Definition. Indications Ventilator Settings Modes of Ventilation Weaning Summary.

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Transcript of Definition. Indications Ventilator Settings Modes of Ventilation Weaning Summary.

Page 1: Definition.  Indications  Ventilator Settings  Modes of Ventilation  Weaning  Summary.
Page 2: Definition.  Indications  Ventilator Settings  Modes of Ventilation  Weaning  Summary.
Page 3: Definition.  Indications  Ventilator Settings  Modes of Ventilation  Weaning  Summary.

Definition. Indications Ventilator

Settings Modes of

Ventilation Weaning Summary

Page 4: Definition.  Indications  Ventilator Settings  Modes of Ventilation  Weaning  Summary.

Use of a mechanical apparatus to provide the requirements of a patient’s breathing.

Use of positive pressure to physically transport gases into and out of lungs(earlier ventilators used negative pressure)

Usually performed via ETT but not always (noninvasive ventilation)

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A supportive measure – not a therapy

Must diagnose and treat underlying cause

Used to support &/or rest patient until underlying disorder improved

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Acute resp failure: ARDS Heart failure. Pneumonia Sepsis. Complication of surgery. Trauma

Acute exacerbations COPD. Neuromuscular diseases.

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FIO2

Volume (VT) Rate Pressure PEEP I:E Flow rate

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Fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2): Target Sao2 90 % & Pao2< 60mmHg. Atempt to keep FiO2 <50% to avoid O2 toxicty.

Tidal volume (Vt): Is constant in volume-cycled modes and variable

with in pressure-limited modes. In patients without lung disease Vt of 8 - 10 mL/kg . Lower Vt 6 ml/kg are recommended for ARDS, &

Vt 8 mL/kg is recommended in patients with asthma, COPD(as long as no increase in plateau presure).

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Respiratory rate (RR): 12 and 20 breaths per minute is reasonable. Determine minute ventilation.

Minute ventilation (VE): Is the product of the Vt and RR. VE is based on PaCO2 as a marker of ventilatory

requirements. VE of approximately 5 L/min maintain

normocapnea. Permissive hypercapnia is allowed in ARDS and

status asthmaticus.

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Inflation pressure limit: High inflation pressures cause barotruama.

Increased Pplat, is most injurious, reflecting alveolar overdistention and not airway resistance.

Pplat > 30 cm H2O is recommended.

Inspiratory Sensitivity : It is the drop in airway pressure that is required

before the ventilator senses the patient's effort. 0.5 to 1 cm H2O allow very weak patients to

initiate a breath, Higher values make triggering more difficult.

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Inspiratory flow rate: The ratio of Vt to inspiratory flow rate determines inspiratory

time (Ti). inspir flow rate Ti time for expiration

auto PEEP. inspir flow rate PIP & not Pplat. COPD & asthma the expiratory time should be increased to

allow exhalation of trapped gas. Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP):

PEEP is the maintenance of positive pressure after expiratory flow is completed.

Useful to treat refractory hypoxemia Complication:

Hypotension Diastolic dysfunctions Barotrauma

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MV may be:

Invasive, delivered through an endotracheal tube (ETT) or tracheostomy tube.

Noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV) interfaces the ventilator with the patient through a full-face or nasal mask.

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Volume cycled MV:

Delivers a preset (Vt) specified by the operator.

(PIP) are, depending on the patient's compliance.

Examples:

• Assist/Control• Intermittent Mandatory

Ventilation (IMV)• Synchronous Intermittent

Mandatory Ventilation (SIMV)

Pressure-limited MV:

Delivers a flow until a preset pressure limit that is set by the operator is reached.

PIP is always the same but Vt is variable, according to the patient's compliance.

Examples:• Pressure Support Ventilation

(PSV)• Pressure Control Ventilation

(PCV)• CPAP• BiPAP

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Every breath is an assisted breath. The patient determines the inspiratory

flow rate and the RR.

Advantages: Better patient synchrony Limits Peak inspiratory Pressure.

Disadvantages: Inadequate volumes if the ETT is

blocked or decreased lung compliance.

Apnea backup is less supportive than that of AC

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Controlled breaths are delivered at a preset time interval.

RR, maximal pressure limit are both controlled.

Spontaneous breaths is allowed between the mandatory breaths.

Advantades: Decrease risk of barotrauma Used in inverse ratio

ventilation. Disadvantages:

Cannot ensure minimal VE

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Used for oxygenation and as a mode of weaning.

patient assumes most of the work of breathing & determine RR, Vt & VE.

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Ventilator delivers two levels of positive airway pressure for preset periods of time.

Advantages: Decreased requirement for sedation. Used in Obstructive Sleep Apnea.

Disadvantages: Theoretical risk of over-distension of lungs.

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Pt RR < preset rate so all breath will be assisted.

Pt RR > preset rate so all breath will be controlled.

Advantages: Ensures a minimum VE.

Better patient synchrony. Disadvantages:

Induce respiratory alkalosis if high respiratory drive (i.e., liver failure).

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Ventilator will deliver a preset volume at a specific time intervals.

Different from Controlled mode: pt can initiate spontaneous breaths.

