Mechanical ventilation: optimizing patient-ventilator interactions and respiratory outcomes
- Respiratory mechanics and control of breathing:
- Clinical management of patients with acute respiratory failure is based on understanding respiratory mechanics and control of breathing.
- Significant changes in respiratory mechanics and respiratory muscle performance contribute to acute respiratory failure.
- Matching ventilator settings to patient physiology:
- Optimizing mechanical ventilation requires accurate measurements of lung and chest wall mechanics, respiratory muscle function, and respiratory drive.
- Ventilator settings should be adjusted to match the patient's respiratory physiology.
- Respiratory physiology:
- Respiratory muscles generate pressure and volume to provide adequate alveolar ventilation with tolerable work of breathing.
- During spontaneous breathing, the equation for describing the act of breathing is Pmus=(Flow×RRS)+(Volume×ERS)+PEEPi.
- Interaction between variables:
- The complex interaction between variables in respiratory mechanics and mechanical ventilation can be summarized by the concept of neuroventilatory coupling.
- Positive pressure ventilation modes may compromise the coupling between effort and ventilatory output.
- Patient and ventilator variables:
- Patient variables include respiratory drive, ventilatory requirements, and timing of the breathing pattern.
- Ventilator variables include delivery mechanism, inspiratory trigger, and cycle-off criterion.
- Total ventilator-controlled mechanical support:
- In this mode, the ventilator replaces the patient's breathing pattern completely.
- Sedation and/or paralysis may be required, but there are potential risks associated with this mode.
- Partial patient-controlled mechanical support:
- In this mode, spontaneous breathing activity is partially preserved.
- The absence of patient-ventilator asynchrony is crucial for effective partial patient-controlled mechanical support.
- Patient-ventilator asynchrony:
- Patient-ventilator asynchrony occurs when there is a mismatch between patient physiology and ventilator function.
- Effective inspiratory trigger and phase synchronization are important to reduce patient effort and improve asynchrony.
- External PEEP and inspiratory effort reduction:
- Application of external PEEP below auto-PEEP level can reduce inspiratory effort.
- Double triggering, a result of limited expiratory phase caused by short ventilator inspiratory time, can be addressed by increasing Ti, adjusting expiratory threshold time, or optimizing pressure rise time.
- Reverse triggering, observed in heavily sedated patients, may cause injurious inflation pattern.
- New triggering algorithms aim to improve patient-ventilator interaction during sudden changes and air leaks.
- Gas delivery asynchrony:
- Increasing flow rate can reduce respiratory drive and active respiratory muscle work.
- Inspiratory time imposed during mechanical ventilation determines respiratory frequency.
- Pressure-targeted breaths may effectively match patient's ventilatory requirements.
- Optimal patient-ventilator synchrony requires tracking patient's inspiratory flow.
- Inspiratory timing-ventilator cycling asynchrony:
- Ventilator-patient asynchrony occurs when patient is trying to exhale, but ventilator is still delivering gas.
- Prolonging mechanical inflation into neural expiration increases inspiratory effort.
- Delayed opening of exhalation valve exacerbates dynamic hyperinflation.
- Inspiratory phase asynchrony occurs when patient's neural inspiratory time is not matched with ventilator inflation time.
- Proper cycling-off requires tracking patient's inspiratory flow.
- Patient-ventilator asynchrony during pressure support ventilation:
- Threshold value of inspiratory flow decay (expiratory trigger) affects patient-ventilator synchrony.
- Pressure rise time (pressure slope) can modify inspiratory flow.
- Pressure support level affects patient-ventilator interactions and air leaks.
- Cycling-off criteria and inspiratory flow modulation can correct dyssynchrony in PSV breaths.
- Closed-loop control systems:
- Closed-loop control systems in mechanical ventilators continuously measure physiologic variables and adapt the ventilator to match spontaneous variations in these variables.
- Design features of closed-loop control systems include the input that activates the system, the output it produces, and the controlling algorithm used to link input and output.
- Modes of mechanical ventilation:
- Proportional assisted ventilation (PAV) and proportional pressure support (PPS) enable the ventilator to amplify patient effort without imposing specific targets.
- Proportional assisted ventilation plus (PAV+) reduces patient-ventilator asynchronies compared to conventional PAV.
- Neurally-adjusted ventilatory assistance (NAVA) allows the patient to retain full control of the breathing pattern, improving patient-ventilator synchrony.
- Adaptive support ventilation adjusts ventilator settings in response to changes in respiratory impedance, spontaneous efforts, and end-tidal PCO2.
- Patient-ventilator asynchrony:
- Patient-ventilator asynchrony occurs when the patient's breathing pattern, ventilatory drive, and timing components do not match ventilator trigger, delivered flow, and cycling criteria.
- Optimization of patient-ventilator interactions requires continuous matching of triggering, flow delivering, and cycling functions with the patient's physiologic variables.
- Patient-ventilator asynchrony is common during mechanical ventilatory support and often goes unrecognized or untreated in clinical settings.
- Future developments in ventilator technology:
- Future developments should focus on systems that interface between physiologic parameters and ventilator output.
- Closed-loop algorithms and total patient-controlled mechanical support should be pursued in ventilator technology.
- Reverse Triggering in ARDS Patients:
- Deeply sedated, mechanically ventilated patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) frequently experience reverse triggering.
- This phenomenon is often unrecognized but can have important implications for the ventilation of ARDS patients.
- Improved Ventilation in COPD Patients:
- Proportional assisted ventilation (PAV) has been shown to improve ventilation and decrease inspiratory muscle effort in difficult-to-wean patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
- Combining PAV with continuous positive airway pressure can further unload the inspiratory muscles and improve ventilation.
- Lung Volume and Neuromechanical Coupling:
- Variations in end-expiratory lung volume between breaths can affect the transformation of respiratory muscle activation into mechanical output (neuromechanical coupling).
- This highlights the importance of lung volume in determining respiratory muscle function.