Current opinion in critical care
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Postextubation respiratory support treatment approaches, indications, and subgroups of patients with different responses to those therapies are rapidly changing. Planning optimal therapy in terms of choosing devices, timing of application and selecting settings with the goal of minimizing extubation failure is becoming a challenge. This review aims to analyze all the available evidence from a clinical point of view, trying to facilitate decision making at the bedside. ⋯ Planning postextubatin respiratory support must consider the risk for failing and the presence of some clinical conditions favoring noninvasive ventilation.Extubation can be safely accelerated by modifying screening criteria and spontaneous breathing trial settings, but there is room to increase the role of postextubation noninvasive respiratory support for this indication, always keeping in mind the dangers of delaying a needed intubation.
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The purpose of this review is to examine the current state of the evidence, including several recent systematic reviews and meta-analyses, to determine if proportional modes of ventilation have the potential to hasten weaning from mechanical ventilation for adult critically ill patients, compared to pressure support ventilation (PSV), the current standard of care during the recovery and weaning phases of mechanical ventilation. ⋯ The current state of the evidence suggests that proportional modes may hasten weaning from mechanical ventilation, but larger, multicentre RCTS are needed to confirm these preliminary findings.
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Curr Opin Crit Care · Feb 2025
ReviewAdvances in achieving lung and diaphragm-protective ventilation.
Mechanical ventilation may have adverse effects on diaphragm and lung function. Lung- and diaphragm-protective ventilation is an approach that challenges the clinician to facilitate physiological respiratory efforts, while maintaining minimal lung stress and strain. Here, we discuss the latest advances in monitoring and interventions to achieve lung- and diaphragm protective ventilation. ⋯ Achieving lung- and diaphragm-protective ventilation may require more than a single intervention; it demands a comprehensive understanding of the (neuro)physiology of breathing and mechanical ventilation, along with the application of a series of interventions under close monitoring. We suggest a bedside-approach to achieve lung- and diaphragm protective ventilation targets.
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The aim of this review is to summarize available data, including the most recent ones, to help develop the best possible strategy regarding the use of tracheostomy in ICU patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation or who experience loss of airway-protecting mechanisms. ⋯ A step-by-step individualized approach based on the available evidence allows identifying the best strategy regarding the use of tracheostomy in ICU patients.
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Curr Opin Crit Care · Feb 2025
ReviewManagement of sedation during weaning from mechanical ventilation.
Critically ill patients frequently require mechanical ventilation and often receive sedation to control pain, reduce anxiety, and facilitate patient-ventilator interactions. Weaning from mechanical ventilation is intertwined with sedation management. In this review, we analyze the current evidence for sedation management during ventilatory weaning, including level of sedation, timing of sedation weaning, analgesic and sedative choices, and sedation management in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). ⋯ Light or no sedation strategies that prioritize analgesia prior to sedatives along with paired SATs/SBTs promote ventilator liberation. Dexmedetomidine may have a role in weaning for agitated patients. Further investigation is needed into optimal sedation management for patients with ARDS.