alveolar ventilation
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2021 ◽  
pp. 0310057X2110476
Author(s):  
Philip J Peyton ◽  
Sarah Aitken ◽  
Mats Wallin

In general anaesthesia, early collapse of poorly ventilated lung segments with low alveolar ventilation–perfusion ratios occurs and may lead to postoperative pulmonary complications after abdominal surgery. An ‘open lung’ ventilation strategy involves lung recruitment followed by ‘individualised’ positive end-expiratory pressure titrated to maintain recruitment of low alveolar ventilation–perfusion ratio lung segments. There are limited data in laparoscopic surgery on the effects of this on pulmonary gas exchange. Forty laparoscopic bowel surgery patients were randomly assigned to standard ventilation or an ‘open lung’ ventilation intervention, with end-tidal target sevoflurane of 1% supplemented by propofol infusion. After peritoneal insufflation, stepped lung recruitment was performed in the intervention group followed by maintenance positive end-expiratory pressure of 12–15 cmH2O adjusted to maintain dynamic lung compliance at post-recruitment levels. Baseline gas and blood samples were taken and repeated after a minimum of 30 minutes for oxygen and carbon dioxide and for sevoflurane partial pressures using headspace equilibration. The sevoflurane arterial/alveolar partial pressure ratio and alveolar deadspace fraction were unchanged from baseline and remained similar between groups (mean (standard deviation) control group = 0.754 (0.086) versus intervention group = 0.785 (0.099), P = 0.319), while the arterial oxygen partial pressure/fractional inspired oxygen concentration ratio was significantly higher in the intervention group at the second timepoint (control group median (interquartile range) 288 (234–372) versus 376 (297–470) mmHg in the intervention group, P = 0.011). There was no difference between groups in the sevoflurane consumption rate. The efficiency of sevoflurane uptake is not improved by open lung ventilation in laparoscopy, despite improved arterial oxygenation associated with effective and sustained recruitment of low alveolar ventilation–perfusion ratio lung segments.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Quangang Yang

Background: In mechanical ventilation, there are still some challenges to turn a modern ventilator into a fully reactive device, such as lack of a comprehensive target variable and the unbridged gap between input parameters and output results. This paper aims to present a state ventilation which can provide a measure of two primary, but heterogenous, ventilation support goals. The paper also tries to develop a method to compute, rather than estimate, respiratory parameters to obtain the underlying causal information. Methods: This paper presents a state ventilation, which is calculated based on minute ventilation and blood gas partial pressures, to evaluate the efficacy of ventilation support and indicate disease progression. Through mathematical analysis, formulae are derived to compute dead space volume/ventilation, alveolar ventilation, and CO2 production. Results: Measurements from a reported clinical study are used to verify the analysis and demonstrate the application of derived formulae. The state ventilation gives the expected trend to show patient status, and the calculated mean values of dead space volume, alveolar ventilation, and CO2 production are 158mL, 8.8L/m, and 0.45L/m respectively for a group of patients. Discussions and Conclusions: State ventilation can be used as a target variable since it reflects patient respiratory effort and gas exchange. The derived formulas provide a means to accurately and continuously compute respiratory parameters using routinely available measurements to characterize the impact of different contributing factors.


Author(s):  
Emma Williams ◽  
Theodore Dassios ◽  
Paul Dixon ◽  
Anne Greenough

