Fitz-Clarke John R
Department of Emergency Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Respir Care. 2018 May;63(5):502-509. doi: 10.4187/respcare.05620. Epub 2018 Apr 17.
Rescue ventilations are given during respiratory and cardiac arrest. Tidal volume must assure oxygen delivery; however, excessive pressure applied to an unprotected airway can cause gastric inflation, regurgitation, and pulmonary aspiration. The optimal technique provides mouth pressure and breath duration that minimize gastric inflation. It remains unclear if breath delivery should be fast or slow, and how inflation time affects the division of gas flow between the lungs and esophagus.
A physiological model was used to predict and compare rates of gastric inflation and to determine ideal ventilation duration. Gas flow equations were based on standard pulmonary physiology. Gastric inflation was assumed to occur whenever mouth pressure exceeded lower esophageal sphincter pressure. Mouth pressure profiles that approximated mouth-to-mouth ventilation and bag-valve-mask ventilation were investigated. Target tidal volumes were set to 0.6 and 1.0 L. Compliance and airway resistance were varied.
Rapid breaths shorter than 1 s required high mouth pressures, up to 25 cm HO to achieve the target lung volume, which thus promotes gastric inflation. Slow breaths longer than 1 s permitted lower mouth pressures but increased time over which airway pressure exceeded lower esophageal sphincter pressure. The gastric volume increased with breath durations that exceeded 1 s for both mouth pressure profiles. Breath duration of ∼1.0 s caused the least gastric inflation in most scenarios. Very low esophageal sphincter pressure favored a shift toward 0.5 s. High resistance and low compliance each increased gastric inflation and altered ideal breath times.
The model illustrated a general theory of optimal rescue ventilation. Breath duration with an unprotected airway should be 1 s to minimize gastric inflation. Short pressure-driven and long duration-driven gastric inflation regimens provide a unifying explanation for results in past studies.
在呼吸和心脏骤停期间进行急救通气。潮气量必须确保氧气输送;然而,对无保护气道施加过大压力会导致胃胀气、反流和肺误吸。最佳技术应提供能使胃胀气最小化的口腔压力和呼吸持续时间。目前尚不清楚呼吸输送应该快还是慢,以及充气时间如何影响气体在肺和食管之间的分配。
使用生理模型预测和比较胃胀气发生率,并确定理想的通气持续时间。气体流动方程基于标准肺生理学。假设只要口腔压力超过食管下括约肌压力就会发生胃胀气。研究了近似口对口通气和袋阀面罩通气的口腔压力曲线。目标潮气量设定为0.6升和1.0升。顺应性和气道阻力有所变化。
短于1秒的快速呼吸需要较高的口腔压力,高达25厘米水柱才能达到目标肺容量,从而促进胃胀气。长于1秒的缓慢呼吸允许较低的口腔压力,但增加了气道压力超过食管下括约肌压力的时间。对于两种口腔压力曲线,当呼吸持续时间超过1秒时,胃容量都会增加。在大多数情况下,约1.0秒的呼吸持续时间导致的胃胀气最少。极低的食管下括约肌压力有利于向0.5秒转变。高阻力和低顺应性均会增加胃胀气并改变理想呼吸时间。
该模型阐述了最佳急救通气的一般理论。对于无保护气道,呼吸持续时间应为1秒,以使胃胀气最小化。过去研究结果的短压力驱动和长持续时间驱动的胃胀气方案提供了统一的解释。