'Ventilator-Induced Diaphragmatic Dysfunction (VIDD) was originally described by Vassilakopoulos and Petrof in 1998, where it is used to cover the effects of mechanical ventilation and respiratory muscle unloading on the diaphragm. A recent article by Grosu and colleagues has demonstrated that the thickness of the diaphragm decreases with about 6% a day in a small cohort of mechanically ventilated patients. This is a longitudinal, single-centre, observational cohort study to examine the long-term effects of invasive mechanical ventilation on the diaphragm, and to study the risk factors associated with VIDD.
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Change in diaphragm thickness
Timeframe: Participants will be followed during their ICU stay, an expected average of 1 week