Ventilator Effects on Right Ventricular (RV) Function
Mechanical ventilation has profound and often under-recognized effects on right ventricular (RV) performance. The RV is particularly vulnerable because it is a thin-walled, volume-sensitive, afterload-intolerant chamber. Positive pressure ventilation (PPV) alters preload, afterload, interventricular interactions, and coronary perfusion, which together determine RV output.
1. Basic RV Physiology Relevant to Ventilation
Unique features of the RV
- Thin-walled, compliant chamber
- Designed to pump against low pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR)
- Poor tolerance to acute increases in afterload
- RV output is highly preload dependent
- RV perfusion occurs throughout the cardiac cycle, but is sensitive to increased wall tension
β> Any ventilatory strategy that increases PVR or reduces venous return can precipitate RV failure
2. Effects of Positive Pressure Ventilation (PPV) on RV Preload
Mechanism
- PPV β β intrathoracic pressure (ITP)
- β ITP β β pressure gradient between systemic veins and right atrium
- Result: β venous return β β RV preload
Clinical impact
- Reduced RV filling
- Decreased RV stroke volume
- More pronounced in:
- Hypovolemia
- High PEEP
- Low chest wall compliance
Key concept
PPV unloads the RV by reducing preload β beneficial in RV volume overload, harmful in preload-dependent states
3. Effects of Mechanical Ventilation on RV Afterload (Most Critical)
RV afterload = Pulmonary Vascular Resistance (PVR)
Factors increasing PVR during ventilation
- High Lung Volumes
- Overdistension compresses alveolar capillaries
- β alveolar pressure β β PVR
- High PEEP
- Excessive PEEP β β transpulmonary pressure
- Capillary compression β β RV afterload
- Hypoxia
- Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV)
- Hypercapnia & Acidosis
- Potent pulmonary vasoconstrictors
- Pulmonary vascular disease
- ARDS
- Pulmonary embolism
- Pulmonary hypertension
Result
- β RV systolic pressure
- RV dilation
- RV ischemia
- Reduced RV output β reduced LV preload
!!!Acute rise in PVR is the single most important mechanism of ventilator-induced RV failure
4. Lung VolumeβPVR Relationship (U-Shaped Curve)
|
Lung Volume |
Effect on PVR |
|
Low lung volume (atelectasis) |
β PVR (extra-alveolar vessel collapse) |
|
Optimal FRC |
Lowest PVR |
|
High lung volume (overdistension) |
β PVR (alveolar capillary compression) |
β>Both atelectasis and overdistension increase RV afterload
β> Lung-protective ventilation aims for optimal FRC
5. Interventricular Interdependence & Septal Shift
Mechanism
- RV dilation β β RV end-diastolic pressure
- Interventricular septum shifts toward LV
- LV diastolic filling β
- Cardiac output β
Exacerbated by
- High PEEP
- Acute pulmonary hypertension
- ARDS
!!This explains hypotension in RV failure despite βnormalβ LV contractility
6. Effects of PEEP on RV Function
Beneficial effects (context-dependent)
- Improves oxygenation β β hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction
- Reduces atelectasis β β PVR
- Decreases LV afterload (indirect benefit)
Harmful effects
- β Intrathoracic pressure β β venous return
- β Transpulmonary pressure β β PVR
- RV dilation β septal shift
Clinical pearl
Moderate PEEP may unload the RV, excessive PEEP precipitates RV failure
7. Tidal Volume (VT) and Driving Pressure Effects
High VT
- Alveolar overdistension
- β PVR
- β RV afterload
High Driving Pressure (ΞP = Pplat β PEEP)
- Strong predictor of RV dysfunction
- Correlates with mortality in ARDS
β> Low VT (6 mL/kg PBW) + low driving pressure protects the RV
8. Impact of Hypercapnia (Permissive Hypercapnia)
Mechanism
- Hypercapnia β pulmonary vasoconstriction
- Respiratory acidosis β β PVR
Result
- RV pressure overload
- RV dilation and dysfunction
π Permissive hypercapnia is not benign in patients with RV dysfunction
9. Spontaneous Breathing vs Controlled Ventilation
Spontaneous breathing
- Negative intrathoracic pressure
- β Venous return
- β RV afterload
- But excessive effort β large swings in transpulmonary pressure β RV stress
Controlled ventilation
- Predictable pressures
- Risk of excessive PEEP/VT
Balanced approach: Avoid both vigorous spontaneous effort and injurious controlled ventilation
10. Ventilator-Induced RV Failure (Acute Cor Pulmonale)
Common in
- Moderateβsevere ARDS
- Pulmonary embolism
- Severe pneumonia
- Pulmonary hypertension
Diagnostic clues
- Sudden hypotension
- Rising CVP
- Echo: RV dilation, septal flattening, β TAPSE
- Worsening oxygenation after β PEEP
11. Ventilator Strategies to Protect the RV (RV-Protective Ventilation)
Core principles
- Low tidal volume (6 mL/kg PBW)
- Limit plateau pressure (<30 cmHβO)
- Minimize driving pressure
- Avoid excessive PEEP
- Prevent hypoxia
- Avoid severe hypercapnia/acidosis
- Prone positioning (reduces PVR and RV afterload)
- Optimize fluid status
- Use pulmonary vasodilators when indicated (inhaled NO, epoprostenol)
12. Summary Table β Ventilator Effects on RV
|
Ventilator Factor |
Effect on RV |
|
Positive pressure |
β Preload |
|
High PEEP |
β Afterload |
|
High VT |
β PVR |
|
Hypoxia |
β PVR |
|
Hypercapnia |
β PVR |
|
Optimal PEEP |
β PVR |
|
Prone position |
β RV afterload |
|
Lung overdistension |
RV failure |

