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The pathophysiology of ‘happy’ hypoxemia in COVID-19

A Letter to the Editor to this article was published on 08 January 2021

Abstract

The novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is a global crisis, challenging healthcare systems worldwide. Many patients present with a remarkable disconnect in rest between profound hypoxemia yet without proportional signs of respiratory distress (i.e. happy hypoxemia) and rapid deterioration can occur. This particular clinical presentation in COVID-19 patients contrasts with the experience of physicians usually treating critically ill patients in respiratory failure and ensuring timely referral to the intensive care unit can, therefore, be challenging. A thorough understanding of the pathophysiological determinants of respiratory drive and hypoxemia may promote a more complete comprehension of a patient’s clinical presentation and management. Preserved oxygen saturation despite low partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood samples occur, due to leftward shift of the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve induced by hypoxemia-driven hyperventilation as well as possible direct viral interactions with hemoglobin. Ventilation-perfusion mismatch, ranging from shunts to alveolar dead space ventilation, is the central hallmark and offers various therapeutic targets.

Take home message

This review describes the pathophysiological abnormalities in COVID-19 that might explain the disconnect between the severity of hypoxemia and the relatively mild respiratory discomfort reported by the patients.

Background

In early December 2019, the first cases of a pneumonia of unknown origin were identified in Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province in China. The pathogen responsible for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has been identified as a novel member of the enveloped RNA betacoronavirus family and named severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), due to similarities with SARS-CoV and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) viruses. Although much is known about the epidemiology and the clinical characteristics of COVID-19, little is known about its impact on lung pathophysiology. COVID-19 has a wide spectrum of clinical severity, data classifies cases as mild (81%), severe (14%), or critical (5%) [1,2,3]. Many patients present with pronounced arterial hypoxemia yet without proportional signs of respiratory distress, they not even verbalize a sense of dyspnea [4,5,6,7,8]. This phenomenon is referred as silent or ‘happy’ hypoxemia. Tobin et al. recently presented three cases of happy hypoxemia with PaO2 ranging between 36 and 45 mmHg in the absence of increased alveolar ventilation (PaCO2 ranging between 34 and 41 mmHg) [5]. In patients with COVID-19, the severity of hypoxemia is independently associated with in-hospital mortality and can be an important predictor that the patient is at risk of requiring admission to the intensive care unit (ICU) [9, 10]. Since correct recognition of hypoxemia has such an impact on prognosis and timely treatment decisions, we here offer an overview of the pathophysiological abnormalities in COVID-19 that might explain the disconnect between hypoxemia and patient sensation of dyspnea.

Dyspnea as a sensation

Breathing is centrally controlled by the respiratory center in the medulla oblongata and pons regions of the brainstem (see Fig. 1) that control the ‘respiratory drive’ to match respiration to the metabolic demands of the body [11, 12]. The main input affecting the respiratory drive is derived from chemical feedback among peripheral and central chemoreceptors. The center is, however, also influenced by higher brain cortex, hypothalamic integrative nociception, feedback from mechanostretch receptors in muscle and lung, and metabolic rate. The output of the respiratory center can be divided into rhythm- (e.g. respiratory rate) and pattern generating (e.g. depth of breathing effort) signals, and these outputs may be controlled independently [11, 13, 14]. Dyspnea is generally defined as a sensation of ‘uncomfortable, difficult, or labored’ breathing and occurs, in general, when the demand for ventilation is out of proportion to the patient’s ability to respond. It should be distinguished from tachypnea (rapid breathing) or hyperpnea (increased ventilation). Dyspnea grading relates to whether this feeling occurs in rest or upon exercise. This semi-quantitative approach of scoring is best exemplified by the frequently used modified Medical Research Council (MRC) dyspnea scale, which categorizes dyspnea from grade 0 (dyspnea only with strenuous exercise) to grade 4 (too dyspneic to leave house or breathless when dressing) in relation to subjects of the same age [15, 16].

Fig. 1
figure 1

Main inputs affecting respiratory center (RCC)