Different from Assisted mode: spontaneous breaths are not supported by machine.

Advantages: Assures a VE

Disadvantages: Patient asynchrony.

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Delivered spontaneous, assisted, and mandatory breath.

Most commonly used mode.

Advantages: Ensures a minimum VE.

Disadvantages: The worst mode of

weaning.

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Avoids intubation and complications. Can deliver various modes of ventilation Indications:

Hypercapneic respiratory failure (COPD exac). Cardiogenic pulmonary edema. Hypoxic respiratory failure.

Contraindications: Inability to cooperate (i.e. Confusion). Inability to clear secretions. Hemodynamic instability. Frature skull base as it may cause

pneumoencephaly.

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Volume Support. Pressure-Regulated Volume Control (PRVC). Volume-Assured Pressure Support. Automode. Adaptive support ventilation (ASV). Proportional Assist Ventilation(PAV). Mandatory Minute Ventilation. Airway Pressure Release Ventilation

(APRV).

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When: The underlying pathology improves. Hemodynamically stable. Oxygenation:

PaO2/FiO2 >200, PEEP<7.5 cm H2O, FiO2<0.5

Indices: Rapid shallow breathing:

RR/Vt > 105 positive predictive value of 78%. RR/Vt < 105 negative predictive value of 95 %.

Maximal Inspiratory Pressure(Pmax) Excellent negative predictive value if less than –20 cm H2O .

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Methods: Spontaneous breathing trials:

complete withdrawal of MV Only one trial every 24-hour

CPAP: Allow monitoring of RR, Vt & VE

Pressure support ventilation (PSV) Gradual reduction in the level of PSV

SIMV: The worst mode of weaning.

Duration: Short-term MV (<21 days) 30 to 120 minutes prolonged MV (>21 days) at least 24 hours.

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Auto-PEEP.

Poor nutritional status.

Overfeeding.

Left heart failure.

Decreased magnesium and phosphate levels.

Infection/fever.

Major organ failure.

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Clinical criteria : Diaphoresis . Increased respiratory effort . Paradoxical breathing & use of accessory respiratory.

Cardiac: HR < 30 beats/min over baseline. Profound bradycardia. Ventricular ectopy. Supraventricular tachyarrhythmias. Mean arterial blood pressure equal to or greater than

15 mm Hg or equal to or less than 30 mm Hg from baseline.

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Respiratory: RR < 35 breaths/min . SaO2> 90%.

PaCO2 50 mmHg or increase >8 mmHg. pH<7.33 or decrease >0.07. PaO2 60 mm Hg with FiO2 of 0.5.

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Ventilator management algorithimVentilator management algorithimInitial intubation• FiO2 = 50%

• PEEP = 5

• RR = 12 – 15• VT = 8 – 10 ml/kg

SaO2 < 90% SaO2 > 90%

SaO2 > 90%• Adjust RR to maintain PaCO2

= 40• Reduce FiO2 < 50% as

tolerated• Reduce PEEP < 8 as tolerated• Assess criteria for SBT daily

SaO2 < 90%• Increase FiO2 (keep

SaO2>90%) • Increase PEEP to max 20• Identify possible acute lung

injury• Identify respiratory failure

causes

Acute lung injury

No injury

Fail SBT

Acute lung injury• Low TV (lung-protective)

settings• Reduce TV to 6 ml/kg• Increase RR up to 35 to

keep pH > 7.2, PaCO2 < 50

• Adjust PEEP to keep FiO2 < 60%SaO2 < 90% SaO2 > 90%

SaO2 < 90%• Associated conditions (PTX,

hemothorax, hydrothorax)• Consider adjunct measures

(prone positioning, HFOV, IRV)

SaO2 > 90%• Continue lung-

protective ventilation until:

•PaO2/FiO2 > 300•Criteria met for

SBT

Persistently fail SBT• Consider tracheostomy• Resume daily SBTs with

CPAP or tracheostomy collar

Pass SBT

Airway stableExtubate

Intubated > 2 wks

• Consider PSV wean (gradual reduction of pressure support)

• Consider gradual increases in SBT duration until endurance improves

Prolonged ventilator dependence

Pass SBT

Pass SBT

Airway stable

Modified from Sena et al, ACS Surgery: Principles and Practice (2005).

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Mechanical ventilation used to:1. Improve oxygenation.2. Improve ventilation (CO2 removal).3. Unload respiratory muscles.4. Neuromuscular diseases.5. Decrease intracranial tension.

A support until patients condition improves

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Different modes for ventilation Differ in how breaths are initiated, ended and

assisted. No proven advantage of one mode over the other. Use ventilator strategies to avoid volutrauma and other adverse effects.

Numerous trials performed to develop criteria for success weaning, however, not very useful to predict when to begin the weaning and physicians should rely on clinical judgement also.

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Daily screening may reduce the duration of MV and ICU cost.

The removal of the artificial airway from a patient who has successfully been discontinued from ventilatory support should be based on assessment of airway patency and the ability of the patient to protect the airway.

Patients receiving MV who fail an SBT should have the cause determined.

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Tracheostomy should be considered after it becomes apparent that the patient will require prolonged MV.

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