Seeing the Breath – The Power of Electrical Impedance Tomography (EIT) at the Bedside

How EIT Works ?
EIT uses a flexible belt of 32 electrodes placed around the thorax (4th–5th intercostal spaces). Harmless, high-frequency, low-amplitude electrical currents are applied, and the device measures resulting voltages to map regional lung conductivity in real time. The output is a color-coded image where:
- Blue = high impedance → ventilation/air
- Red = low impedance → perfusion/blood flow
Key Clinical Advantages
1. Non-Invasive & Continuous Unlike CT, EIT requires no patient transport, no ionizing radiation, and enables continuous monitoring up to 24 hours — ideal for the dynamic ICU environment.
2. PEEP Optimization EIT allows clinicians to individualize PEEP titration by directly visualizing the balance between atelectasis (collapse) and overdistension — the two competing harms of mechanical ventilation. This is arguably its most impactful ICU application.
3. VILI Prevention By identifying regional overdistension and collapse simultaneously, EIT guides lung-protective ventilation strategies to minimize Ventilator-Induced Lung Injury.
4. Mortality Benefit A 2025 meta-analysis demonstrated a 36% reduction in mortality risk with EIT-guided PEEP titration in ARDS patients (RR = 0.64) — a clinically significant finding.
5. Immediate Complication Detection EIT provides real-time alerts for:
- Pneumothorax
- Pleural effusion
- Incorrect endotracheal tube placement
Anesthesia & Perioperative Applications
- Reducing post-operative atelectasis
- Managing high-risk surgeries
- Real-time evaluation of lung recruitment maneuvers
- Guiding One-Lung Ventilation (OLV) in thoracic surgery
Limitations to Keep in Mind
| Limitation | Clinical Implication |
|---|---|
| Lower resolution than CT | Cannot replace CT for anatomical/structural diagnosis |
| No sagittal or cranial views | Limited spatial orientation |
| BMI > 50 reduces quality | Obese patients may yield unreliable data |
| Avoid with pacemakers or during MRI | Contraindicated in select patients |
Bottom Line for Critical Care Practice
EIT fills a genuine clinical gap: it delivers functional, real-time, radiation-free lung imaging at the bedside without the risks of patient transport. For ARDS, post-surgical patients, and anyone on mechanical ventilation, EIT-guided management represents a meaningful step toward truly individualized ventilator care — moving beyond population-based PEEP tables toward patient-specific titration backed by direct visual feedback.

