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History of Ventilation. Noninvasive ventilation: foundation of concept of mechanical ventilation1876: First iron lung1889: Alexander Graham Bell-first iron lung for newborn infant1920's: Drinker iron lung1940's: Polio epidemics1960's: Rise of positive pressure ventilation1990's: Resurgence of
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1. Noninvasive Ventilation in Pediatric Respiratory Failure: Does It Work? James D. Fortenberry MD FCCM, FAAP
Director, Critical Care Medicine
Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Egleston
Clinical Associate Professor
Emory University School of Medicine
Atlanta, Georgia USA
2. History of Ventilation Noninvasive ventilation: foundation of concept of mechanical ventilation
1876: First iron lung
1889: Alexander Graham Bell-first iron lung for newborn infant
1920’s: Drinker iron lung
1940’s: Polio epidemics
1960’s: Rise of positive pressure ventilation
1990’s: Resurgence of interest in NIV
3. First Reported Use of Noninvasive Ventilation
And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and man became a living soul.
4. What is Noninvasive Ventilation? Delivery of ventilatory support without the use of an invasive artificial airway
Role in:
Chronic respiratory insufficiency:obstructive sleep apnea
Acute respiratory failure
Hypoxemic
Hypercarbic
5. What is Noninvasive Ventilation? Modalities
Negative pressure: inspiration ? lowers pressures surrounding chest wall, augments tidal volume, more physiologic
Iron lung
Cuirass
Positive pressure (NIPPV): generates positive pressure flow to meet need in spontaneously breathing patient
Current standard
6. Noninvasive Positive Pressure Ventilation Modes of Delivery
Volume ventilator
Pressure-controlled
Continuous (CPAP)
Bilevel (BiPAP® is trade name): cycles between inspiratory (IPAP) and expiratory (EPAP) pressures
Intermittent
Continuous
7. Modes of BiPAP Spontaneous: response to threshold level of patient inspiratory flow to provide IPAP with extra flow, EPAP after peak
Spontaneous/Timed: cycle added in event of apnea
Timed: intermittent pulses at set rate only
Continuous PAP (CPAP)
Problems:
infant may have difficulty achieving sufficient inspiratory flow to trigger
Mask leak prolongs inflation time
8. NIPPV: Mechanisms of Action Stabilize chest wall
“Unload” diaphragm and accessory muscles of breathing
Increase tidal volume/minute ventilation
Increase FRC
Prevent atelectasis
Decrease auto-PEEP/stent airways
Maintain upper airway patency/ decrease apnea and hypopnea
How well NIPPV provides these is undocumented
9. NIPPV: Potential Benefits Avoidance of risks of intubation
Improved bedside caregiver time
Decreased nosocomial pneumonia
Potential decreased ICU length of stay, mortality
Decreased costs
10. NIPPV: Initiation in Children Varied approaches
General BiPAP settings: IPAP 12, EPAP 6 cmH2O
Blended oxygen flow to titrate
Bedside caregiver presence high initially
Sedation often needed in children to tolerate
Ketamine bolus/infusion our choice
11. NIPPV: Delivery Systems Conventional ventilators
CPAP device
Aladdin
Bilevel device:
BiPAP (Respironics)
Knightstar (Puritan-Bennett)
High flow nasal cannula devices:
Vapotherm
12. NIPPV: Interface modes and systems Mask
Nasal
Full face
Type of mask
Mask vs. pillows/cannula
13. Nasal Mask
14. Full Face Mask
15. Nasal Prong Devices
16. Nasal Pillow Devices
17. Interfaces for NIPPV Nasal
Advantages
Less aspiration risk
Easier secretion clearance
Less dead space
Easier fit in adults
Disadvantages
Mouth leak
Higher resistance through nasal passages
Nasal irritation
Potential nasal obstruction
Fit in infants? Oronasal
Advantages
Better control of mouth leak
Better for mouth breathers
Disadvantages
More dead space
Claustrophobia
Higher aspiration risk
More difficulty in speaking
Risk if vent malfunction
Greater sedation need in kids?
