Influence of Tracheal Obstruction on the Efficacy of Superimposed High-frequency Jet Ventilation and Single-frequency Jet Ventilation

2015 ◽  
Vol 123 (4) ◽  
pp. 799-809 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Sütterlin ◽  
Antonella LoMauro ◽  
Stefano Gandolfi ◽  
Rita Priori ◽  
Andrea Aliverti ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Both superimposed high-frequency jet ventilation (SHFJV) and single-frequency (high-frequency) jet ventilation (HFJV) have been used with success for airway surgery, but SHFJV has been found to provide higher lung volumes and better gas exchange than HFJV in unobstructed airways. The authors systematically compared the ventilation efficacy of SHFJV and HFJV at different ventilation frequencies in a model of tracheal obstruction and describe the frequency and obstruction dependence of SHFJV efficacy. Methods: Ten anesthetized animals (weight 25 to 31.5 kg) were alternately ventilated with SHFJV and HFJV at a set of different fHF from 50 to 600 min−1. Obstruction was created by insertion of interchangeable stents with ID 2 to 8 mm into the trachea. Chest wall volume was measured using optoelectronic plethysmography, airway pressures were recorded, and blood gases were analyzed repeatedly. Results: SHFJV provided greater than 1.6 times higher end-expiratory chest wall volume than HFJV, and tidal volume (VT) was always greater than 200 ml with SHFJV. Increase of fHF from 50 to 600 min−1 during HFJV resulted in a more than 30-fold VT decrease from 112 ml (97 to 130 ml) to negligible values and resulted in severe hypoxia and hypercapnia. During SHFJV, stent ID reduction from 8 to 2 mm increased end-expiratory chest wall volume by up to 3 times from approximately 100 to 300 ml and decreased VT by up to 4.2 times from approximately 470 to 110 ml. Oxygenation and ventilation were acceptable for 4 mm ID or more, but hypercapnia occurred with the 2 mm stent. Conclusion: In this in vivo porcine model of variable severe tracheal stenosis, SHFJV effectively increased lung volumes and maintained gas exchange and may be advantageous in severe airway obstruction.

2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qianshen Zhang ◽  
Jason Macartney ◽  
Lita Sampaio ◽  
Karel O'Brien

Objective. To review experience of the transport and stabilization of infants with CDH who were treated with high frequency jet ventilation (HFJV).Study Design. Retrospective chart review was performed of infants with antenatal diagnosis of CDH born between 2004 and 2009, at Mount Sinai Hospital Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Detailed information was abstracted from the charts of all infants who received HFJV.Results. Of the 55 infants, 25 were managed with HFJV at some point during resuscitation and stabilization prior to transport. HFJV was the initial ventilation mode in six cases and nineteen infants were placed on HFJV as rescue therapy. Blood gases procured from the umbilical artery before and/or after the initiation of HFJV. There was a significant difference detected for both PaCO2(P=0.0002) and pH (P<0.0001). The pre- and posttransport vital signs remained stable and no transport related deaths or significant complications occurred.Conclusion. HFJV appears to be safe and effective providing high frequency rescue therapy for infants with CDH failing conventional mechanical ventilation. This paper supports the decision to utilize HFJV as it likely contributed to safe transport of many infants that would not otherwise have tolerated transport to a surgical centre.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurie Putz ◽  
Alain Mayné ◽  
Anne-Sophie Dincq

The indications for rigid bronchoscopy for interventional pulmonology have increased and include stent placements and transbronchial cryobiopsy procedures. The shared airway between anesthesiologist and pulmonologist and the open airway system, requiring specific ventilation techniques such as jet ventilation, need a good understanding of the procedure to reduce potentially harmful complications. Appropriate adjustment of the ventilator settings including pause pressure and peak inspiratory pressure reduces the risk of barotrauma. High frequency jet ventilation allows adequate oxygenation and carbon dioxide removal even in cases of tracheal stenosis up to frequencies of around 150 min−1; however, in an in vivo animal model, high frequency jet ventilation along with normal frequency jet ventilation (superimposed high frequency jet ventilation) has been shown to improve oxygenation by increasing lung volume and carbon dioxide removal by increasing tidal volume across a large spectrum of frequencies without increasing barotrauma. General anesthesia with a continuous, intravenous, short-acting agent is safe and effective during rigid bronchoscopy procedures.


1994 ◽  
Vol 108 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. L. Evans ◽  
M. H. Keene ◽  
A. S. E. Bristow

High-frequency jet ventilation (HFJV) is a safe, effective anaesthetic technique with a low risk of aspiration which has not yet gained wide acceptance in laryngology. Following anaesthesia and muscular relaxation the patient is intubated with a size 7FG infant feeding catheter and ventilation is achieved by delivering small bursts of anaesthetic gas at high frequency. The mechanisms of gas exchange are thought to be little different from those of conventional ventilation. We have found HFJV to be of value in laryngoscopy, laryngo-tracheal reconstruction, tracheoplasty, bronchoscopy and tonsillectomy.The advantages include:(a) ease of intubation, especially in the presence of a supraglottic mass;(b) improved surgical access compared with a conventional endotracheal tube; and(c) protection of the airway by the inherent ‘auto-PEEP’ effect. Care must be taken to ensure that conditions allow adequate exhaust of expired gas. Humidification of inspired gas is essential during prolonged procedures.


1989 ◽  
Vol 63 (7) ◽  
pp. 108S-109S
Author(s):  
S.D. MOTTRAM ◽  
M.J. JONES ◽  
E.S. LIN ◽  
G. SMITH

1995 ◽  
Vol 74 (6) ◽  
pp. 2707-2712 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. A. Linton ◽  
D. M. Band ◽  
P. McLoughlin

1. The rate of change sensitivity of some carotid chemoreceptors to within-breath changes in PaCO2 would suggest that the half-life of adaptation of these receptors to a step increase is shorter than the 5-10 s previously reported. 2. In six anesthetized cats, step increases in PaCO2 (10 in each cat) were produced by injection of CO2 into the inspired gas during high-frequency jet ventilation. Chemoreceptor discharge was recorded from single-fiber preparations of the divided carotid sinus nerve, and the changes in PaCO2 were followed with the use of an in vivo pH electrode. 3. The adaptation half-lives were 0.3, 0.8, 1.2, 1.3, 1.6, and 8.6 s. The physiological significance of these findings in terms of respiratory control and the mechanism of chemotransduction are discussed. The receptors with the shortest and longest half-lives showed corresponding differences in response to sine-wave oscillations in PaCO2. 4. In a further group of five cats, chemoreceptor responses to step increases in PaCO2 were tested before and during infusion of KCl to produce a mean arterial [K-] of 6.8 +/- 0.2 (SE) mM. Under these conditions the hyperkalemia caused no further increase in discharge. 5. We conclude that adaptation of the chemoreceptor response to increases in PaCO2 is much faster than previously reported and that this finding is consistent with observations of chemoreceptor responses to respiratory PaCO2 oscillations.


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