2021 ◽  
pp. 261-291
Author(s):  
Graham Mitchell

This chapter discusses the respiratory system of giraffes. The respiratory system supplies oxygen, removes of carbon dioxide and produces the airflow needed to make sounds. Giraffes do not have the velocity of airflow through the airways to vibrate vocal cords sufficiently to generate sounds able to be heard by humans but can produce sounds able to be heard by giraffes. Air reaches alveoli for gas exchange through a long trachea, which is relatively narrow (~4 cm in diameter). Dead space volume is large. A short trunk and rigid chest wall reduce the capacity of the thorax and consequently lung volume is small. Respiratory rate is low (~10 min-1), but tidal volume is relatively big, and alveolar ventilation rate (VA; ~60 L min-1) delivers sufficient air despite the large dead space volume. Laryngeal muscles act to prevent food from entering the trachea a process controlled by the (short) superior and (long) inferior (recurrent) laryngeal nerves. Air that has been delivered to alveoli comes into contact with pulmonary artery blood (=cardiac output, Q; ~40 L min-1). The VA: Q ratio is ~1.5 (cf 0.8 in humans). Gas exchange occurs by diffusion. The surface area for diffusion is related to the number of alveoli which increase in number during growth from ~1 billion in a newborn giraffe to 11 billion in an adult. Gas carriage of oxygen and carbon dioxide is a function of erythrocytes which are small (MCV = 12 fL) but numerous (12 × 1012 L-1) and each liter of blood contains ~150 g of hemoglobin.


Author(s):  
Simon Orlob ◽  
Johannes Wittig ◽  
Christoph Hobisch ◽  
Daniel Auinger ◽  
Gabriel Honnef ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Previous studies have stated that hyperventilation often occurs in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) mainly due to excessive ventilation frequencies, especially when a manual valve bag is used. Transport ventilators may provide mandatory ventilation with predetermined tidal volumes and without the risk of hyperventilation. Nonetheless, interactions between chest compressions and ventilations are likely to occur. We investigated whether transport ventilators can provide adequate alveolar ventilation during continuous chest compression in adult CPR. Methods A three-period crossover study with three common transport ventilators in a cadaver model of CPR was carried out. The three ventilators ‘MEDUMAT Standard²’, ‘Oxylog 3000 plus’, and ‘Monnal T60’ represent three different interventions, providing volume-controlled continuous mandatory ventilation (VC-CMV) via an endotracheal tube with a tidal volume of 6 mL/kg predicted body weight. Proximal airflow was measured, and the net tidal volume was derived for each respiratory cycle. The deviation from the predetermined tidal volume was calculated and analysed. Several mixed linear models were calculated with the cadaver as a random factor and ventilator, height, sex, crossover period and incremental number of each ventilation within the period as covariates to evaluate differences between ventilators. Results Overall median deviation of net tidal volume from predetermined tidal volume was − 21.2 % (IQR: 19.6, range: [− 87.9 %; 25.8 %]) corresponding to a tidal volume of 4.75 mL/kg predicted body weight (IQR: 1.2, range: [0.7; 7.6]). In a mixed linear model, the ventilator model, the crossover period, and the cadaver’s height were significant factors for decreased tidal volume. The estimated effects of tidal volume deviation for each ventilator were − 14.5 % [95 %-CI: −22.5; −6.5] (p = 0.0004) for ‘Monnal T60’, − 30.6 % [95 %-CI: −38.6; −22.6] (p < 0.0001) for ‘Oxylog 3000 plus’ and − 31.0 % [95 %-CI: −38.9; −23.0] (p < 0.0001) for ‘MEDUMAT Standard²’. Conclusions All investigated transport ventilators were able to provide alveolar ventilation even though chest compressions considerably decreased tidal volumes. Our results support the concept of using ventilators to avoid excessive ventilatory rates in CPR. This experimental study suggests that healthcare professionals should carefully monitor actual tidal volumes to recognise the occurrence of hypoventilation during continuous chest compressions.


Author(s):  
Emma Williams ◽  
Theodore Dassios ◽  
Paul Dixon ◽  
Anne Greenough

Medicine ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 100 (6) ◽  
pp. e23570
Author(s):  
Jonas Weber ◽  
Claudia Mißbach ◽  
Johannes Schmidt ◽  
Christin Wenzel ◽  
Stefan Schumann ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 129 (5) ◽  
pp. 1039-1050
Author(s):  
Ronald F. Coburn

This article introduces and supports a postulate that the tissue hypoxia component of carbon monoxide poisoning results in part from impairment of physiological adaptation mechanisms whereby tissues can match regional blood flow to O2 uptake, and the lung can match regional blood flow to alveolar ventilation.


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