Various sensory, pain and emotional stimuli affect the sensation of breathing via the cerebral cortex and hypothalamus [17, 18]. The abnormal sense of muscle effort is another contributor to dyspnea. Conscious awareness of the activation of respiratory muscles is absent in healthy breathing. However, when the respiratory muscles are fatigued or weakened due to altered lung mechanics (e.g. decreased thoracic compliance), breathing may be perceived as a substantial effort [12]. Dyspnea can also be caused by input from the mechanoreceptors in the respiratory tract and the chest wall. Stimulation of vagal irritant receptors (e.g. bronchoconstriction, breathing through an external resistance) appears to intensify dyspnea [12, 19, 20]. The contribution of metabolic rate in modulating sense of dyspnea in critically ill patients remains unclear, despite its well-established role during exercise [11, 21]. The best-known determinants of the respiratory drive are the central and peripheral chemoreceptors. Changes in partial gas pressure of dissolved carbon dioxide in the blood (PaCO2) seem the most important component, causing shifts in pH at the level of both the peripheral and central chemoreceptors [11, 12, 22]. At steady state, the arterial PaCO2 is determined by the following equation:

$$ PaCO2=\frac{K. VCO2}{Ve.\left(1-\raisebox{1ex}{$ Vd$}\!\left/ \!\raisebox{-1ex}{$ Vt$}\right.\right)}. $$

K

constant (863 mmHg)

VCO2

Rate of CO2 production

VE

minute ventilation

VD

dead space

Vt

tidal volume

The normal response to hypercapnia (caused by increased VD, hypoventilation or increased VCO2) is an increase in respiratory drive and minute volume ventilation [23]. Hypoxemia itself rather plays a limited role in the sensation of breathlessness experienced by patients with cardiopulmonary disease on the opposite of hypercapnia that creates per se dyspnea [12, 24, 25]. In healthy subjects, the respiratory drive shifts minimally in mild hypoxemia (PaO2 60–65 mmHg), such as resulting from stays at high altitude or experimental hypoxic chambers [11, 26]. Many patients with dyspnea are not hypoxemic, while those who are, usually experience only a slight improvement in symptoms after hypoxemia is corrected with supplemental oxygen therapy [12]. When arterial PaO2 drops below 40 mmHg, dyspnea often occurs [12]. Of note, the normal response to hypoxemia is a rise in minute ventilation, primarily by increasing tidal volume and respiratory rate. Increased respiratory rate (tachypnea) and tidal volume (hyperpnea) - and not dyspnea - are therefore the most important clinical signs of impending hypoxemic respiratory failure [11, 27]. Furthermore, PaCO2 serves as one of the fundamental regulators of cerebral blood flow. Hyperventilation causes decreased PaCO2 which subsequently leads to arterial vasoconstriction thus lowering cerebral blood flow and intracranial pressure. In contrary, increase in PaCO2 leads to increased intracranial pressure ultimately leading to deteriorating level of consciousness, altered brainstem reflexes, and altered postural and motor responses [28, 29]. At the bedside, a profound understanding of the pathophysiological determinants of respiratory drive and hypoxemia may promote a more complete comprehension of a COVID-19 of a patient’s clinical presentation and timely management [11].

Happy hypoxemia in COVID-19

The disconnect between the severity of hypoxemia and the relatively mild respiratory discomfort reported by the COVID-19 patients contrasts with the experience of physicians usually treating critically ill patients in respiratory failure [30]. Guan reported dyspnea in only 18.7% of 1099 hospitalized COVID-19 patients, despite low PaO2/FiO2 ratios, abnormal CT scans (86%) and common requirement for supplemental oxygen (41%) [31]. Happy or silent hypoxemia is not exclusively seen in COVID-19, but may also occur in patients with atelectasis, intrapulmonary shunt (i.e. arterio-venous malformations) or right-to-left intracardiac shunt. The adequacy of gas exchange is primarily determined by the balance between pulmonary ventilation and capillary blood flow, referred as ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) matching [32]. In the initial phase of COVID-19, several mechanisms contribute to the development of arterial hypoxemia (see Fig. 2), without a concomitant increase in work of breathing. Rapid clinical deterioration may occur.

Fig. 2
figure 2

Mechanisms of hypoxemia in COVID-19

Changes in oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve

Oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry (SpO2) is often used to detect hypoxemia. However, SpO2 should be interpreted with caution in COVID-19. The sigmoid shaped oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve seems to shift to the left, due to induced respiratory alkalosis (drop in PaCO2) because of hypoxemia-driven tachypnea and hyperpnea. During hypocapnic periods, the affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen and thus oxygen saturation increases for a given degree of PaO2, explaining why SpO2 can be well-preserved in the face of a profoundly low PaO2 [33,34,35]. This finding is also seen in high altitude hypoxemia, in which hypocapnia significantly shifts the oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve and improves blood oxygen saturation [36]. The alveolar gas equation also predicts that hyperventilation and the resulting drop in the alveolar partial pressure of carbon dioxide leads to an increase in the alveolar partial pressure of oxygen and ultimately lead to an increase in SpO2 [22].

