scholarly journals S87 The effect of on patient comfort and neural respiratory drive (NRD) of ventilator trigger delay during non-invasive ventilation (NIV)

Thorax ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 68 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A46.2-A47
Author(s):  
MC Ramsay ◽  
S Mandal ◽  
E-S Suh ◽  
J Steier ◽  
A Simonds ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  

In critically ill COVID-19 patients, proper management of sedation is an important issue. Therefore, for this purpose, several strategies and protocols have been proposed. In this paper, we illustrate an approach focused on lung damage, and both the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profiles of drugs used. In line with this, during high flow nasal (HFN), continuous positive airway pressure, or non-invasive ventilation, dexmedetomidine-based light sedation can be helpful for maintaining the respiratory driving and improving the patient comfort. A worsening in the respiratory clinical picture with mechanical ventilation may require deep sedation with the use of clonidine. The latter may reduce the hypnotic doses, allowing improved hemodynamic stability. When respiratory performance improves, dexmedetomidine can replace clonidine to reduce the time to extubation.


Author(s):  
Anita Saigal ◽  
Amar J Shah ◽  
Swapna Mandal

Acute hypercapnic respiratory failure accounts for 50 000 hospital admissions each year in the UK. This article discusses the pathophysiology and common causes of acute hypercapnic respiratory failure, and provides practical considerations for patient management in acute medical settings. Non-invasive ventilation for persistent acute hypercapnic respiratory failure is widely recognised to improve patient outcomes and reduce mortality. National audits highlight a need to improve patients' overall care and outcomes through appropriate patient selection and treatment initiation. Multidisciplinary involvement is essential, as this underpins inpatient care and follow up after hospital discharge. New non-invasive ventilation modalities may offer better patient comfort and compensate better for sleep-related changes in respiratory mechanics. Emerging therapies, such as nasal high flow, may offer an alternative treatment approach in those who cannot tolerate non-invasive ventilation, but more research is required to completely understand its effectiveness in treating acute hypercapnic respiratory failure.


2014 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Longrois ◽  
Giorgio Conti ◽  
Jean Mantz ◽  
Andreas Faltlhauser ◽  
Riku Aantaa ◽  
...  

This review examines some of the issues encountered in the use of sedation in patients receiving respiratory support from non-invasive ventilation (NIV). This is an area of critical and intensive care medicine where there are limited (if any) robust data to guide the development of best practice and where local custom appears to exert a strong influence on patterns of care. We examine aspects of sedation for NIV where the current lack of structure may be contributing to missed opportunities to improve standards of care and examine the existing sedative armamentarium. No single sedative agent is currently available that fulfils the criteria for an ideal agent but we offer some observations on the relative merits of different agents as they relate to considerations such as effects on respiratory drive and timing, and airways patency. The significance of agitation and delirium and the affective aspect(s) of dyspnoea are also considered.We outline an agenda for placing the use of sedation in NIV on a more systematic footing, including clearly expressed criteria and conditions for terminating NIV and structural and organizational conditions for prospective multicentre trials.


2021 ◽  
pp. 00373-2021
Author(s):  
Elise Artaud-Macari ◽  
Michael Bubenheim ◽  
Gurvan Le Bouar ◽  
Dorothée Carpentier ◽  
Steven Grangé ◽  
...  

High-flow nasal cannula (HFNC) oxygen therapy has recently shown clinical benefits in hypoxemic acute respiratory failure (ARF) patients, while the interest of non-invasive ventilation (NIV) remains debated. The primary endpoint was to compare alveolar recruitment using global end-expiratory electrical lung impedance (EELI) between HFNC and NIV. Secondary endpoints compared regional EELI, lung volumes (global and regional tidal volume variation (TV)), respiratory parameters, hemodynamic tolerance, dyspnea and patient comfort between HFNC and NIV, relative to face mask (FM).A prospective randomised cross-over physiological study was conducted in patients with hypoxemic ARF due to pneumonia. They received alternately HFNC, NIV and FM.Sixteen patients were included. Global EELI was 4083 with NIV and 2921 with HFNC (p=0.4). Compared to FM, NIV and HFNC significantly increased global EELI by 1810.5 (95%CI: (857; 2646)) and 826 (95%CI: (399.5; 2361)) respectively. Global and regional TV increased significantly with NIV compared to HFNC or FM, but not between HFNC and FM. NIV yielded a significantly higher SpO2/ FiO2 ratio compared to HFNC (p=0.03). No significant difference was observed between HFNC, NIV and FM for dyspnea. Patient comfort score with FM was not significantly different than with HFNC (p=0.1) but was lower with NIV (p=0.001).This study suggests a potential benefit of HFNC and NIV on alveolar recruitment in patients with hypoxemic ARF. In contrast with HFNC, NIV increased lung volumes which may contribute to overdistension and its potentially deleterious effect in these patients.


