High-frequency percussive ventilation for severe inhalation injury.
نویسندگان
چکیده
998 April 2014 A HEALTHY 26-yr-old with singed nares, carbonaceous tracheal secretions, and respiratory distress was intubated following a house fire. Bronchoscopy (fig.) revealed soot throughout the tracheobronchial tree consistent with severe inhalational injury. Despite ARDSNet goal-directed conventional mechanical ventilation, adequate muscle relaxation, and aerosolized pharmacotherapy of albuterol, acetylcysteine, and heparin, worsening oxygenation and ventilation ensued. High-frequency percussive ventilation (HFPV) was initiated to aid oxygenation, mechanics, and secretion clearance. Nine days later, the patient had adequate oxygenation with negligible secretions. Conventional ventilation was reinstituted with extubation shortly thereafter. HFPV has been associated with attenuated ventilator-induced lung injury, improved oxygenation at lower peak airway pressures, and hemodynamic stability among patients with inhalation injury.1 HFPV produces small, high-frequency gas pulses that accumulate to form low-frequency tidal volume breaths in the apneic, motionless lung. This continuous laminar oxygen flow results in a distal-to-proximal gas concentration gradient beginning at the alveolar–arterial interface. Consequently, conventional precepts of dead space and effective alveolar ventilation have limited application to high-frequency ventilation in which diffusion becomes the principle means of gas exchange.2 Because inhalation injury is predominantly a conducting and peripheral airway insult, HFPV may preferentially benefit these specific patients. A recent prospective, randomized controlled clinical trial of burn patients with inhalation injury compared conventional low tidal volume ventilation with HFPV. The study reported similar ventilator-free days for both groups; however, a statistically greater proportion (29% vs. 6%) of the conventional ventilation group failed to meet oxygenation or ventilation goals and required an alternate rescue modality.3
منابع مشابه
High-frequency percussive ventilation in patients with inhalation injury.
Inhalation injury complicated by bacterial pneumonia is now one of the primary causes of morbidity and mortality in patients with thermal injury. We have investigated the use of high-frequency percussive ventilation (HFPV) as a means of ventilatory support for these patients. We propose that high-frequency ventilation may decrease the incidence of pulmonary infection following inhalation injury...
متن کاملProphylactic use of high-frequency percussive ventilation in patients with inhalation injury.
Death and the incidence of pneumonia are significantly increased in burn patients with inhalation injury, despite application of conventional ventilatory support techniques. The effect of high-frequency percussive ventilation on mortality rate, incidence of pulmonary infection, and barotrauma were studied in 54 burn patients with documented inhalation injury admitted between March 1987 and Sept...
متن کاملHigh-frequency percussive ventilation and low tidal volume ventilation in burns: a randomized controlled trial.
OBJECTIVES In select burn intensive care units, high-frequency percussive ventilation is preferentially used to provide mechanical ventilation in support of patients with acute lung injury, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and inhalation injury. However, we found an absence of prospective studies comparing high-frequency percussive ventilation with contemporary low-tidal volume ventilation ...
متن کاملHigh-frequency percussive ventilation revisited.
High-frequency percussive ventilation (HFPV) has demonstrated a potential role as a rescue option for refractory acute respiratory distress syndrome and as a method for improving inhalation injury outcomes. Nevertheless, there is a lack of literature examining the practical application of HFPV theory toward either improving gas exchange or preventing possible ventilator-induced lung injury. Thi...
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Despite advances in mechanical ventilatory support for patients with smoke inhalation injury, including the use of high-frequency flow-interruption ventilators such as the VDR, inhalation injury alone may increase mortality by as much as 20% in patients with thermal injury, and up to 60% when pneumonia occurs. Inhalation injury causes a primary large and small airway epithelial insult that resu...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Anesthesiology
دوره 120 4 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2014