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MECHANICAL VENTILATION

MECHANICAL VENTILATION. D.Gihan Tarabeah Ass. Prof. OF anesthesia And surgical ICU, Mansoura Faculty of Medicine. Presentation. Different settings to consider Monitoring of the patient Different type of patient COPD, Asthma ARDS Trouble shooting. Ventilator settings.

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MECHANICAL VENTILATION

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  1. MECHANICAL VENTILATION D.Gihan Tarabeah Ass. Prof. OF anesthesia And surgical ICU, Mansoura Faculty of Medicine.

  2. Presentation • Different settings to consider • Monitoring of the patient • Different type of patient • COPD, Asthma • ARDS • Trouble shooting

  3. Ventilator settings

  4. Ventilator settings • Ventilator mode • Respiratory rate • Tidal volume or pressure settings • Inspiratory flow • I:E ratio • PEEP • FiO2 • Inspiratory trigger

  5. CMV

  6. A/CV

  7. SIMV

  8. PSV(pressure support ventilation) Spontaneous inspiratory efforts trigger the ventilator to provide a variable flow of gas in order to attain a preset airway pressure. Can be used in adjunct with SIMV.

  9. Respiratory Rate • What is the pt actual rate demand?

  10. Tidal Volume or Pressure setting • Maximum volume/pressure to achieve good ventilation and oxygenation without producing alveolar overdistention • Max cc/kg? = 10 cc/kg • Some clinical exceptions

  11. Inspiratory flow • Varies with the Vt, I:E and RR • Normally about 60 l/min • Can be majored to 100- 120 l/min

  12. I:E Ratio • 1:2 • Prolonged at 1:3, 1:4, … • Inverse ratio

  13. FIO2 • The usual goal is to use the minimum Fio2 required to have a PaO2 > 60mmhg or a sat >90% • Start at 100% • Oxygen toxicity normally with Fio2 >40%

  14. Inspiratory Trigger • Normally set automatically • 2 modes: • Airway pressure • Flow triggering

  15. Positive End-expiratory Pressure (PEEP) What is PEEP? What is the goal of PEEP? • Improve oxygenation • Diminish the work of breathing • Different potential effects

  16. PEEP • What are the secondary effects of PEEP? • Barotrauma • Diminish cardiac output • Regional hypoperfusion • NaCl retention • Augmentation of I.C.P.? • Paradoxal hypoxemia

  17. PEEP • Contraindication: • No absolute CI • Barotrauma • Airway trauma • Hemodynamic instability • I.C.P.? • Bronchospasm?

  18. PEEP • What PEEP do you want? • Usually, 5-10 cmH2O

  19. Monitoring of the patient

  20. Look at your patient • Question your pt • Examine your pt • Monitor your pt • Look at the synchronicity of your pt breathing

  21. Pressures

  22. Compliance pressure (Pplat) • Represent the static end inspiratory recoil pressure of the respiratory system, lung and chest wall respectively • Measures the static compliance or elastance

  23. Pplat • Measured by occluding the ventilator 3-5 sec at the end of inspiration • Should not exceed 30 cmH2O

  24. Peak Pressure (Ppeak) • Ppeak = Pplat + Pres Where Pres reflects the resistive element of the respiratory system (ET tube and airway)

  25. Ppeak • Pressure measured at the end of inspiration • Should not exceed 50cmH2O?

  26. Auto-PEEP or Intrinsic PEEP • What is Auto-PEEP? • Normally, at end expiration, the lung volume is equal to the FRC • When PEEPi occurs, the lung volume at end expiration is greater then the FRC

  27. Auto-PEEP or Intrinsic PEEP • Why does hyperinflation occur? • Airflow limitation because of dynamic collapse • No time to expire all the lung volume (high RR or Vt) • Expiratory muscle activity • Lesions that increase expiratory resistance

  28. Auto-PEEP or Intrinsic PEEP • Auto-PEEP is measured in a relaxed pt with an end-expiratory hold maneuver on a mechanical ventilator immediately before the onset of the next breath

  29. Auto-PEEP or Intrinsic PEEP • Adverse effects: • Predisposes to barotrauma • Predisposes hemodynamic compromises • Diminishes the efficiency of the force generated by respiratory muscles • Augments the work of breathing • Augments the effort to trigger the ventilator

  30. Different types of patient

  31. COPD and Asthma • Goals: • Diminish dynamic hyperinflation • Diminish work of breathing • Controlled hypoventilation (permissive hypercapnia)

  32. Diminish DHI • Why?

  33. Diminish DHI • How? • Diminish minute ventilation • Low Vt (6-8 cc/kg) • Low RR (8-10 b/min) • Maximize expiratory time

  34. Diminish work of breathing • How: • Add PEEP (about 85% of PEEPi) • Applicable in COPD and Asthma.

  35. Controlled hypercapnia • Why? • Limit high airway pressures and thus diminish the risk of complications

  36. Controlled hypercapnia • How? • Control the ventilation to keep adequate pressures up to a PH > 7.20 and/or a PaCO2 of 80 mmHg

  37. Controlled hypercapnia • CI: • Head pathologies • Severe HTN • Severe metabolic acidosis • Hypovolemia • Severe refractory hypoxia • Severe pulmonary HTN • Coronary disease

  38. A.R.D.S. Ventilation with lower tidal volume as compared with traditional volumes for acute lung injury and the ARDS The Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Network N Engl J Med 2000;342:1301-08

  39. Methods • March 96 – March 99 • 10 university centers • Inclusion: • Diminish PaO2 • Bilateral infiltrate • Wedge < 18 • Exclusion • Randomized

  40. Methods • A/C 28d or weaning • 2 groups: • 1. Traditional Vt (12cc/kg) • 2. Low Vt (6cc/kg) • End point: • 1. Death • 2. Days of spontaneous breathing • 3. Days without organ failure or barotrauma

  41. Results • The trails were stopped after 861 pt because of lower mortality in low Vt group

  42. Trouble Shooting

  43. Trouble Shooting • Doctor, doctor, his pressures are going up!!! What is your next step?

  44. Trouble Shooting • Call the I.T., he will take care of it! • Where is the staff? • I dont know this pt, and run! • Ask which pressure is going up

  45. Trouble Shooting • Ppeak is up • Look at your Pplat

  46. Trouble Shooting • If your Pplat is high, you are faced with a COMPLIANCE problem • If your Pplat is N, you are faced with a RESISTIVE problem • DD?

  47. Trouble Shooting

  48. Trouble Shooting • Doctor, doctor, my patient is very agitated! • What is your next step?

  49. Trouble Shooting • Give an ativan to the nurse! • Give haldol 10mg to the patient! • Take 5mg of morphine for yourself! • Look at your pt!

  50. Trouble Shooting • At the time of intubation, fighting is largely due to anxiety • But what do you do if pt is stable and then becomes agitated?

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