There might also be a biological explanation for the leftward shift of the curve in COVID-19. Liu et al. put forward hypotheses about direct viral interaction with the heme group of hemoglobin. According to this theory, heme serum levels are increasing in COVID-19 along with harmful iron ions (Fe3+) causing inflammation and cell death (ferroptosis). This leads to the production of large amounts of serum ferritin to bind these free irons in order to reduce tissue damage [37]. In conclusion, SpO2 should be interpreted in the light of the presence of hyperventilation (tachypnea, low PaCO2) and, if possible, PaO2 via arterial puncture. Measuring the alveolar to arterial oxygen (P(A-a)O2 gradient (150 mmHg - PaCO2/0.8 - PaO2 at sea level) and relating this value to age and supplemental oxygen (age/4 + 4 + 50 (FiO2–0.21) in mmHg) can be insightful. This can be performed rapidly on a smartphone app [38]. The P(A-a)O2 gradient is increased either by V/Q mismatch or by intrapulmonary shunting. Hypoxemia due to V/Q mismatch can be easily corrected by supplemental oxygen therapy whereas pulmonary shunts have a poor response to oxygen therapy [39].

Causes of hypoxemia in COVID-19

Intrapulmonary shunting

Arterial hypoxemia early in SARS-CoV-2 infection is primarily caused by V/Q mismatch and thus persistence of pulmonary arterial blood flow to non-ventilated alveoli, reflected by a marked increase in P(A-a)O2 gradient. The infection leads to a modest local interstitial edema, particularly located at the interface between lung structures with different elastic properties, where stress and strain are concentrated [27]. Due to increased lung edema (leading to ground-glass opacities and consolidation on chest imaging), loss of surfactant and superimposed pressure, alveolar collapse ensues and a substantial fraction of the cardiac output is perfusing non-aerated lung tissue, resulting in intrapulmonary shunting [27]. As previously discussed, tidal volume increases during the disease course leading to rising negative inspiratory intrathoracic pressure. The latter, in combination with increased lung permeability due to inflammation, will eventually result in progressive edema, alveolar flooding, and patient self-inflicted lung injury (P-SILI), as first described by Barach in 1938 [11, 40, 41]. Over time, the increased edema will further enhance lung weight, alveolar collapse, and dependent atelectasis, resulting in progressively increasing shunt fraction and further decline of oxygenation which cannot completely be corrected by increasing FiO2.

Loss of lung perfusion regulation

The persistence of high pulmonary blood flow to non-aerated lung alveoli appears to be caused by the relative failure of the hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction mechanism (constriction of small intrapulmonary arteries in response to alveolar hypoxia) during SARS-CoV-2 infection, as recently illustrated by Lang et al. using dual-energy CT [42, 43]. Whether the latter mechanism is only triggered by the release of endogenous vasodilator prostaglandins, bradykinin, and cytokines associated with the inflammatory process or also by other yet undefined mechanisms remains to be investigated [33, 44, 45]. Vasoplegia also seems to be influential in the loss of lung perfusion regulation, possibly induced by shear stress on the interfaces between lung structures, as part of the P-SILI spectrum [45,46,47]. Further, dysregulation of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) contribute to the pathophysiology of COVID-19 [48,49,50,51,52]. Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) is the principal functional receptor used by SARS-CoV-2 for cell entry, implying ACE2 internalization [52,53,54]. ACE2 converts angiotensin II (Ang II) to angiotensin 1–7 (Ang 1–7) and is also important for degrading bradykinin. Hence, diminished levels of ACE2 lead to an increase in Ang II, mediating pulmonary vasoconstriction through agonism at Ang II-receptor, while Ang 1–7 opposes the actions of Ang II [50, 51, 54]. Recently, Liu et al. revealed that serum Ang II levels were linearly associated with viral load and lung injury in COVID-19 [55].

Intravascular microthrombi

Endothelial injury is emerging as a central hallmark of COVID-19 pathogenesis, and the cytopathic virus can directly infect lung capillary endothelial cells that express ACE2 [54, 56]. Intravascular microthrombi are the net result of an imbalance between procoagulant and fibrinolytic activity in the presence of acute inflammation and endothelial injury [45, 57,58,59]. The pro-coagulant activity might result from complement system-mediated activation of clotting, similar to some forms of thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA), or could be due to inhibition of plasminogen activation and fibrinolysis via increased activity of plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1 and -2) which are induced as acute-phase proteins under the influence of IL-6. Diffuse intravascular coagulation (DIC) is also seen in patients with severe COVID-19, mediated via endothelial release of tissue factor and activation of clotting factor VII and XI. Many patients with COVID-19 develop elevated D-dimers suggesting the formation of blood clots. D-dimer levels on admission are used to predict in-hospital mortality in COVID-19, and DIC present much more frequently (71%) in COVID-19 patients with a dismal prognosis, versus only 0,6% of survivors [60,61,62,63]. Autopsy of the lungs after severe disease showed fibrin deposition, diffuse alveolar damage, vascular wall thickening, and frequently occurring complement-rich microthrombi occluding lung capillaries and larger thrombi causing pulmonary artery thrombosis and embolism [63,64,65]. Hypercoagulable state leads to further deterioration in V/Q mismatch and lung tissue damage. Moreover, coagulation is also modulated by activating C-reactive protein and ensuing complement activation and hepatic synthesis of fibrinogen as an acute phase protein in COVID-19 [66].

