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- Ariel Berlinski and Jeanne Velasco.
- Department of Pediatrics, Pulmonology Section, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and with the Pediatric Aerosol Research Laboratory, Arkansas Children's Research Institute, Little Rock, Arkansas. berlinskiariel@uams.edu.
- Respir Care. 2019 Nov 1; 64 (11): 1366-1370.
BackgroundPediatric patients treated with noninvasive ventilation (NIV) are frequently given aerosol therapy. Limited pediatric data are available on the efficiency of aerosol delivery efficiency. We evaluated the effect of different nebulizers, positions in the single-limb ventilator circuit, and ventilator settings on the efficiency of aerosol delivery in a model of pediatric NIV. We hypothesized that using a vibrating mesh nebulizer, placing the nebulizer after the circuit leak, and not using the highest inspiratory positive airway pressure would increase aerosol delivery efficiency.MethodsWe connected a breathing simulator in series to a low-dead-space filter holder (lung dose) and to an anatomically correct face/airway model of a 5-y-old child. A mask with an entrainment elbow was connected to a ventilator operated in a NIV bi-level mode and assembled with a single-limb heated-wired circuit. Inspiratory/expiratory pressures of either 15/5 or 20/5 cm H2O were used. We studied 3 different jet nebulizers and 2 vibrating mesh nebulizers loaded with albuterol solution (2.5 mg/3 mL). Albuterol was measured with spectrophotometry. The outcome measure was the efficiency of aerosol delivery (ie, lung dose expressed as percentage of the nominal dose).ResultsVibrating mesh nebulizers placed after the exhalation port of the circuit had the highest delivery efficiency, even compared with a vibrating mesh nebulizer integrated into the mask. Placing the nebulizer after the exhalation port of the circuit increased efficiency for all nebulizers. Vibrating mesh nebulizers were more efficient than jet nebulizers, regardless of their position in the circuit. Increasing the inspiratory pressure resulted in a variable effect on aerosol-delivery efficiency.ConclusionsIn a model of pediatric NIV using a single-limb circuit, aerosol delivery devices were more efficient when placed after the exhalation port of the ventilator circuit. Vibrating mesh nebulizers were more efficient than jet nebulizers.Copyright © 2019 by Daedalus Enterprises.
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