Septic related lung injury (ARDS), as presently defined, is a clinical 
description, not a disease - based on a blood gas and a chest x-ray in the 
absence of heart failure. 
The metrics are crude and highly confounded and do not distinguish specific disease. Just look at
 our largest post mortem analysis of so called ' ARDS' pts by Hemptinne et al, 
Chest and realize our present definition of ARDS included 13 different 
diseases at autopsy as diverse as diffuse alveolar damage to pulmonary infarct, to usual interstitial 
pneumonia, to hemorrhage. How then can we hope to advance disease 
specific care if we insist on using tired old insensitive metrics that 
do not distinguish disease?
But do we have disease specific therapies? 
Not
 really. If we had a therapy that worked at the cellular level to 
effectively decrease endothelial permeability it would become imperative
 to measure permeability or at least its surrogate - extra vascular lung water (EVLWi)  - 
but we don't. And so the arguing goes on. 
To
 significantly advance care we simply must design ways to identify 
pathophysiology at the cellular level and tailor therapies to these 
changes. But the horse here is the development of disease specific 
therapy - the cart, metrics that identify these specific diseases. And, 
for the most part, we have no horse. 
But
 in the meantime can we at least distinguish septic related permeability
 injury from early interstitial lung disease by measuring EVLW/PVPI? Or 
if convinced it's diffuse alveolar inflammatory damage - that our 
attempts at diuresis are working? Or using EVLWI to try to avoid 
drowning the lung in our 'resuscitative' efforts in the first place? 
Apparently not as per Berlin  
And so it goes.....
 
 
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