.
pulse pressure the difference between the systolic and diastolic pressures. If the systolic pressure is 120 mm Hg and the diastolic pressure is 80 mm Hg, the pulse pressure is 40 mm Hg; the normal pulse pressure is between 30 and 40 mm Hg.
urethral pressure the pressure inwards exerted by the walls of the urethra, which must be counteracted in order for urine to flow through; see also urethral pressure profile.
venous pressure the blood pressure in the veins; see also central venous pressure.
water vapor pressure the tension exerted by water vapor molecules, 47 mm Hg at normal body temperature.
wedge pressure blood pressure measured by a small catheter wedged into a vessel, occluding it; see also pulmonary capillary wedge pressure and wedged hepatic vein pressure.
wedged hepatic vein pressure the venous pressure measured with a catheter wedged into the hepatic vein. The difference between wedged and free hepatic vein pressures is used to locate the site of obstruction in portal hypertension; it is elevated in that due to cirrhosis, but low in cardiac ascites or portal vein thrombosis.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

pla·teau pres·sure

(pla-tō' presh'ŭr)
The equilibrium pressure between airways and alveoli in a patient-ventilator system; considered to be an approximation of alveolar pressure.
Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing © Farlex 2012
References in periodicals archive ?
For the isotherm measured at 673 K, the plateau pressures were around 1 and 0.4 bar for reactions (2) and (3), respectively.
Effects of tidal volume reduction in acute lung injury (ALI) patients with inspiratory plateau pressures < 32 cmH20 before tidal volume reduction.
The table 12 & Fig 10 shows mean & standard deviation of baseline peak & plateau pressure for pressure controlled and volume controlled ventilation which shows that peak & plateau pressure was less for pressure controlled ventilation compared with volume controlled ventilation.
Therefore, the current trend is to ventilate these patients with tidal volumes based on about 6 ml/kg of ideal body weight and positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), along with attempting to achieve plateau pressures of less than 35 cm H20.
After eight days of mechanical ventilation, and despite a prone position, blood gas showed pH 7.27, pC[O.sub.2] 83 mmHg, p[O.sub.2] 57 mmHg, HC[O.sub.3]-37 mmol.[l.sup.-1] with Fi[O.sub.2] 1 ([P.sub.a][O.sub.2]/Fi[O.sub.2] 57), Vt 4 ml/kg of predicted body weight, positive end-expiratory pressure 15 cm[H.sub.2]O and mean plateau pressure of 39 cm[H.sub.2]O.
The measurement of Plateau Pressure (PPLAT) is one of the most indispensable values we can determine.
In the pressure-time curves at Y-piece of the PB840, plateau pressure (Ppl) in the injured model (18.5 cm[H.sub.2]O) was higher than those in the normal (11.4 cm[H.sub.2]O) and injured models of the SV300 (14.5 cm[H.sub.2]O).
Plateau Pressure - (PPLAT) PPLAT is the pressure measured at the end of inspiration during an inflation hold.
Several of the key elements to patient management include: 1) During mechanical ventilation, target tidal volume at 6mL/Kg per ideal body weight or less, 2) maximize plateau pressure at 30 cm H20 or less to prevent volume induced lung injury, 3) allow for permissive hypercapnia to achieve the pressure and volume targets, 5) set PEEP to avoid alveolar collapse since alveolar de-recruitment leads to high alveolar opening pressures and lung damage, 6) minimize the use of pulmonary artery catheters due to no evidence based benefit, 6) use bicarbonate therapy if pH is < 7.15.
Despite the focus of the recent literature on airway pressure and flow based indicators (such as plateau pressure, mean airway pressure, stress index, inflection/deflection points and tidal compliance) for setting tidal volume and PEEP, it is hazardous to rely on any of these without knowing the intrapleural pressure and absolute volume of the lungs.
Mean arterial pressure, heart rate, pulse oximetry (SP[O.sub.2]), fraction of inspired oxygen (Fi[O.sub.2]), [P.sub.ET]C[O.sub.2], central venous pressure, [P.sub.a][O.sub.2], [P.sub.a]C[O.sub.2], peak pressure of airway (Ppeak) and plateau pressure of airway (Pplat) were recorded at five time points: 20 minutes after TLV in the lateral position (T1), 20 minutes (T2), 40 minutes (T3) and 60 minutes (T4) after the initial of OLV and 20 minutes after conversion to TLV (T5).
To date, virtually every published clinical trial has relied on the airway plateau pressure as the primary indicator of maximum tidal stress applied to the parenchyma.