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Principles of Mechanical Ventilation

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Title: Principles of Mechanical Ventilation


1
Principles of Mechanical Ventilation
  • RET 2284
  • Module 2.0
  • Classification of Ventilators
  • How a Breath is Delivered

2
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Factors Controlled and Measured by the Ventilator
    During Inspiration
  • To deliver inspiratory volume, the operator most
    commonly sets either a volume or a pressure
  • The primary variable the ventilator adjusts to
    achieve inspiration is called the control
    variable

3
How a Breath is Delivered
  • CONTROL VARIABLES
  • The primary variable the ventilator adjusts to
    achieve inspiration
  • Mechanical ventilators can control four
    variables, but only one at a time
  • Pressure
  • Volume
  • Flow
  • Time

4
How a Breath is Delivered
  • CONTROL VARIABLES
  • Because only one of these variables can be
    directly controlled at a time, a ventilator must
    function as either one of the following
  • Pressure controller
  • Volume controller
  • Flow controller
  • Time controller

5
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Pressure Controller
  • When the ventilator maintains the pressure
    waveform in a specific pattern, the breathing is
    described as pressure controlled (also pressure
    limited or pressure targeted)
  • The pressure waveform is unaffected by changes in
    lung characteristics

6
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Pressure Controller
  • The pressure waveform will remain constant but
    volume and flow will vary with changes in
    respiratory system mechanics (airway resistance,
    compliance)

7
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Volume Controller
  • The ventilator maintains the volume waveform in a
    specific pattern, the delivered breath is volume
    controlled (volume limited, volume targeted)
  • The volume and flow waveforms remain unchanged,
    but the pressure waveform varies with changes in
    lung characteristics (resistance and compliance)

8
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Volume controller
  • Volume and flow waveforms will remain constant,
    but pressure will vary with changes in
    respiratory mechanics (airway resistance and
    compliance)

Pressure
Volume
Flow
9
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Flow Controller
  • Directly measures flow and uses the flow signal
    as a feedback signal to control its output
  • Most newer ventilators measure flow and are flow
    controllers volume becomes a function of flow as
    follows
  • Volume (L) Flow (L/sec) x Inspiratory Time
    (sec)

10
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Flow Controller
  • Flow and volume waveforms will remain constant,
    but pressure will vary with changes in
    respiratory mechanics (airway resistance and
    compliance)

11
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Time Controller
  • Measures and controls inspiratory and expiratory
    time
  • Pressure and volume waveforms vary with changes
    in resistance and compliance (neither pressure or
    volume are used as a control)

12
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Inspiration is commonly described as pressure
    controlled or volume controlled (although flow
    and time ventilation have been defined, they are
    not typically used).

13
How a Breath is Delivered
  • PHASE VARIABLES
  • Ventilator-supported breath may be divided into
    four distinct phases
  • The initiation of inspiration
  • Inspiration itself
  • The end of inspiration
  • Expiration
  • To understand a breath cycle, you must know how
    the ventilator starts, sustains, and stops
    inspiration and you must know what occurs between
    breaths

14
How a Breath is Delivered
  • PHASE VARIABLES
  • The phase variable is a variable that is measured
    and used by the ventilator to initiate some phase
    of the breath cycle
  • Trigger variable causes a breath to begin
  • Limit variable limits the magnitude of any
    parameter (pressure, flow, volume) during
    inspiration
  • Cycle variable causes the end of inspiration
  • Baseline variable determines what happens
    during expiration

15
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Trigger Variable
  • Determines the start of inspiration
  • Any one of the following may be sensed/measured
    by the ventilator and used to initiate
    inspiration
  • Pressure
  • Volume
  • Flow
  • Time
  • Either the ventilator or the patient initiates a
    breath. If the machine initiates the breath, the
    trigger variable is time

16
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Time Triggered
  • Ventilatory initiates a breath according to a
    predetermined time interval
  • Rate control on ventilator is a time-triggering
    device
  • Example Rate 10 (breaths/min) One breath every
    6 seconds
  • An alternative approach is to provide separate
    timers for inspiration and expiration. Changing
    either or both of these timers will alter the
    breathing rate