18. NIPPV: Potential Indications Cardiogenic pulmonary edema
Hypercarbic respiratory failure/COPD
Hypoxemic respiratory failure
Peri-extubation
Immunocompromised patients
Asthma
19. NIPPV: Contraindications Significant altered mental status/inability to protect airway
Hemoptysis
Facial injuries
NP obstruction
Airway foreign bodies
Significant cardiovascular instability
20. NIPPV: Potential Complications Acute unrecognized deterioration
Nasal/facial erosions
Aspiration
Abdominal distention (GE sphincter pressure up to 25 cmH2O)
21. NIPPV: What is the evidence for its benefit? Fifteen suitable randomized controlled trials for COPD
Eight suitable RCTs in AHRF
2 major meta-analyses
No pediatric RCTs
22. NIPPV Meta-Analysis: Effect on ICU Mortality in COPD
23. NIPPV For COPD/Obstructive Airways Diseases Conclusions: strongest support for a NIPPV indication
COPD-NIPPV now considered a “standard of care”
Asthma-potential benefit, less evidence
24. NIPPV Meta-Analysis: Effect on Intubation in AHRF
25. NIPPV Meta-Analysis: Effect on ICU Length of Stay in AHRF
26. NIPPV Meta-Analysis: Effect on ICU Mortality in AHRF
27. NIPPV Meta-Analysis: NIPPV Benefit As A Function of Unit Mortality
28. NIPPV for Hypoxemic Respiratory Failure
Conclusions:
Limited evidence supports its use
“In the setting of single organ respiratory failure, a trial of NIPPV is warranted…”
“Intubation should not be delayed if rapid improvement does not occur”
29. NIPPV For Postoperative and Post-Extubation Respiratory Failure Trials:
Use of NIPPV for respiratory distress after extubation
Use to facilitate extubation
Results
Conclusions
30. NIPPV for Respiratory Failure After Extubation 37 centers
221 adults extubated with respiratory failure within 48 hours
Randomized to face mask NIPPV or standard therapy
31. NIPPV for Respiratory Failure After Extubation
32. Impact of NIPPV vs. Intubation on Nosocomial Pneumonia
33. NIPPV For Immunocompromised Patients
Avoidance of infectious complications beneficial
2 RCTs of NPPV vs. standard therapy
40 solid organ transplants (Antonelli, JAMA 2000)
NPPV decreased intubation and ICU mortality
52 neutropenic patients (Hilbert, NEMJ 2001)
NPPV: Fewer intubations, decreased mortality
34. Effect of NIPPV on Caregiver Time
35. Why NIPPV Might Work Better in Children Immature chest wall more highly compliant
Predicted FRC closer to total lung capacity
Increased pharyngeal tone needed at expiration to maintain FRC
Fewer fatigue-resistant muscle fiber types in infant diaphragm
Prone to asynchrony of thorax and abdomen = retractions
Marginal increase in positive pressure support may be more helpful in child
36. NIPPV in Pediatrics: Clinical Experience Limited in children
9 published case series (no RCTs)
AHRF: combined 73 reported cases - only 8% required intubation
Acute hypercarbic respiratory failure: combined 34 reported cases- 16% required intubation
37. Early Experience With NIPPV (BiPAP) in Children 28 children
Median age 8 years (4-204 months)
AHRF: Mean P/F 141, A-a 271
Most common diagnosis: pneumonia
BiPAP: median IPAP 12 (8-16), EPAP 6 (5-8)
Median duration of BiPAP 72 hours
Improvement in all parameters
Only 3/28 required intubation/reintubation
38. Early Experience With NIPPV (BiPAP) in Children
39. NIPPV: Pediatric Experience in Varied Settings Use in 34 hypercapnic or hypoxemic children with impending respiratory failure in PICU: decreased dyspnea, only 3 intubated (Padman CCM, 1998)
Pediatric OSA: decreased apnea (Padman Clin Pediatr 2002)
Acute chest syndrome in HbSS: 24/25 improved respiratory distress (Padman Del Med J 2004)
Liver transplant/ respiratory insufficiency (Chin Liver Transpl 2005)
15 children (2.5 months-15 years; previously reintubated)
Hypercarbia improved
13 of 15 remained extubated
40. NIPPV in Pediatric Status Asthmaticus Theoretical benefits
Offset of auto-PEEP with airway obstruction
Reduce inspiratory WOB without hyperinflation
“Unload” diaphragm
Improve delivery of bronchodilators
Avoid PPV: high risk in asthma
41. NIPPV in Pediatric Status Asthmaticus Limited case reports
Prospective crossover trial
BiPAP (10/5) vs. standard therapy
20 asthmatic children
Median 4 yrs, 2 mo-14 yrs
42. NIPPV in Children With Lower Airway Obstruction: Effect on Asthma Score
43. New Aspects of NIPPV: Vapotherm A high flow nasal cannula: up to xx LPM
Warms and humidifies high flows of gas for patient delivery
Water and gas circuit separate: Gas warmed and humidified through vapor transfer cartridge: pressurizes water into molecular vapor
Potential benefits: positive pressure support in a more comfortable interface
Infants, neonates
Vapor transfer cartridge requires disinfection
44. Vapotherm 2000i
45. Vapotherm: Mechanism of Action
46. Vapotherm: Infection Problems CDC Public Health Notification (12/2005):
Contamination: 29 institutions in 16 states
Ralstonia spp. (GNR similar to Pseudomonas, Burkholderia) from instruments and 40 pediatric patients
Majority probably colonization; one active infection; ? one death
Disinfecting protocol ineffective
“…encouraged to weigh the risk of bacterial contamination against the benefits Vapotherm might provide…”
47. Vapotherm: Voluntary Recall Vapotherm, Inc. issues voluntary recall (1/2006)
Children’s of Atlanta removed all devices
Replacement: other high-flow nasal cannulas (Fisher-Paykel: 10-12 LPM flow; Aladdin): limited by flow
48. NIPPV: Conclusions NIPPV offers potential benefits for:
Acute/chronic hypercarbic respiratory failure
Acute hypoxemic respiratory failure-less certain
Immuno-compromised host to avoid intubation
Post-extubation failure: high risk for deterioration
Benefit of NIPPV in children
Anecdotal-hypercarbia/AHRF
Likely helps in selected cases to avoid intubation or re-intubation
We need a randomized study!