Allowing for spontaneous breathing during high-frequency oscillation: the key for final success?

被引:0
|
作者
Peter C Rimensberger
机构
[1] University Children's Hospital of Geneva,Pediatric and Neonatal ICU
来源
Critical Care | / 10卷
关键词
Continuous Positive Airway Pressure; Spontaneous Breathing; Airway Pressure Release Ventilation; Heavy Sedation; Continuous Distend Pressure;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In the present issue of Critical Care, van Heerde and colleagues describe a new technical development (a flow-demand system during high-frequency oscillation) that may have an important impact on the future use of high-frequency ventilation in children and adults. Flow compensation on patient demand seems to reduce the imposed work of breathing, may therefore increase patient comfort, and should theoretically allow for maintaining spontaneous breathing while heavy sedation and muscular paralysis could be avoided. With further technical development of this concept, high-frequency oscillation can finally be added to the techniques of mechanical ventilatory support that maintain, rather than suppress, spontaneous breathing efforts. Furthermore, this concept will give high-frequency oscillation the chance to prove its potential role as primary therapy in patients with acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome, the chance to reduce the incidence of high-frequency oscillation failure for patient or physician discomfort as reported in so many clinical trials in the past, the chance to most probably allow successful weaning from high-frequency oscillation to extubation, and, ultimately, in analogy to what has been reported from the experience with other ventilator modes that allow for maintaining spontaneous breathing, the chance to decrease ventilator days in patients with acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] VENTILATION BY HIGH-FREQUENCY OSCILLATION
    BOHN, DJ
    BUTLER, W
    FROESE, AB
    BRYAN, AC
    FEDERATION PROCEEDINGS, 1979, 38 (03) : 951 - 951
  • [32] VENTILATION BY HIGH-FREQUENCY OSCILLATION
    BOHN, DJ
    MIYASAKA, K
    MARCHAK, BE
    THOMPSON, WK
    FROESE, AB
    BRYAN, AC
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1980, 48 (04) : 710 - 716
  • [33] HIGH-FREQUENCY OSCILLATION IN DOGS
    HOFF, BH
    MACKENZIE, CF
    HASNAIN, J
    MOSTELLO, L
    HELRICH, M
    CLARK, D
    SOUTHERN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1983, 76 (09) : P24 - P24
  • [34] MECHANICS OF HIGH-FREQUENCY OSCILLATION
    LIGAS, JR
    MOSLEHI, F
    EPSTEIN, MAF
    AMERICAN REVIEW OF RESPIRATORY DISEASE, 1986, 133 (04): : A386 - A386
  • [35] EFFECTS OF CHANGING INSPIRATORY TIME DURING HIGH-FREQUENCY OSCILLATION
    SPOHN, W
    COURTNEY, S
    MALIN, S
    BENDER, C
    WEBER, K
    GOTSHALL, R
    CLINICAL RESEARCH, 1987, 35 (06): : A920 - A920
  • [36] FLOW DISTRIBUTION IN A SINGLE BIFURCATION DURING HIGH-FREQUENCY OSCILLATION
    TSUZAKI, K
    KAMM, RD
    RESPIRATION PHYSIOLOGY, 1990, 82 (01): : 89 - 106
  • [37] CARBON-DIOXIDE CLEARANCE DURING HIGH-FREQUENCY OSCILLATION
    NGEOW, YK
    MITZNER, W
    PERMUTT, S
    SYLVESTER, J
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 1981, 9 (03) : 164 - 164
  • [38] INTRAPULMONARY GAS MIXING DURING HIGH-FREQUENCY OSCILLATION IN HUMANS
    MOFFATT, SL
    BYFORD, LJ
    FORKERT, L
    FEDERATION PROCEEDINGS, 1984, 43 (03) : 322 - 322
  • [39] Transpulmonary pressure during high-frequency oscillation ventilation: Is it the culprit?
    Cressoni, M.
    Chiumello, Davide
    ANNALS OF INTENSIVE CARE, 2016, 6
  • [40] OSCILLATING VOLUMES DURING VENTILATION WITH HIGH-FREQUENCY OSCILLATION (HFO)
    HOSKYNS, EW
    MILNER, AD
    HOPKIN, IE
    EARLY HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, 1988, 17 (01) : 96 - 96