Impaired diffusion capacity

Lung diffusion capacity (DLCO) can be impaired, although pure diffusion defects are rarely a cause for increased P(A-a)O2 gradient at rest [67, 68]. SARS-CoV-2 propagates within alveolar type II cells, where a large number of viral particles will be produced and released, followed by immune response mediated destruction of infected cells (virus-linked pyroptosis) [54]. Loss of alveolar epithelial cells and a pro-coagulant state cause the denuded basement membrane to be covered with debris, consisting of fibrin, dead cells, and complement activation products, collectively referred to as hyaline membranes [54, 69]. With incremental exercise and in the face of absent hypoxic vasoconstriction in COVID-19, a hyperdynamic pulmonary circulation might not allow sufficient time for red blood cells to equilibrate their oxygen uptake. A diffusion limitation may, therefore, occur in COVID-19 leading to a raised P(A-a)O2 gradient and exercise-induced arterial hypoxemia (EIAH) [68]. Recently, Xiaoneng Mo et al. confirmed a decrease in DLCO in COVID-19 patients at the time of discharge. The prevalence of impaired diffusing-capacity was linked to the severity of disease, respectively 30.4% in mild illness, 42.4% in pneumonia and 84.2% in severe pneumonia [70]. Long-term studies are needed to address whether these deficits are persistent as seen in MERS where 37% of MERS survivors still presented with an impairment of DLCO [39].

Preservation of lung mechanics

The outline presented in the previous paragraphs largely clarifies the dissociation between the severity of hypoxemia in COVID-19 and relatively well-preserved lung mechanics. Gas exchange abnormalities in some patients with COVID-19 occur earlier than increases in mechanical loads [41]. During the first days of infection, there is no increased airway resistance, and there is presumably no increased anatomical or physiological dead space ventilation. The breathing effort also remains rather low because lung compliance is normal in many patients without pre-existing lung disease. As recently shown by Gattinoni et al. in a cohort of 16 critically ill patients, relatively normal values for respiratory system compliance (50.2 ± 14.3 ml/cmH2O) went hand in hand with a dramatically increased shunt fraction of 0.50 ± 0.11 [47]. Such a wide discrepancy is highly unusual for most forms of disorders that lead to acute lung injury and ARDS [47, 71]. Relatively high compliance indicates a well-preserved lung gas volume and explains in part the absence of dyspnea early in the course of illness [42, 47, 61, 72, 73]. In contrast, Ziehr et al. described a low compliance and a uniform presentation consistent with the Berlin definition for ARDS in a cohort of COVID-19 patients [30, 70]. Of note, patients on mechanical ventilation have the highest COVID-19 severity and thus probably the lowest respiratory system compliance. Dyspnea itself may have precipitated mechanical ventilation, and the latter may be a surrogate marker for low compliance in COVID-19 [41]. Understanding of the respiratory mechanics found in COVID-19 will continue to evolve as further research is reported.

Rapid deterioration

Hypoxemia-driven tachypnoea, hyperpnea and altered oxygenation predict clinical deterioration induced by either disease severity and/or host response and/or suboptimal management [35, 61]. As the disease progresses, the more consolidated air spaces do not inflate as easily at higher transpulmonary pressures. The volume loss is proportionally greater at higher lung volumes. This loss of volume reduces total lung compliance and increases the work of breathing [45]. There is also evidence that the dynamic compliance of the remaining ventilated lung is reduced in SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia (as seen in pneumococcal pneumonia) most possibly by a reduction in surfactant activity, further increasing the work of breathing [45]. Physiological dead space is also increasing due to reduced blood flow caused by intravascular thrombi. Importantly, the anxiety experienced by COVID-19 patients also affects the cortical feedback to the respiratory centers. Consequently, as the disease progresses, dyspnea becomes increasingly apparent.

