• Anaesthesia · Jan 2017

    Performance of adjustable pressure-limiting (APL) valves in two different modern anaesthesia machines.

    • J Thomas, M Weiss, A R Schmidt, and P K Buehler.
    • Department of Anaesthesia and Children's Research Centre, University Children's Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland.
    • Anaesthesia. 2017 Jan 1; 72 (1): 28-34.

    AbstractThe ability to gently ventilate a patient's lungs using a self-inflating bag requires a properly working adjustable pressure-limiting (APL) valve. We compared the performance of the APL valves of the GE Aisys CS(2) and the Draeger Fabius anaesthetic machines during closure and opening from 1-20 and from 20-1 cmH2 O, using standardised experimental baby and adolescent patient lung models. Airway pressures and inspiratory tidal volumes were measured using an ASL-5000 test lung and a GE Aisys CS(2) near-patient spirometry sensors. In both lung models, the GE Aisys CS(2) APL valves demonstrated non-linear behaviours for airway pressures and for inspiratory tidal volumes, with a sharp increase at set APL pressure levels of 8-10 cmH2 O. With further closure of the GE Aisys CS(2) APL valves up to 20 cmH2 O, inspiratory tidal volumes decreased to ~50% of the highest values measured. Airway pressures in the Draeger Fabius APL valves demonstrated a near linear increase and decrease. Airway pressure values measured in the Draeger Fabius were never higher than those set by the APL valves, whereas in the GE Aisys CS(2) , they considerably exceeded set pressures (by up to 27 cmH2 O). We conclude that the performance of the GE Aisys CS(2) APL valve does not allow safe bag-assisted ventilation of a patient's lungs.© 2016 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland.

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