Is there anything more frustrating in the ICU when you decide to start weaning a patient – they look like they’re assisting the ventilator. You switch them over to a “spontaneous” mode and then……nothing…..no breaths….eventually the backup starts.
This tutorial is about triggering of mechanical ventilation. I will revisit how patients trigger the ventilator, the different systems used and introduce I-Sync – a new method of triggering.
Finally I will discuss the problem of Auto-PEEP and explain why, in the setting of Auto-PEEP, there is no point fiddling with the flow by or negative pressure.
Expiratory dysynchrony is a major unrecognized problem in critical care. Usually it takes one of two forms: a terminal upstroke on the pressure waveform, indicating pressure cycling (breath too long) or a W shaped anomaly in the expiratory flow waveform – indicative of the breath being too short or too long. I call this the “Wibbly Wobbly Waveform”.
This tutorial looks at expiratory dysynchrony – why it happens and how to make adjustments to resolve the problem. I also introduce a relatively new technology: IE Sync.
The patient is turning purple in the bed, alarms are going off, he is desaturating: he is “fighting the ventilator.” Although a widely used description I believe that it is misused to redefine the problem away from an issue of ventilator operator competency and reframe it as a patient problem. It is not. Most of the time that patient have negative interactions with the ventilator it is a problem of triggering, flow or expiratory cycling. The treatment is not deep sedation and controlled ventilation. The treatment requires skill and nuance, and does not always work. This tutorial looks at inspiration and reasons why it may go wrong.
The most frequently seen patient ventilator dysynchrony is scooping of the pressure waveform, usually associated with flow limited volume controlled ventilation. This can be resolved by increasing the peak flow or changing to pressure control.
In general the ambition to establish a patient on spontaneous assisted ventilation is laudable, but oftentimes we have no idea about what is going on underneath the pressure, flow and volume waveforms. In this tutorial I try and correct the narrative about patient-ventilator interaction when using pressure support. I suggest that volume support in some situations may be a superior approach. I point out that the tidal volume in pressure support has little to do with patient effort and more to do with lung compliance.
I finish the tutorial with a discussion about the inspiratory rise time and explain why you must be careful when using older ventilators.