Thoughts on management

At the stage that COVID-19 patients are admitted to the hospital with hypoxemia, viral replication is well underway and in addition to giving antiviral medication, optimization of the V/Q mismatch and reduction of cytokine storm remain the major therapeutic goals. Regarding perfusion, avoiding microthrombi and ongoing fibrin deposition is one of the therapeutic strategies. It seems prudent to use thromboprophylaxis in all COVID-19 patients, particularly in those with high D-dimers on admission [59, 66, 74]. Moore et al. recently suggested the use of tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) to treat ARDS in COVID-19 [75]. In addition, tackling the systemic prothrombotic complication using anti-inflammatory medications (such as anti-IL6R tocilizumab or sarilumab, or the anti-IL6 antibody siltuximab or complement inhibiting strategies) to prevent macro- and microthrombi represents another potential approach and several trials are currently verifying this hypothesis [54]. Effective hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction may be another target to improve the matching of regional perfusion and ventilation in the lung. There is an excessive release of inflammatory mediators that disturbs the balance between nitric oxide (NO), endothelin, and prostanoids in the pulmonary capillaries [76], although inhaled NO has consistently failed to show an improvement in mortality in ARDS [53,54,55, 84]. RAS modulation (e.g. angiotensin receptor blockers, recombinant soluble ACE2, and inhibition of the bradykinin system) may have a potential role in restoring lung perfusion regulation, and trials are ongoing [50,51,52].

Regarding ventilation, supplemental oxygen is the first step in facilitating oxygenation. In patients with refractory hypoxemic respiratory failure (increasing shunt fraction), timely but not premature intubation and invasive ventilation support may be superior to non-invasive ventilation in boosting transpulmonary pressure, opening collapsed alveoli, improving oxygenation, decreasing oxygen debt, avoiding P-SILI and offering a better chance for the lungs to heal [61, 76, 77]. Considering the critical cases, most patients fulfil the Berlin criteria of ARDS, where lung-protective ventilation, prone ventilation, effective sedation and analgesia, and high positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) are key [54, 61, 70, 77]. COVID-19 patients are exquisitely PEEP sensitive [78,79,80]. Tolerance for modest permissive hypercapnia minimizes ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) [61]. Since prone position recruits the dorsal lung regions and diverts blood flow to these caudal regions, it may have particular importance in COVID-19 when used early and in relatively long sessions [42]. Although further trials are needed to evaluate the impact on disease severity and mortality, several authors confirmed that awake proning can improve oxygenation in COVID-19 [81,82,83].

Conclusion

The remarkable dissociation between profound hypoxemic respiratory failure and a clinically ‘happy’ patient is frequently seen and should prompt physicians and health care workers not only to rely on the patient’s apparent wellbeing but closely monitor respiratory rate, signs of hyperventilation, oxygen saturation and invasive measurements of hypoxemia/hypocapnia at regular time intervals. Pulse oximetry should be interpreted with caution, because left-sided shifting of the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve. The arterial hypoxemia is induced by intrapulmonary shunting, dysregulated hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction, impaired lung diffusion, and formation of intravascular microthrombi. As in the first days of the disease, the lung mechanics are well-preserved and there is no increased airway resistance or dead space ventilation. The respiratory center thus does not sense an uncomfortable sensation of breathing. However, sudden and rapid respiratory decompensation may occur, and tachypnea and hyperpnea might be the most important clinical warning signs of impending respiratory failure in COVID-19 patients.

Availability of data and materials

Not applicable.

Abbreviations

COVID-19:

Coronavirus Disease 2019

SARS-CoV-2:

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2

MERS:

Middle East Respiratory Syndrome

ICU:

Intensive Care Unit

PaCO2 :

Partial gas pressure of dissolved carbon dioxide in the blood

PaO2 :

Partial gas pressure of dissolved oxygen in the blood

SpO2 :

Oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry

P(A-a)O2 gradient:

the alveolar to arterial oxygen gradient

VCO2:

Rate of CO2 production

VE:

Minute ventilation

VD:

Dead space

Vt:

Tidal volume

V/Q:

Ventilation/Perfusion

FiO2 :

Fraction of inspired oxygen

P-SILI:

Patient self-inflicted lung injury

VILI:

Ventilator-induced lung injury

RAS:

Renin-angiotensin system

ACE2:

Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2

Ang:

Angiotensin

TMA:

Thrombotic microangiopathy

PAI:

Plasminogen activator inhibitor

DIC:

Diffuse intravascular coagulation

DLCO:

Lung diffusion capacity

NO:

Nitric oxide

PEEP:

Positive end-expiratory pressure

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Dhont, S., Derom, E., Van Braeckel, E. et al. The pathophysiology of ‘happy’ hypoxemia in COVID-19. Respir Res 21, 198 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12931-020-01462-5

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