Neuromuscular disease (NMD) refers to a group of diseases (i.e., motor neuron diseases, muscular dystrophies, and so forth) that are collectively associated with progressive respiratory muscle weakness that ultimately result in a decline in vital capacity, a decrease in chest wall and lung compliance, atelectasis, an increase in work of breathing, and an impaired ability to cough. As a result, progressive neuromuscular diseases carry an increased risk of respiratory infection, respiratory failure, and mortality (see, e.g., Ambrosino N, Carpene N, Gherardi M: Chronic respiratory care for neuromuscular diseases in adults. Eur Respir J 2009; 34: 444-451.). Non-invasive ventilation (NIV), mechanical insufflation-exsufflation (MI-E), and lung volume recruitment (LVR) are some examples of respiratory support strategies for patients with NMD (see, e.g., Simonds, A: Recent Advances in Respiratory Care for Neuromuscular Disease. Chest 2006; 130: 1879-1886; McKim D, Katz S, Barrowman N, Ni A, LeBlanc C: Lung Volume Recruitment Slows Pulmonary Function Decline in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2012; 93: 1117-1121).
Lung Volume Recruitment (LVR) is an important therapeutic intervention; that when properly administrated, is associated with the mitigation and or reversal of alveolar atelectasis, improvement in chest wall compliance, and aids in the assisted cough effort aimed at avoiding respiratory infections. In the LVR technique, the lungs are inflated by way of an externally applied airway pressure to increase lung volume. The term “recruitment” thus refers to the recruitment of additional lung volume by way of the LVR therapy. LVR can be separated into two primary application techniques. The more commonly known technique is often termed “breath-stacking” associated with volume delivery whereas the second technique utilizes a pressure control mode. Breath-stacking may be delivered in its most simple construct utilizing a resuscitation bag combined with an integrated one-way valve. The integration of a one-way valve in the resuscitation bag prevents the patient from exhaling while facilitating stacking of successive inhalation breaths; one on top of the other, thereby increasing the net lung volume achieved. The resuscitation bag is inexpensive, and the technique is relatively simple since the addition of the one-way valve means the patient does not need to have glottis control in order to prevent exhalation during the delivery of the successive inhalation breaths. This technique does require that the patient have upper or lower limb mobility to squeeze the bag if performed autonomously, otherwise caregiver assistance and training on an effective technique would be indicated. LVR therapy by way of a ventilator operated in pressure control mode requires more complex and expensive equipment.
Mechanical insufflation-exsufflation (MI-E) therapy is a technique in which positive airway pressure is delivered to the lungs during the inhalation phase to build up a large tidal volume, followed by application of negative airway pressure during the exhalation phase. MI-E therapy is designed to clear the lungs of secretions by producing high expiratory flow rates and is often prescribed as part of home therapy for NMD patients. Patients undergoing MI-E therapy would often also benefit from LVR therapy. A resuscitation bag is typically used due to its low cost and suitability for unsupervised home therapy. Thus, a home therapy device combining MI-E and LVR requires that the patient switch between the MI-E device and the resuscitation bag to perform the LVR.
The following discloses certain improvements.
In one aspect, a mechanical ventilation system includes a mechanical ventilator configured to deliver ventilation to a patient. An electronic controller is programmed to control the mechanical ventilator to perform a LVR therapy method. The LVR therapy method includes at least one LVR cycle including: an inspiration phase in which air is delivered to an upper airway of the patient by the mechanical ventilator to ramp an airway pressure up to an LVR pressure of the LVR cycle, a hold phase in which the airway pressure is maintained by the mechanical ventilator at the LVR pressure or at a pressure above the LVR pressure for a hold time interval, and an expiration phase in which the airway pressure decreases to a positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) of the LVR cycle.
In another aspect, a non-transitory computer readable medium stores instructions executable by an electronic controller of a mechanical ventilator to perform a LVR therapy method in which the LVR therapy method comprising a plurality of LVR cycles. Each LVR cycle includes: an inspiration phase in which air is delivered to an upper airway of the patient by the mechanical ventilator to ramp an airway pressure up to an LVR pressure of the LVR cycle, a hold phase in which the airway pressure is maintained by the mechanical ventilator at the LVR pressure or at a pressure above the LVR pressure for a hold time interval, and an expiration phase in which the airway pressure decreases to a PEEP of the LVR cycle.
