Respiratory care
-
Preoperative inspiratory muscle training (IMT) is frequently used in patients waiting for major surgery to improve respiratory muscle function and to reduce the risk of postoperative pulmonary complications (PPCs). Currently, the mechanism of action of IMT in reducing PPCs is still unclear. Therefore, we investigated the associations between preoperative IMT variables and the occurrence of PPCs in patients with esophageal cancer. ⋯ This study shows that an improvement in preoperative inspiratory muscle strength during IMT and training intensity of IMT were not associated with a reduced risk on PPCs after esophagectomy. Further research is needed to investigate other possible factors explaining the mechanism of action of preoperative IMT in patients undergoing major surgery, such as the awareness of patients related to respiratory muscle function and a diaphragmatic breathing pattern.
-
Observational Study
Effects of the First Spontaneous Breathing Trial in Children With Tracheostomy and Long-Term Mechanical Ventilation.
Weaning and liberation from mechanical ventilation in pediatric patients with tracheostomy and long-term mechanical ventilation constitute a challenging process due to diagnosis heterogeneity and significant variability in the clinical condition. We aimed to evaluate the physiological response during the first attempt of a spontaneous breathing trial (SBT) and to compare variables in subjects who failed or passed the SBT. ⋯ Conducting an SBT to evaluate the tolerance and cardiorespiratory response in tracheostomized children with long-term mechanical ventilation is feasible. Time on mechanical ventilation before the first attempt and type of SBT (with or without positive pressure) could be associated with SBT failure.
-
Mechanical ventilation is a lifesaving intervention that may also induce further lung injury by exerting excessive mechanical forces on susceptible lung tissue, a phenomenon termed ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). The concept of mechanical power (MP) aims to unify in one single variable the contribution of the different ventilatory parameters that could induce VILI by measuring the energy transfer to the lung over time. ⋯ Currently, due to different limitations, the clinical application of MP is debatable. Further clinical studies are required to enhance our understanding of the relationship between MP and the development of VILI, as well as its potential impact on clinical outcomes.
-
Multicenter Study Observational Study
Work of Breathing During Proportional Assist Ventilation as a Predictor of Extubation Failure.
Despite decades of research on predictors of extubation success, use of ventilatory support after extubation is common and 10-20% of patients require re-intubation. Proportional assist ventilation (PAV) mode automatically calculates estimated total work of breathing (total WOB). Here, we assessed the performance of total WOB to predict extubation failure in invasively ventilated subjects. ⋯ The discriminative performance of a PAV-derived total WOB value to predict extubation failure was good, indicating total WOB may represent an adjunctive tool for assessing extubation readiness. However, these results should be interpreted as preliminary, with specific thresholds of PAV-derived total WOB requiring further investigation in a large multi-center study.
-
At high ambient temperatures in ICU rooms, the humidification performances of heated-wire humidifiers are significantly reduced, with delivered gas humidity well below 30 mg H2O/L, which leads to an increased risk of endotracheal occlusions, subocclusions, or mucociliary dysfunction. The objective of the study was to evaluate the humidity delivered at the Y-piece with new-generation heated-wire humidifiers with advanced algorithm (FP950 [Fisher & Paykel Healthcare, Auckland, New Zealand] and VHB20 [Vincent Medical, Inspired, Hong Kong]) while varying ambient temperatures. ⋯ The new FP950 and VHB20 heated-wire humidifiers by using advanced algorithms demonstrated stable performance while varying the ambient temperature by 20-30°C, better than the previous generation of heated humidifiers when ambient temperatures were high.