Ntoumenopoulos George, Jones Alison, Koutoumanou Eirini, Shannon Harriet
Physiotherapy Department, St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom.
Respir Care. 2023 Dec 28;69(1):32-41. doi: 10.4187/respcare.10932.
It is unclear if high-frequency chest-wall compression (HFCWC) has a role to assist with secretion clearance in patients on mechanical ventilation. The effect of HFCWC on the delivery of mechanical ventilation is unknown. This study describes the effect of HFCWC on mechanical ventilation delivery and flow bias in an orally intubated and mechanically ventilated bench model.
An orally intubated mannequin was mechanically ventilated in 5 commonly used modes of ventilation at settings that reflect current practice. HFCWC was applied via a randomized combination of oscillation frequencies and pressure settings. Mechanical ventilator flow, flow bias, and breathing frequency were measured before and during the application of HFCWC.
HFCWC led to 3- to 7-fold increases in ventilator-delivered breathing frequency during synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation, bi-level (with pressure support), bi-level-assist, and pressure-regulated volume control modes of ventilation. Only in the bi-level mode without pressure support was the ventilator breathing frequency unaffected by HFCWC. During HFCWC, peak inspiratory flow to peak expiratory flow ratios toward an expiratory flow bias, particularly at higher HFCWC pressures, only in pressure-regulated volume control and synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation modes were peak inspiratory flow to peak expiratory flow ratios of <0.9 generated that would facilitate secretion clearance.
HFCWC led to 3- to 7-fold increases in ventilator breathing frequency delivered by mechanical ventilation except in the bi-level mode. The bi-level mode may be the optimal mode to use HFCWC to minimize disruption to the delivered ventilator breathing frequency. The peak inspiratory flow to peak expiratory flow ratios < 0.9, the optimal flow bias for secretion clearance, was only achieved in the pressure-regulated volume control and synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation modes. However, the findings in this bench model with a fixed low compliance may not be generalizable to the patient in the ICU, and we recommend further investigation into the effects of HFCWC in the patient in the ICU.
高频胸壁按压(HFCWC)在机械通气患者中是否有助于分泌物清除尚不清楚。HFCWC对机械通气输送的影响尚不清楚。本研究描述了HFCWC对经口插管并机械通气的模拟人体模型中机械通气输送和气流偏向的影响。
使用一个经口插管的人体模型,以反映当前实践的设置,采用5种常用的通气模式进行机械通气。通过振荡频率和压力设置的随机组合应用HFCWC。在应用HFCWC之前和期间测量机械通气机的流量、气流偏向和呼吸频率。
在同步间歇指令通气、双水平(带压力支持)、双水平辅助和压力调节容量控制通气模式下,HFCWC导致通气机输送的呼吸频率增加3至7倍。仅在无压力支持的双水平模式下,通气机呼吸频率不受HFCWC影响。在HFCWC期间,吸气峰流量与呼气峰流量之比呈现呼气气流偏向,特别是在较高的HFCWC压力下,仅在压力调节容量控制和同步间歇指令通气模式下,吸气峰流量与呼气峰流量之比小于0.9,这将有助于分泌物清除。
除双水平模式外,HFCWC导致机械通气输送的通气机呼吸频率增加3至7倍。双水平模式可能是使用HFCWC以最小化对输送的通气机呼吸频率干扰的最佳模式。吸气峰流量与呼气峰流量之比小于0.9,即分泌物清除的最佳气流偏向,仅在压力调节容量控制和同步间歇指令通气模式下实现。然而,在这个具有固定低顺应性的模拟人体模型中的发现可能不适用于重症监护病房的患者,我们建议进一步研究HFCWC对重症监护病房患者的影响。