Implanted phrenic nerve stimulation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13546-010-0007-3Abstract
The implanted phrenic nerve stimulation is a technique restoring the spontaneous breathing in patients with a failing respiratory command, which leads to a dependency on mechanical ventilation. This technique may particularly involve quadriplegic patients with a high-level spinal cord injury and patients with congenital central hypoventilation syndrome. The electrophysiological diaphragm investigations allow a better patient selection, assessing in one hand a definite problem with central respiratory command and on the other hand the integrity of phrenic nerves. To date, two different phrenic stimulation techniques are available in France: the quadripolar intra-thoracic stimulation and the bipolar intra-diaphragmatic stimulation. Both techniques allow patients to be weaned off their mechanical ventilator, improving dramatically their quality of life. In fact, one of the systems (phrenic intra-diaphragmatic stimulation) was granted reimbursement in France in 2009 and is now on the social security list of reimbursed products. In the future, the phrenic intra-diaphragmatic stimulation may find its place in the intensive care unit with temporal use following surgeries leading to specific respiratory complications as well as diaphragmatic atrophy induced by prolonged mechanical ventilation.