Patients with neuromuscular disease (NMD) who require long-term ventilation normally have the ventilation set using empirical daytime parameters. We evaluated arterial blood gases (ABG), breathing pattern, respiratory muscle function, and sleep architecture during ventilation with two noninvasive Pressure Support Ventilation (nPSV) settings in nine patients with NMD. The two settings were randomly applied: the usual (US), with the nPSV setting titrated on simple clinical parameters, and the physiological (PHYS), tailored to the patient's respiratory effort. During wakefulness, nPSV significantly improved ABG and minute ventilation and reduced the diaphragmatic pressure-time product (PTPdi/breath), independently of the type of setting (PTPdi/breath spontaneous breathing 5.7 +/- 2.4, US 3.2 +/- 2, PHYS 3.6 +/- 1.6 cm H2O . seconds(-1), p < 0.001). However, during sleep, PHY nPSV resulted in a significant improvement of gas exchange, sleep efficiency (71.7% +/- 14 US vs. 80.6% +/- 8.3 PHYS, p < 0.01) and % of REM sleep (9.1% +/- 7 US vs. 17.3% +/- 5.4 PHYS, p < 0.01). This improvement was significantly correlated with the reduction in ineffective efforts. In NMD, nPSV is effective in improving daytime ABG and in unloading inspiratory muscles independently of whether it is set on the basis of the patient's comfort or the patient's respiratory mechanics. However, PHYS was associated with better sleep architecture and nighttime gas exchange.
Using a simple decisional flowchart we were able to remove tracheotomy cannula in almost 80% of the patients with spontaneous breathing autonomy without major clinical complications. Further larger prospective studies are needed to confirm this clinical approach in larger and different populations.
We conclude that, over time, experience with NIV may progressively allow more severely ill patients to be treated without changing the rate of success. The daily cost of NIV per patient can be reduced by treating less severely ill patients outside the RICU.
We have demonstrated the feasibility and efficacy of a new algorithm to detect the occurrence of impaired patient-ventilator interaction during mechanical ventilation in real time. This software may help the clinician in the identification of this problem, which has been shown to have important clinical consequences.
Noninvasive ventilation (NIV) is widely used in the treatment of acute respiratory failure (ARF), but not in patients with end-stage solid cancer in whom any form of mechanical ventilation tends to be avoided. In a prospective study, we investigated the use of NIV in 23 patients with solid malignancies receiving palliative care and who were affected by severe hypoxic or hypercapnic ARF. The most frequent causes of ARF were exacerbations of pre-existing pulmonary diseases and pneumonia. After one hour, NIV significantly improved PaO2/FiO2 (from 154+/-48 to 187+/-55) and the Borg dyspnoea score (from 5.5+/-1.2 to 2.3+/-0.3). NIV also improved pH, but only in the subset of hypercapnic patients. Thirteen of 23 (57%) patients were successfully ventilated and discharged alive, while 10/23 patients (43%) met the criteria for intubation or died after an initial trial of NIV. Only two of these patients accepted invasive ventilation. The mortality rate in this subgroup was 9/10 (90%). A higher Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS II) and a lower PaO2/FiO2 on admission were associated with a lower probability of survival. Patients with ARF and end-stage solid malignancies have an overall ICU and 1-year mortality rate of 39% and 87%, respectively, but despite this, a consistent subset of patients may still be successfully treated with NIV, if the cause of ARF is reversible.
In normal subjects, heated humidification during nasal NIV attenuates the adverse effects of mouth leak on effective tidal volume, nasal resistance and improves overall comfort. Heated humidification should be considered as part of an approach to patients who are troubled with nasal symptoms, once leak has been minimised.
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