Cardiorespiratory values were measured in nine patients with severe respiratory failure before and following initiation of pressure controlled inverse ratio ventilation (PC-IRV) at an inspiratory to expiratory ratio of 2:1. All patients showed increases in PaO2, with the mean PaO2 rising from 63 +/- 4 (mean +/- SEM) to 76 +/- 8 mm Hg. Peak inspiratory pressure fell from 44 +/- 4 to 39 +/- 2 cm H2O. There were no significant changes in any hemodynamic or oxygen metabolism variable associated with the institution of PC-IRV. In particular, no significant alteration in cardiac index, pulmonary artery pressures, oxygen delivery, oxygen consumption, or oxygen extraction ratio occurred with the use of PC-IRV. These results suggest that PC-IRV may be a useful ventilatory modality in the treatment of severe respiratory failure since it results in improvement in arterial oxygenation without any deterioration in hemodynamic or tissue oxygen metabolism parameters.