17
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Time Triggered
  • Ventilatory initiates a breath according to a
    predetermined time interval

18
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Pressure Triggered
  • Occurs when the patients inspiratory effort
    causes a drop in pressure within the breathing
    circuit

19
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Pressure Triggered
  • Typically, trigger levels (sensitivity) range
    between 0.5 to 1.5 cm H2O below the patients
    baseline, or end-expiratory pressure
  • Setting the sensitivity to a higher number, e.g.,
    3 cm H2O makes the ventilator less sensitive and
    requires the patient to work harder to initiate
    inspiration. Conversely, setting the trigger
    level lower make the ventilator more sensitive

20
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Pressure Triggered
  • The operator must set the sensitivity to meet the
    patients needs. If it is not set correctly, the
    ventilator may not be sensitive enough to the
    patients effort, and the patient will have to
    work too hard to trigger the breath.
  • If the ventilator is too sensitive, it can
    autotrigger (i.e., the machine triggers a breath
    without the patient making an effort)

21
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Quiz
  • A patient has a baseline pressure of 10 cm H2O
    during mechanical ventilation. The trigger
    sensitivity is set at 1 cm H2O. At what
    pressure will the ventilator sense a patient
    effort and start inspiration?

Answer 9 cm H2O
22
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Flow Triggered
  • Ventilator-supported breath is initiated when the
    ventilator detects a drop in flow through the
    patient circuit during exhalation

Continuous flow through circuit Base Flow
23
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Flow Triggered
  • Between breaths, the flow coming out of the main
    flow control valve and the flow going through the
    exhalation valve are equal
  • During the patients inspiratory effort, the flow
    through the exhalation valve falls below the flow
    from the output valve
  • The difference between these two flows is the
    flow trigger variable

24
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Flow Triggered
  • Ventilator graphic representing flow triggering

25
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Quiz
  • The operator decides to use flow triggering for a
    patient and sets the base flow at 6 L/min and the
    trigger flow at 2 L/min. The base flow
    measurement must drop to what value before the
    ventilator will begin the inspiratory phase?

Answer 4 L/min.
26
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Volume Triggered
  • Occurs when the ventilator detects a small drop
    in volume in the patient circuit during
    exhalation. The machine interprets this drop as
    a patient effort and begins inspiration
  • Dräger Babylog
  • Cardiopulmonary Venturi

27
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Manual Triggered
  • A button or touch pad on the control panel
    labeled Manual breath or Start breath
  • When this control is activated, the ventilator
    delivers a breath according to the set variables

PB 840
28
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Inductive Plethysmography Triggered
  • Infants ventilator-supported breath is initiated
    when a when chest expands

Sechrist IV-200
29
How a Breath is Delivered
  • NAVA (Neurally Adjusted Ventilator Assist)
  • A esophageal probe senses the electrical activity
    of the diaphragm, which triggers the ventilator

Maquets Servo-I NAVA
30
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Limit Variable
  • A limit variable is the maximum value a variable
    (pressure, flow, volume) can attain. This limits
    the variable during inspiration but does not end
    the inspiratory phase.
  • Do not confuse this with cycle variable, which
    always ends inspiration

31
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Pressure Limiting
  • Allows pressure to rise to a certain value but
    not exceed it

32
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Pressure Limiting
  • Remember in pressure ventilation, the pressure
    the ventilator delivers to the patient is
    limited however, reaching the pressure limit
    does not end the breath
  • Example of pressure-limiting modes
  • Pressure support
  • Pressure control

33
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Volume Limiting
  • The volume is set by the operator however,
    reaching that volume does not necessarily end
    inspiration

34
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Flow Limiting
  • Ventilator flow to the patient reaches but does
    not exceed a maximum value before the end of
    inspiration

35
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Maximum Safety Pressure
  • Pressure Limiting vs. Pressure Cycling
  • All ventilators have a maximum pressure limit
    control, which is used to prevent excessive
    pressure from reaching a patients lungs
    reaching the maximum high pressure limit ends the
    inspiratory phase
  • AKA
  • High pressure limit
  • Upper pressure limit
  • Pressure limit

