• Critical care medicine · Jan 1997

    Tracheal gas insufflation during pressure-control ventilation: effect of using a pressure relief valve.

    • D T Gowski, E Delgado, A M Miro, F J Tasota, L A Hoffman, and M R Pinsky.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, USA.
    • Crit. Care Med. 1997 Jan 1;25(1):145-52.

    ObjectivesPressure-control ventilation minimizes alveolar overdistention by limiting peak airway pressure, but a consequence of this pressure limitation may be a reduction in tidal volume with subsequent hypercarbia. Tracheal gas insufflation (TGI) can be used in combination with pressure-control ventilation to augment CO2 elimination. During pressure-control ventilation with continuous TGI, we observed that peak airway pressure increased above the set inspiratory pressure. Based on this observation, we investigated the ability of the pressure-control ventilator circuit to compensate for continuous TGI and the effect of insertion of a pressure relief valve to eliminate over-pressurization.SettingUniversity research laboratory.DesignUsing an artificial lung model, we studied the effects of continuous TGI with varying catheter flows (0, 2, 6, and 10 L/ min); ventilator frequencies (10 and 20 breaths/min); inspiratory duty cycles (0.33, 0.50, and 0.67); lung compliance (0.01, 0.02, and 0.04 L/cm H2O); and airway resistance (5, 20, and 50 cm H2O/L/sec) on: a) peak airway pressure; b) total inspiratory tidal volume; c) ventilator-derived tidal volume; and d) intrapulmonary pressure at end-exhalation (auto-PEEP). Tests were performed with and without a pressure relief valve whose threshold "pop-off" pressure was adjusted to match the set inspiratory pressure (35 cm H2O) for a total of 432 experimental conditions.Measurements And Main ResultsOur data demonstrate that pressure-control ventilation augmented with continuous TGI can increase peak airway pressure above set inspiratory pressure due to delivery of a higher than intended tidal volume. Predisposing conditions include catheter flow rates of 6 and 10 L/min, long inspiratory time, low compliance, and low resistance. With the pressure relief valve, peak airway pressure was maintained at the set inspiratory pressure and total inspiratory tidal volume remained constant.ConclusionA pressure relief valve is a necessary adjunct to maintain peak airway pressure at set inspiratory pressure and keep total inspiratory tidal volume constant when continuous TGI is administered in conjunction with pressure-control ventilation.

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