NON INVASIVE VENTILATION - asja

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Transcript NON INVASIVE VENTILATION - asja

NON INVASIVE VENTILATION
Definition:
NIV is the delivery of mechanical ventilation to the lungs
using techniques that do not require an endotracheal
airway
Types:
negative pressure NIV
Main means of NIV during the
1st half of the 20th century
o positive pressure NIV
resurgence in the early 1980s
due to the development of nasal
CPAP
o
Why the interest in NIV
The desire to avoid complications of invasive
ventilation
 Complications related to the process of
intubation and mechanical ventilation
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Aspiration
Trauma
Arrythmias and hypotension
barotrauma
 Complications
caused by loss of airway
defense mechanisms
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Direct conduit to lower airway  chronic bacterial
colonization
 Complication
that occur after
removal of ETT
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Hoarseness, sore throat, cough
Sputum production
Upper airway obstruction
hemoptysis
 From
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the patient’s point of view
Discomfort
Decreased ability to eat and communicate
Advantages of NIV
Leaves upper airway intact
 Preserve airway defense mechanisms
 Allows patient to eat, drink, verbalize and
expectorate
 Enhance comfort, convenience and portability
 Less cost

Interfaces
Devices that connect the ventilator‘s tubing
to the face allowing pressurized gas to enter
into upper airway
Nasal
Cone
shaped clear plastic device with soft
cuff
Multiple sizes and shapes
Chronic application
Better tolerated by patients with
claustrophobia
Exert pressure over the bridge of the nose
 Avoided
by
Fore head spacer
o Nasal mask with gel seal
o Mini-masks
o Custom-molded individualized masks
o Thin plastic flap
o Nasal pillows (pledgets directed to the
nostrils)
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Oronasal ( full face mask)
Preferred
o in acute settings
o for patients with copious air leaking through
the mouth
o For edentulous patients
 Interferes with speech, eating and expectoration
 Increase risk of aspiration, rebreathing
 Increase likelihood of claustrophobic reaction
 Total face mask (hockey goalie‘s mask)

Mouth pieces
Provides NIPPV to patients with chronic
respiratory failure
 Simple inexpensive
 Nasal air leaking decrease its efficacy
o Managed by increasing ventilator‘s tidal
volume
o Occluding nostrils with cotton pledgets or
nose clips
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Ventilators for NIPPV
CPAP
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Delivers constant pressure during both inspiration and
expiration
Increase functional residual capacity
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Improve lung compliance
Open collapsed alveoli
Improve oxygenation
Decrease work of breathing
Decrease left ventricular transmural pressure, ↓ afterload
and ↑COP
Simple, small and cheap portable units are available
Pressure limited ventilators
 PCV
 Delivers
time- cycled preset inspiratory and
expiratory pressures with adjustable I/E ratio
 Permits patient triggering with a back up rate
 PSV
 Assist
spontaneous breathing
 Peak inspiratory and expiratory pressures are
selected
 Close matching with patient‘s spontaneous breathing
 Allow patient to control rate and inspiratory duration
 Portable devices (bilevel devices)
Volume limited ventilators
 Vt
is usually set higher (10→ 15ml/kg )
 Usually set in the A/C mode, RR set
slightly below the patient’s rate
 Portable devices are more convenient,
cheap, have more sophisticated alarm
system, generate high pressure
Proportional assisted ventilation
(PAV)
 Targets
and respond rapidly patient‘s
effort ( inspiratory flow and volume)
 Able to select the proportion of breathing
work that is to be assisted
Negative pressure ventilation
 Intermittently
apply a sub atmospheric
pressure to the chest wall and upper
abdomen
 Efficiency depends on chest wall and
abdomen compliance and surface area
over which negative pressure is applied
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E.g.
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Tank ventilator
Cuirass
Wrap
Shell
Iron lung
Rocking belt and pneumobelt (work by displacing
abdominal viscera)
Goals of NIV
Short term (acute)
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Relieve symptoms
Reduce work of
breathing
Improve or stabilize gas
exchange
Good patient-ventilator
synchrony
Optimize patient
comfort
Avoid intubation
Minimize risk
Long term (chronic)
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Improve sleep duration
and quality
Enhance functional
status
Prolong survival
Maximize quality of life
PROTOCOL FOR INITIATION OF NIV
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Appropriately monitored location
Patient in bed or chair sitting at > 30-degree
angle
Select and fit interface
Select ventilator
Apply headgear; avoid excessive strap tension
encourage patient to hold mask
Connect interface to ventilator tubing and turn
on ventilator
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Start with low pressures/volumes in
spontaneously triggered mode with backup rate;
pressure-limited: 8 to 12 cm H2O inspiratory; 3 to
5 cm H2O expiratory, volume-limited: 10 ml/kg
Gradually increase inspiratory pressure (10 to 20
cm H2O) or tidal volume (10 to 15 ml/kg) as
tolerated to achieve alleviation of dyspnea,
decreased respiratory rate, increased tidal volume
, and good patient-ventilator synchrony
Provide O2 supplementation as needed to keep
O2 sat > 90%
PROTOCOL FOR INITIATION OF NIV
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Check for air leaks, readjust straps as needed
Add humidifier as indicated
Consider mild sedation (i.e., intravenously
administered lorazepam 0.5 g) in agitated
patients
Encouragement, reassurance, and frequent
checks and adjustments as needed
Monitor occasional blood gases (within 1 to 2 h
and then as needed)
Monitoring
Subjective responses
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Bed side observation
Ask about discomfort related to the mask or airflow
Physiologic response
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↓ RR, ↓ HR
Patient breath in synchrony with the ventilator
↓ accessory muscle activity and abdominal paradox
Monitor air leaks and Vt
Gas exchange
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Continuous oximetry
Occasional ABG
Uses of NIV
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Respiratory failure
Hypercapnic respiratory failure
 Obstructive
diseases
 Restrictive diseases
Hypoxic respiratory failure
 Acute
pulmonary edema
 Acute pneumonia
 ARDS
 Trauma
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Imunocomprimized patients
 Avoid
ETT→ ↓infectious and hemorrhagic
complications
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Morbidly obese patients
 used
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in obstructive sleep apnea
Do not intubate patients
 ETT
is contraindicated or postpond
 Refuse intubation
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Post operative patients
 Avoid
reintubation if RF develops
 Improve gas exchange and pulmonary function
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Weaning and extubation
 Before
meeting extubation criteria
Adverse effects and complications of
NIV
Mask related
 Nasal pain
 Nasal bridge erythema and ulceration
Ventilator air flow or pressure complications
 Conjunctival irritation
 Sinus or ear pain
 Nasal or oral dryness
 Nasal congestion or discharge
 Gastric insufflation
Failure of NIV
Mask intolerance
 Failure to improve ventilation
 Claustrophobia
 Sensation of excessive air pressure
 Patient-ventilator asynchrony
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MI
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Specially with BIPAP
ANY QUESTIONS?
THANK YOU