The present invention relates to a method and device for determining dynamic hyperinflation during mechanical ventilation of a spontaneously breathing patient.
Intrinsic positive end-expiratory pressure (intrinsic PEEP or PEEPi) is a phenomena occurring due to insufficient expiratory time, preventing the lungs of a patient from becoming sufficiently emptied at the end of expiration, trapping air in the lungs, and increasing the end-expiratory lung volume (dynamic hyperinflation).
During mechanical ventilation of a patient, the presence of dynamic hyperinflation and intrinsic PEEP (PEEPi) can be aggravated by high levels of mechanical ventilation and trigger/off-cycling settings on the mechanical ventilator.
Clinical methods to detect/quantify intrinsic PEEP (PEEPi) comprise measuring pressures at an opening of mechanically ventilating airways during occlusions of those airways; such methods are difficult to interpret during spontaneous breathing.
According to a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a method for determining dynamic hyperinflation during mechanical ventilation of a spontaneously breathing patient, comprising: removing mechanical ventilation during one breath of the patient; measuring inspiratory and expiratory volumes of the patient during said one breath; calculating a difference between the inspiratory and expiratory volumes measured during said one breath; and indicating dynamic hyperinflation of the patient's lungs in relation to the calculated difference.
According to a second aspect of the invention, there is provided a device for determining dynamic hyperinflation during mechanical ventilation of a spontaneously breathing patient, comprising: a controller for removing mechanical ventilation during one breath of the patient; a sensor of inspiratory and expiratory volumes of the patient during said one breath; a calculator of a difference between the inspiratory and expiratory volumes sensed during said one breath; and an indicator of dynamic hyperinflation of the patient's lungs in relation to the calculated difference.
The foregoing and other features of the present invention will become apparent from reading of the following non restrictive description of an illustrative embodiment thereof, given by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
As described hereinabove, the concept of air-trapping relates to a quantity of air penetrating the lungs of a patient larger than the quantity of air leaving the patient's lungs. Air-trapping induced by mechanical ventilation actually worsens contractility of the inspiratory muscles due to dynamic hyperinflation until a level where weakness of the inspiratory muscles and added mechanical ventilation reach an equilibrium causing inspiratory (Vins) and expiratory (Vexp) volumes to match.
When mechanical ventilation is removed in the presence of air-trapping, the patient has difficulty to inhale due to lost mechanical ventilation and weak inspiratory muscles. However, due to extra stored energy i.e. increased elastic recoil in the inspiratory muscles due to air-trapping, the patient has no difficulty to generate force to exhale.
Accordingly, air-trapping during mechanical ventilation should hence result in similar inspiratory (Vins) and expiratory (Vexp) volumes during breaths with mechanical ventilation, whereas inspiratory volumes (Vins) are smaller than expiratory volumes (Vexp) during the first breaths after mechanical ventilation has been removed. When the lungs are not trapping air, the inspiratory (Vins) and expiratory (Vexp) volumes should be similar for breaths both with mechanical ventilation and without mechanical ventilation. With these concepts in mind,
The device 100 of
A calculator 103 is responsive to the inspiratory (Vins) and expiratory (Vexp) volumes detected by the sensor 101 to calculate a difference between the detected inspiratory (Vins) and expiratory (Vexp) volumes of the patient.
An indicator 104 is responsive to the difference between the detected inspiratory (Vins) and expiratory (Vexp) volumes of the patient, for example the ratio Vins/Vexp, to indicate dynamic hyperinflation.
A controller 105 is connected to the sensor 101, the calculator 103 and a mechanical ventilator 106 providing mechanical ventilation to the patient 102.
A method 200 (
Operation 201 (
The controller 105 (
Operation 202 (
The controller 105 (
For that purpose, the sensor 101 (
Operation 203 (
The controller 105 (
More specifically, for the one (1) breath without mechanical ventilation from the mechanical ventilator 106 (
If the ratio (Vins/Vexp) is close to 1 this suggests that the patient 102 is able to exhale the same amount of air as was inhaled during the one (1) breath without mechanical ventilation, suggesting that air-trapping due to the mechanical ventilator 106 (
However, if the ratio (Vins/Vexp) becomes close to 0, this indicates that the patient 102 (
Operation 204 (
An indicator 104 (
For example, the indicator 104 (
Also, the ratio (Vins/Vexp) could be used to guide conventional titration of external PEEP, or in combination with previous neural PEEP titration methods (US Published Patent Applications 2005/0211246 and 2003/0226565).
In the graph of
In the graph of
The sensor 101 (
Also, the above described method 200 (
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CA2010/000017 | 1/7/2010 | WO | 00 | 9/21/2011 |
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WO2010/081214 | 7/22/2010 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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Blanch et al. “Measurement of Air Trapping, Intrinsic Positive End-in Expiratory Pressure, and Dynamic Hyperinflation in Mechanically Ventilated Patients”, Respiratory Care, Jan. 2005, vol. 50, No. 1, pp. 110-124. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120118290 A1 | May 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61193974 | Jan 2009 | US |