Effect of inspiratory synchronization during pressure-controlled ventilation on lung distension and inspiratory effort

Abstract

Background

In pressure-controlled (PC) ventilation, tidal volume ( V _T) and transpulmonary pressure ( P _ L ) result from the addition of ventilator pressure and the patient’s inspiratory effort. PC modes can be classified into fully, partially, and non-synchronized modes, and the degree of synchronization may result in different V _T and P _ L despite identical ventilator settings. This study assessed the effects of three PC modes on V _T, P _ L , inspiratory effort (esophageal pressure–time product, PTP_es), and airway occlusion pressure, P _0.1. We also assessed whether P _0.1 can be used for evaluating patient effort

Methods

Prospective, randomized, crossover physiologic study performed in 14 spontaneously breathing mechanically ventilated patients recovering from acute respiratory failure (1 subsequently withdrew). PC modes were fully (PC-CMV), partially (PC-SIMV), and non-synchronized (PC-IMV using airway pressure release ventilation) and were applied randomly; driving pressure, inspiratory time, and set respiratory rate being similar for all modes. Airway, esophageal pressure, P _0.1, airflow, gas exchange, and hemodynamics were recorded

Results

V _T was significantly lower during PC-IMV as compared with PC-SIMV and PC-CMV (387 ± 105 vs 458 ± 134 vs 482 ± 108 mL, respectively; p  < 0.05). Maximal P _ L was also significantly lower (13.3 ± 4.9 vs 15.3 ± 5.7 vs 15.5 ± 5.2 cmH_2O, respectively; p  < 0.05), but PTP_es was significantly higher in PC-IMV (215.6 ± 154.3 vs 150.0 ± 102.4 vs 130.9 ± 101.8 cmH_2O × s × min^−1, respectively; p  < 0.05), with no differences in gas exchange and hemodynamic variables. PTP_es increased by more than 15% in 10 patients and by more than 50% in 5 patients. An increased P _0.1 could identify high levels of PTP_es

Conclusions

Non-synchronized PC mode lowers V _T and P _ L in comparison with more synchronized modes in spontaneously breathing patients but can increase patient effort and may need specific adjustments. Clinical Trial Registration Clinicaltrial.gov # NCT02071277

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