• Pediatr Crit Care Me · Jan 2008

    Assessment of neonatal ventilation during high-frequency oscillatory ventilation.

    • Wendy J Sturtz, Suzanne M Touch, Robert G Locke, Jay S Greenspan, and Thomas H Shaffer.
    • Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
    • Pediatr Crit Care Me. 2008 Jan 1;9(1):101-4.

    ObjectiveTo determine alterations in high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) performance during clinical ventilator management.DesignClinical investigation.SettingTwo level III intensive care nurseries in Wilmington, Delaware, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.PatientsThirty infants 1.49 +/- 1.01 kg with respiratory distress receiving HFOV.InterventionsDue to the demonstrated benchtop load sensitivity of the HFOV (SensorMedics 3100), we hypothesized that measured tidal volume (Vt/kg) and high-frequency minute ventilation (HFMV) would vary inversely with respiratory rate adjustments and that ventilator performance will be affected with endotracheal tube (ETT) suctioning. Both Vt/kg and HFMV were recorded using a novel hot-wire anemometry technique at the time of ETT suctioning or changes in ventilator settings.Measurements And Main ResultsDuring HFOV it was found that Vt/kg = 2.52 +/- 0.68 mL/kg and HFMV = 69 +/- 45 ([mL/kg]2 x Hz); effective ventilation was observed in the range of HFMV = 29-113 ([mL/kg]2 x Hz). HFMV decreased with an increase in breathing frequency. Although there was a significant increase in the mean Vt/kg after suctioning events, there was no difference in Vt/kg or HFMV after disconnection of the ETT alone. There were significant alterations in HFOV performance as a result of clinical adjustments in respiratory rate and suctioning. In addition, we found that measured Vt during clinically effective HFOV is at least equivalent to expected deadspace.ConclusionsMeasurement of tidal volume and HFMV may be clinically important in optimizing HFOV performance both during ETT suctioning and adjustments to breathing frequency.

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