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Music for a Cause

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Pratiksha Dhote
Pratiksha Dhote

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome is a life-threatening condition characterized by widespread inflammation in the lungs, typically triggered by sepsis, pneumonia, or severe trauma. The pathophysiology involves the breakdown of the alveolar-capillary barrier, leading to the flooding of air sacs with fluid and the subsequent failure of gas exchange. Management is notoriously difficult and requires a highly coordinated intensive care approach. The gold standard for treatment remains "lung-protective ventilation," which utilizes low tidal volumes to prevent further mechanical injury to the fragile lung tissue. By maintaining lower pressures within the ventilator circuit, clinicians aim to avoid barotrauma while ensuring adequate oxygenation of vital organs.

Recent discussions have emphasized the importance of prone positioning—turning the patient onto their stomach—to improve ventilation-perfusion matching. This maneuver helps recruit collapsed alveoli in the posterior regions of the lungs and has shown significant mortality benefits in severe cases. Pharmacological interventions, however, remain a point of contention. While corticosteroids are frequently used to mitigate the fibroproliferative phase of the syndrome, their timing and dosage are subject to ongoing debate. Research is now pivoting toward mesenchymal stem cell therapy and personalized fluid management strategies. The ultimate goal in ARDS care is to bridge the patient through the acute inflammatory storm while minimizing the secondary complications of long-term sedation and mechanical ventilation, such as diaphragm dysfunction and healthcare-acquired infections.

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