Beyond One-Size-Fits-All: Precision Mechanical Ventilation in ARDS

dc.contributor.authorAzzam S.
dc.contributor.authorKhattab K.
dc.contributor.authorAl Sharie S.
dc.contributor.authorAl-Husinat L.
dc.contributor.authorSilva P.L.
dc.contributor.authorBattaglini D.
dc.contributor.authorSchultz M.J.
dc.contributor.authorRocco P.R.M.
dc.contributor.correspondenceAzzam S.
dc.contributor.otherMahidol University
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-20T18:23:00Z
dc.date.available2026-03-20T18:23:00Z
dc.date.issued2026-03-01
dc.description.abstractAcute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) has traditionally been managed with population-based, protocolized mechanical ventilation strategies designed to limit ventilator-induced lung injury. While these approaches have improved outcomes, they fail to account for the pronounced biological, mechanical, radiological, and temporal heterogeneity that characterizes ARDS. Accumulating evidence shows that patients differ markedly in functional lung size, recruitability, chest wall mechanics, inflammatory burden, and tolerance to ventilatory stress, making uniform ventilatory targets physiologically imprecise and, at times, harmful. This narrative review examines the evolution from conventional lung-protective ventilation toward a precision-based paradigm that aligns ventilatory support with individual patient physiology. We conceptualize ARDS not as a static syndrome but as a dynamic spectrum, viewing the injured lung as a heterogeneous mechanical system susceptible to regionally amplified stress and strain. Within this framework, we discuss key principles underlying precision ventilation, including functional lung size (the “baby lung”), driving pressure, mechanical power, patient–ventilator interaction, spontaneous breathing-associated injury, and the time-dependent evolution of lung mechanics. We synthesize current evidence supporting mechanical, biological, and radiological subphenotyping as complementary strategies to individualize ventilatory management, while critically appraising their current limitations. This review also evaluates bedside tools that may operationalize precision ventilation in clinical practice, including esophageal pressure monitoring, lung ultrasound, and electrical impedance tomography, and examines the role of artificial intelligence as a clinician-directed decision-support aid rather than a prescriptive substitute for physiological reasoning. Implications for clinical trial design, ethical considerations, and future directions toward predictive and adaptive ventilation strategies are also addressed. Precision mechanical ventilation represents a shift from rigid thresholds toward proportional, physiology-guided intervention across the disease trajectory. By integrating evolving lung mechanics, ventilatory load, and patient effort over time, this approach provides a coherent framework for safer and more effective mechanical ventilation in ARDS while preserving the core principles of lung protection.
dc.identifier.citationJournal of Clinical Medicine Vol.15 No.5 (2026)
dc.identifier.doi10.3390/jcm15052058
dc.identifier.eissn20770383
dc.identifier.scopus2-s2.0-105032756928
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/115800
dc.rights.holderSCOPUS
dc.subjectMedicine
dc.titleBeyond One-Size-Fits-All: Precision Mechanical Ventilation in ARDS
dc.typeReview
mu.datasource.scopushttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=105032756928&origin=inward
oaire.citation.issue5
oaire.citation.titleJournal of Clinical Medicine
oaire.citation.volume15
oairecerif.author.affiliationUniversidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
oairecerif.author.affiliationUniversità degli Studi di Genova
oairecerif.author.affiliationMedizinische Universität Wien
oairecerif.author.affiliationVanderbilt University Medical Center
oairecerif.author.affiliationIRCCS San Martino Polyclinic Hospital
oairecerif.author.affiliationNuffield Department of Medicine
oairecerif.author.affiliationYarmouk University
oairecerif.author.affiliationKantonsspital St.Gallen
oairecerif.author.affiliationMahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit
oairecerif.author.affiliationFaculty of Medicine Jordan University of Science and Technology

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