36
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Cycle Variable
  • The variable a ventilator measures to determine
    the end of inspiration is called the cycling
    mechanism once cycling occurs, expiratory gas
    flow begins
  • Cycle variables
  • Pressure
  • Volume
  • Flow
  • time

37
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Pressure Cycled
  • Ventilator will deliver flow until a present
    pressure is reached, at which point inspiration
    ends and expiratory flow begins
  • The most common application of pressure-cycling
    is for alarm setting (e.g., high pressure alarm)
    and IPPB

38
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Volume Cycled
  • Ventilator will deliver flow until a present
    volume is reached, at which point inspiration
    ends and expiratory flow begins

39
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Flow Cycled
  • Ventilator will deliver flow until a present
    level is met, at which point flow stops and
    expiration begins
  • The most frequent application of flow cycling is
    pressure control mode ventilation (to be
    discussed in a future module)

40
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Time Cycled
  • Expiratory flow starts because a present time
    interval has elapsed

41
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Limit Variable

A
B
C
This figure illustrates the importance of
distinguishing between the terms limit and cycle.
A, Inspiration is pressure limited and time
cycled. B, Inspiration is flow limited and volume
cycled. C, Inspiration is both flow limited and
volume limited (because flow and volume reach
preset values before inspiratory time ends) and
time cycled (after the preset inspiratory hold
time).
42
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Inflation Hold (Inspiratory Pause)
  • Designed to maintain air in the lungs at the end
    of inspiration
  • Used to obtain PPlateau for calculating CS
  • Occasionally used to help increase peripheral
    distribution of gas and improve oxygenation

43
How a Breath is Delivered
  • Inflation Hold (Inspiratory Pause)
  • Calculation of CS requires accurate measurement
    of the plateau pressure the PPlateau value is
    inaccurate if the patient is actively breathing
    when the measurement is taken

44
How a Breath is Delivered
  • TYPES of Breaths
  • Spontaneous
  • Started by the patient (patient triggered) and VT
    delivery is determined by the patient (i.e.,
    patient cycled)
  • Volume and pressure delivered are based on
    patient demand rather than a value set by the
    ventilator operator

45
How a Breath is Delivered
  • TYPES of Breaths
  • Mandatory
  • Ventilator determines the start time (time
    triggered) or VT (or both)
  • The machine triggers and/or cycles the breath

46
How a Breath is Delivered
  • BASELINE VARIABLE
  • The variable that is controlled during the
    expiratory phase
  • Note Most commonly, pressure is controlled
    during the
  • expiratory phase
  • CPAP
  • PEEP

47
How a Breath is Delivered
  • BASELINE VARIABLE
  • Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)
  • The application of pressures above ambient to
    improve oxygenation is a spontaneously breathing
    patient
  • Can be applied through a freestanding CPAP system
    or a ventilator

48
How a Breath is Delivered
  • BASELINE VARIABLE
  • Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)
  • Simplified pressure-time waveform showing
    continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP).
    Breathing is spontaneous. Inspiratory positive
    airway pressure (IPAP) and expiratory positive
    airway pressure (EPAP) are present. Pressures
    remain positive and do not return to a zero
    baseline.

49
How a Breath is Delivered
  • BASELINE VARIABLE
  • Positive End Expiratory Pressure (PEEP)
  • The application of pressures above ambient at the
    end of exhalation to improve oxygenation during
    mechanical ventilation

50
How a Breath is Delivered
  • BASELINE VARIABLE
  • Positive End Expiratory Pressure (PEEP)
  • Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) with
    intermittent mandatory breaths (also called
    intermittent mandatory ventilation IMV with
    PEEP). Spontaneous breaths are taken between
    mandatory breaths, and the baseline is maintained
    above zero.

51
How a Breath is Delivered
  • BASELINE VARIABLE
  • Positive End Expiratory Pressure (PEEP)
  • Helps prevent early airway closure and alveolar
    collapse at the end of expiration
  • Recruits collapsed alveoli
  • Augments FRC
  • Facilitates better oxygenation
  • DOES NOT PROVIDE VENTILATION!
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