Respiratory care
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Critical-care ventilators provide patient circuit compensation (CC) to counteract the loss of volume due to patient circuit compliance. No studies show the effect of inspiratory efforts (indicating maximal value of the muscle pressure waveforms [Pmax]) on CC function. The goal of this study was to determine how Pmax affects volume delivery with or without CC for both volume control continuous mandatory ventilation with set-point targeting scheme (VC-CMVs) and pressure control continuous mandatory ventilation with adaptive targeting scheme (PC-CMVa) modes on the Servo-u ventilator. ⋯ CC corrected the delivered VT for volume lost due to compression in the patient circuit as expected. This compensation volume decreases as airway pressure drops due to patient Pmax.
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High-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) is widely used in neonatal critical care, and several modern ventilators using different technologies are available to provide HFOV. These devices have different technical characteristics that might interact with patient lung mechanics to influence the effectiveness of ventilation. To verify this, we studied the oscillation transmission of 5 neonatal oscillators in a lung model mimicking the mechanical patterns commonly observed in neonatal practice. ⋯ In an experimental setting mimicking typical neonatal lung disorders, the oscillation transmission was more dependent on the ventilator model than on the mechanical lung conditions at equal HFOV parameters. Fabian HFO and VN500 provided better oscillation transmission overall, and when increasing amplitude, Fabian HFO delivered oscillations with the lowest variability.
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Noninvasive ventilation is recommended in hypercapnic respiratory failure secondary to ventilatory failure. Noninvasive ventilation may contribute to aerosol dispersion, which may increase the risk of transmission of COVID 2019. The addition of filters to the ventilator circuit has been recommended to reduce this risk. The aim of this benchtop study was to investigate the impact of adding filters to a ventilator circuit. ⋯ This study demonstrated that ventilator settings established with filters in situ are not applicable if the ventilator is used without the filters. This is an important clinical consideration for patients who are hospitalized and require noninvasive ventilation in the COVID 2019 era.
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Editorial Comment
Telemedicine: An Opportunity in RT Clinical Education.
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There is currently no standardized way to determine suitability for extubation of pediatric ICU (PICU) patients, potentially resulting in prolonged duration of mechanical ventilation. We aimed to design and implement a protocol for screening all intubated PICU patients for extubation readiness. ⋯ An acceptable and safe ERT protocol was implemented and found to improve outcomes in PICU subjects on mechanical ventilation.