Synchronized Inflations Generate Greater Gravity-Dependent Lung Ventilation in Neonates - 17/12/20

Abstract |
Objective |
To describe the regional distribution patterns of tidal ventilation within the lung during mechanical ventilation that is synchronous or asynchronous with an infant's own breathing effort.
Study design |
Intubated infants receiving synchronized mechanical ventilation at The Royal Children's Hospital neonatal intensive care unit were studied. During four 10-minute periods of routine care, regional distribution of tidal volume (VT; electrical impedance tomography), delivered pressure, and airway flow (Florian Respiratory Monitor) were measured for every inflation. Post hoc, each inflation was then classified as synchronous or asynchronous from video data of the ventilator screen, and the distribution of absolute VT and delivered ventilation characteristics determined.
Results |
In total, 2749 inflations (2462 synchronous) were analyzed in 19 infants; mean (SD) age 28 (30) days, gestational age 35 (5) weeks. Synchronous inflations were associated with a shorter respiratory cycle (P = .004) and more homogenous VT (center of ventilation) along the right (0%) to left (100%) lung plane; 45.3 (8.6)% vs 48.8 (9.4)% (uniform ventilation 46%). The gravity-dependent center of ventilation was a mean (95% CI) 2.1 (−0.5, 4.6)% toward the dependent lung during synchronous inflations. Tidal ventilation relative to anatomical lung size was more homogenous during synchronized inflations in the dependent lung.
Conclusions |
Synchronous mechanical ventilator lung inflations generate more gravity-dependent lung ventilation and more uniform right-to-left ventilation than asynchronous inflations.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : synchronization, infant, regional ventilation, mechanical ventilation
Abbreviations : CoVRL, CoVVD, EIT, NICU, PEEP, PIP, ROI, SpO2, VT, VTao, VTEIT
Plan
| Supported by the Victorian Government Operational Infrastructure Support Program (Melbourne, Australia). G.D. and N.S. received an MCRI Honours student scholarship. D.T. is supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council Clinical Career Development Fellowship (1053889). SenTec AG (Landquart, Switzerland) manufactured custom-built EIT belts for infants. All EIT hardware was purchased by Murdoch Children's Research Institute (MCRI) without any restrictions. The authors declare no conflicts of interest. |
Vol 228
P. 24 - janvier 2021 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
L’accès au texte intégral de cet article nécessite un abonnement.
Déjà abonné à cette revue ?
