Mora Carpio Andres L., Mora Jorge I.
University of Pennsylvania
Mechanical ventilation is a lifesaving procedure that is often performed when patients require respiratory support. Assist-control (AC) mode is one of the most common methods of mechanical ventilation in the intensive care unit. AC ventilation is a volume-cycled mode of ventilation. It works by setting a fixed tidal volume (VT) that the ventilator will deliver at set intervals of time or when the patient initiates a breath. The VT delivered by the ventilator in AC always will be the same regardless of compliance, peak, or plateau pressures in the lungs. When AC mode is selected in the ventilator, four parameters may be quickly modified: This is the set amount of volume that will be delivered with each breath. Changing the VT will, in turn, change the minute ventilation (VT x RR); an increase in minute ventilation will result in a decrease in carbon dioxide (CO2), by the same token, a decreased VT will result in a decreased minute ventilation and increase in the patient’s blood CO2. This is the set rate for delivering breaths per minute (bpm). For example, if the set rate is 15, then the delivery is 15 bpm or 1 breath every 4 seconds. This is called time-triggered control. In AC, this set rate can be overturned by the patient, meaning that if the patient inhales, the ventilator will sense the drop in pressure and deliver that breath, even if the patient is breathing above the set rate. For example, if a patient is breathing at 20 bpm and the ventilator is set at 15 bpm, the ventilator will follow the patient and deliver 20 bpm (one each time the patient initiates a breath). This is called patient-triggered breaths. The ventilator will only deliver breaths at the set RR if the patient does not trigger it faster. As with VT, increasing RR will increase minute ventilation and decrease the patient’s blood CO2. A caveat on this is that by increasing the RR, the dead space is also increased, so increasing RR may not be as effective as increasing VT in improving ventilation. The ventilator in AC mode is programmed to sense changes in the system pressure when a patient initiates a breath. When the diaphragm contracts, the intrathoracic pressure becomes more negative. The negative pressure is transmitted to the airways and then to the ventilator tubing, where sensors detect the change in pressure and deliver a breath to the set tidal volume. The amount of negative pressure needed to trigger a breath is called the trigger sensitivity and is usually set up by the respiratory therapist. This is the percentage of oxygen in the air mix delivered by the ventilator during each respiratory cycle. Increasing the FiO2 will increase the patient's oxygen saturation. The positive pressure that will remain in the system at the end of the respiratory cycle (end of expiration) is the PEEP. As with FiO2, PEEP can be used to increase oxygenation. By Henry’s law, we know that the solubility of a gas in a liquid is directly proportional to the pressure of that gas above the surface of the solution. This applies to mechanical ventilation in that increasing PEEP will increase the pressure in the system. This increases the solubility of oxygen and its ability to cross the alveolocapillary membrane and increase the oxygen content in the blood. PEEP also can be used to improve ventilation-perfusion mismatches by opening or “splinting” airways to improve ventilation throughout the system. Apart from these four main parameters, the way the ventilation is delivered also can be adjusted. For every setting, regardless of the rate and volume, the breath will always be delivered to the patient in the same way. The ventilator allows flow change; the flow may be constant through the inhalation (square waveform) or decelerating as the breath is delivered (ramp waveform). 1. Square waveform will allow for faster delivery of the inspiration, decreasing the inspiratory time and increasing the expiratory time. This can be useful for patients with asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or in cases of increased RR to prevent auto-PEEP and allow for enough time for exhaling. 2. Ramp waveform will decrease the flow as the delivered volume increases. This is usually more comfortable for the patient and allows for a better volume distribution and equalization in patients with heterogeneous lungs, such as ARDS. The speed at which this flow is delivered also can be controlled by setting inspiratory and expiratory times. This can be adjusted for patient comfort or to prevent auto-PEEP. After the inspiration is finished, the expiratory valve of the ventilator opens, and the air is allowed to come out until the pressure in the system reaches PEEP. (figure 1)
机械通气是一种挽救生命的操作,通常在患者需要呼吸支持时进行。辅助控制(AC)模式是重症监护病房中最常用的机械通气方法之一。AC通气是一种容量控制通气模式。它的工作原理是设定一个固定的潮气量(VT),呼吸机将在设定的时间间隔或患者发起呼吸时输送该潮气量。无论肺部的顺应性、峰值或平台压如何,呼吸机在AC模式下输送的VT始终相同。当在呼吸机上选择AC模式时,可以快速修改四个参数:这是每次呼吸将输送的设定容量。改变VT反过来会改变分钟通气量(VT×RR);分钟通气量增加会导致二氧化碳(CO2)减少,同样,VT减少会导致分钟通气量减少,患者血液中的CO2增加。这是每分钟输送呼吸的设定频率(bpm)。例如,如果设定频率为15,那么输送频率就是15 bpm或每4秒1次呼吸。这称为时间触发控制。在AC模式下,这个设定频率可以被患者推翻,这意味着如果患者吸气,呼吸机将感知压力下降并输送那次呼吸,即使患者的呼吸频率高于设定频率。例如,如果患者的呼吸频率为20 bpm,而呼吸机设置为15 bpm,呼吸机将跟随患者并输送20 bpm(每次患者发起呼吸时输送一次)。这称为患者触发呼吸。只有当患者没有更快地触发时,呼吸机才会以设定的RR输送呼吸。与VT一样,增加RR会增加分钟通气量并降低患者血液中的CO2。对此的一个注意事项是,通过增加RR,无效腔也会增加,因此增加RR在改善通气方面可能不如增加VT有效。AC模式下的呼吸机被编程为在患者发起呼吸时感知系统压力的变化。当膈肌收缩时,胸腔内压力变得更负。负压传递到气道,然后传递到呼吸机管道,传感器在那里检测压力变化并输送设定潮气量的呼吸。触发一次呼吸所需的负压量称为触发灵敏度,通常由呼吸治疗师设置。这是呼吸机在每个呼吸周期输送的混合气体中的氧气百分比。增加FiO2会增加患者的氧饱和度。呼吸周期结束时(呼气结束时)系统中剩余的正压是PEEP。与FiO2一样,PEEP可用于增加氧合。根据亨利定律,我们知道气体在液体中的溶解度与溶液表面上方该气体的压力成正比。这适用于机械通气,即增加PEEP会增加系统压力。这会增加氧气的溶解度及其穿过肺泡毛细血管膜的能力,并增加血液中的氧含量。PEEP还可用于通过打开或“支撑”气道来改善通气/灌注不匹配,以改善整个系统的通气。除了这四个主要参数外,通气的输送方式也可以调整。对于每个设置,无论频率和容量如何,呼吸总是以相同的方式输送给患者。呼吸机允许流量变化;流量在吸气过程中可能是恒定的(方波),或者在输送呼吸时逐渐减速(斜坡波)。1. 方波将允许更快地输送吸气,减少吸气时间并增加呼气时间。这对于患有哮喘或慢性阻塞性肺疾病的患者或RR增加的情况可能有用,以防止自动PEEP并留出足够的呼气时间。2. 斜坡波将随着输送的容量增加而降低流量。这通常对患者更舒适,并允许在肺部不均匀的患者(如ARDS)中实现更好的容量分布和均衡。输送该流量的速度也可以通过设置吸气和呼气时间来控制。这可以根据患者的舒适度进行调整或防止自动PEEP。吸气结束后,呼吸机的呼气阀打开,空气被允许排出,直到系统压力达到PEEP。(图1)