Trials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Swagata Tripathy ◽  
P. Bhaskar Rao

Abstract Objectives We aim to study the effect of epidural morphine as a means to reduce high respiratory drive in COVID 19 patients on non-invasive ventilation (NIV)—primary end point—and to study its effect on respiratory parameters, subjective patient comfort, rates of endotracheal intubation, duration of mechanical ventilation and mortality. Trial design Parallel group, randomised, double blind, single centre placebo control trial. Allocation ratio 1:1, superiority trial Participants Trial site and population—COVID ICU patients in the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India Inclusion and exclusion criteria Inclusion criteria Adult patients on NIV with COVID-19 Exclusion criteria Metabolic acidosis HCO3-< 16 and pH < 7.2. Severe hypoxemia warranting cessation of NIV and intubation, non-acceptance of NIV and proven sepsis. Technical difficulty for epidural catheterization, coagulation abnormalities, low respiratory drive and EOL orders. Sources or methods of recruitment—daily discussion at 8 am of new admissions to COVID ICU on NIV—consenting adult patients with COVID19 on NIV and high respiratory drive; not meeting exclusion criteria will be recruited for the trial and randomised. Intervention and comparator Patients of both groups will be turned to a lateral or sitting position (as comfortable), and an injection of local anaesthetic be given at lumbar 2–3/3–4 space. In the intervention group, an epidural catheter will be inserted using aseptic technique and fixed to the skin. The control group will have a sham catheter fixed exactly like in the intervention group, but not entering the epidural space. The intervention group will be administered injection morphine sulphate once every 18–24 h into the epidural space. The doses will be escalated daily (5–10 mg), titrated to effect: escalation limited by hypoventilation resulting in respiratory acidosis (pH < 7.2). The intervention will continue for a minimum of 2 doses and a maximum of 5 doses (96 h) of morphine. It will be stopped if the epidural catheter gets dislodged before the second dose or the patient is weaned off non-invasive ventilation to high flow mask for a continuous period of 24 h or requires endotracheal intubation. The patient will be followed up till death or 28 days after ICU discharge. Main outcomes Primary outcome—diaphragm thickening index fraction (average of minimum 3 readings) Secondary outcomes—ventilator parameters, sedation and pain scores, subjective comfort and dyspnoea scores, time to intubation, length of stay on NIV and 28-day mortality Timing of outcome assessment—every 8th hour assessment for 24 h after the last dose of epidural morphine or 120 h whichever is greater Randomisation A central random number list will be kept with the study research assistant. She will randomise according to the numbers available in the list using an allocation ratio of 1:1. An opaque sealed envelope concealing the allotted randomisation code will be dispatched to the ICU team. Blinding (masking) The assessor, patient, nurses and physicians will be blind to group allocation. One member of the team not involved in research will administer the intervention. Numbers to be randomised (sample size) Twenty-five patients per group; 50 patients total Trial status Protocol version 1. Not recruiting yet. Recruitment to begin by 24 July 2021 and end by 31 August 2022 Trial registration Central Trials Registry India CTRI CTRI/2021/07/035093. Registered on 23 July 2021. Prospectively registered Full protocol The full protocol is attached as an additional file, accessible from the Trials website (Additional file 1). In the interest of expediting dissemination of this material, the familiar formatting has been eliminated; this Letter serves as a summary of the key elements of the full protocol


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