Increased Dead Space Ventilation and Refractory Hypercapnia in Patients with COVID-19
journals.lww.comWe speculate that thromboinflammation with pulmonary microvasculature occlusion leads to a sudden increase in dead space and shunt resulting in severe hypercapnia and hypoxemia in coronavirus disease 2019 patients. Early identification of these physiologic and clinical biomarkers could trigger the institution of therapies aiming to reverse the hypercoagulable state and support right ventricular function.
There was sequential development of: 1) severe hypercapnia attributable to marked elevation of dead space without radiographic changes; 2) concomitant coagulopathy manifest by an increase in d-dimer levels; 3) progressive shunt with consequent hypoxemia; and 4) right ventricular dysfunction.
Management included extracorporeal Co2 removal, direct thrombin inhibition, pulmonary vasodilators, and inotropic support.