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Chart — Pulmonary Diseases

ARDS vs Cardiogenic Pulmonary Edema Chart

Both fill the alveoli with fluid and both present as bilateral infiltrates with hypoxemia — but one is a leaky-membrane problem and the other is a pressure problem, and they are managed in opposite directions. This chart contrasts the two so you can tell a permeability edema from a hydrostatic one at the bedside.

Written by Apex Respiratory Editorial Team

Educational use only. This material supports respiratory therapy education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional protocols, or physician orders. Always follow facility policies and current provider orders, and verify calculations independently before clinical use.

ARDS vs Cardiogenic Edema Side by Side

Comparison of ARDS and cardiogenic pulmonary edema across mechanism, onset, imaging, biomarkers, echocardiography, edema fluid, oxygenation, and management
FeatureARDS (non-cardiogenic)Cardiogenic Edema
MechanismIncreased capillary permeability / diffuse alveolar damageHydrostatic — elevated left atrial pressure
OnsetWithin 1 week of an insult — sepsis, aspiration, pancreatitis, traumaAcute cardiac event or fluid overload
Chest X-rayBilateral patchy infiltrates, often peripheralCentral / perihilar “bat-wing,” cephalization, effusions, cardiomegaly
Heart sizeNormalOften enlarged
BNPLowerTypically elevated
Echo / EFPreserved unless coexisting diseaseOften reduced EF or diastolic dysfunction
Edema fluid proteinHigh — exudateLow — transudate
P/F ratio≤ 300 with PEEP ≥ 5 defines severityHypoxemia improves with diuresis / afterload reduction
Response to diuresisMinimalImproves
ManagementLung-protective ventilation, treat the cause, prone if severeDiuretics, preload / afterload reduction, CPAP/NIV, treat the cardiac cause

Clinical Notes

  • The two can coexist. A septic patient with ARDS can also be volume-overloaded; the presence of one does not rule out the other.
  • Read the P/F in context. The Berlin severity bands assume a PEEP of at least 5 cm H₂O, so always pair the P/F ratio with the PEEP it was measured on. Run the numbers with the P/F ratio calculator.
  • Let the whole picture decide. No single value is definitive — the clinical context, echocardiogram, and BNP together distinguish a permeability edema from a hydrostatic one.

Related Resources

Sources

  1. ARDS Definition Task Force; Ranieri VM, Rubenfeld GD, Thompson BT, et al. Acute respiratory distress syndrome: the Berlin definition. JAMA. 2012;307(23):2526-2533.
  2. Kacmarek RM, Stoller JK, Heuer AJ. Egan's Fundamentals of Respiratory Care. 12th ed. Elsevier; 2021.