In another aspect, a LVR therapy method, in which a non-invasive patient accessory is coupled to a mechanical ventilator configured to deliver ventilation to a patient to an upper airway of the patient. The LVR therapy method includes a plurality of LVR cycles including: delivering air to an upper airway of the patient by the mechanical ventilator to ramp an airway pressure up to an LVR pressure of the LVR cycle; maintaining the airway pressure with the mechanical ventilator at the LVR pressure or at a pressure above the LVR pressure for a hold time interval; decreasing the airway pressure to a PEEP of the LVR cycle; for each LVR cycle, determining a lung recruitment volume as a highest lung volume measured during the LVR cycle; and terminating the LVR therapy method in response to the lung recruitment volume for a most recently completed LVR cycle being no larger than the lung recruitment volume of a preceding LVR cycle.
One advantage resides in providing a respiratory therapy device including a mechanical ventilator to perform LVR therapy without requiring the user to be capable of squeezing a resuscitation bag.
Another advantage resides in providing a mechanical ventilator without a complex device setup, configurations, or patient-specific titration settings.
Another advantage resides in providing a mechanical ventilator for providing LVR that is easier for a clinician or caregiver to operate, and/or which is suitable for use by an NMD patient in home therapy.
Another advantage resides in providing a mechanical ventilator to provide both MI-E therapy and LVR therapy for a patient, optionally automatically without user intervention.
A given embodiment may provide none, one, two, more, or all of the foregoing advantages, and/or may provide other advantages as will become apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art upon reading and understanding the present disclosure.
The disclosure may take form in various components and arrangements of components, and in various steps and arrangements of steps. The drawings are only for purposes of illustrating the preferred embodiments and are not to be construed as limiting the disclosure.
As used herein, the singular form of “a”, “an”, and “the” include plural references unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. As used herein, statements that two or more parts or components are “coupled,” “connected,” or “engaged” shall mean that the parts are joined, operate, or co-act together either directly or indirectly, i.e., through one or more intermediate parts or components, so long as a link occurs. Directional phrases used herein, such as, for example and without limitation, top, bottom, left, right, upper, lower, front, back, and derivatives thereof, relate to the orientation of the elements shown in the drawings and are not limiting upon the scope of the claimed invention unless expressly recited therein. The word “comprising” or “including” does not exclude the presence of elements or steps other than those described herein and/or listed in a claim. In a device comprised of several means, several of these means may be embodied by one and the same item of hardware.
With reference to
The mechanical ventilator 2 includes an air inlet (not shown) to draw atmospheric air which is delivered to the air hose 6 to provide the LVR therapy to the patient. For example, the ventilator 2 may include a blower 12 to deliver air to the air hose 6. (Note, the blower 12 is indicated diagrammatically in
With reference to
To begin the method 100, a first cycle of the LVR therapy is performed. At an operation 102, the mechanical ventilator 2 is calibrated during a calibration LVR cycle to determine an airway pressure at which to deliver air to the patient P. The calibration operation 102 includes operations 202-222. At an operation 202, ventilation therapy is delivered by the mechanical ventilator 2 to the patient P with a therapy setting. The therapy setting can be a target inspiratory pressure, which can be set to maximum value tolerated by the patient (e.g., 40 cmH2O).
At an operation 204, a lower inflection point (LIP) of the lung-volume-versus-airway pressure curve measured during a ramp of the calibration LVR cycle during delivery of the ventilation therapy is detected. The LIP is indicative of an initial alveolar-bronchiole opening in the lungs of the patient P. At an operation 206, a positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) value is set for an LVR cycle performed subsequent to the calibration LVR cycle based on the LIP. The PEEP value can be recorded at and stored in the non-transitory computer medium 15.
At an operation 208, an upper inflection point (UIP) of a lung volume-versus-airway pressure curve measured during a ramp during delivery of the ventilation therapy of the calibration LVR cycle is detected. The UIP is indicative of a recruitment pressure ceiling or upper pressure limit threshold aimed at mitigating alveolar over-distention and resulting barotrauma in the lungs of the patient P. At an operation 210, an LVR pressure (LVRP) value of at least one LVR cycle performed subsequent to the calibration LVR cycle is set based on the UIP detected in the calibration LVR cycle. The LVRP value can be recorded at and stored in the non-transitory computer medium 15.
To identify the LIP and the UIP, the calibration operation 102 implements a positive airway pressure ramp by way of an operation 212 and an operation 214, in which the pressure of the delivered therapy is increased by a predetermined constant value k for a predetermined time t to implement the ramp. The calibration operation 102 continues until both the LIP and the UIP are detected.
At an optional operation 216, the airway pressure of the air delivered to the patient P by the mechanical ventilator 2 is increased by a small incremental positive pressure above the LVRP (e.g. 2 cmH2O). The operations 202-216 thus correspond to the inspiration phase of this calibration LVR cycle. At an operation 218, a hold phase occurs, in which the airway pressure is maintained by the mechanical ventilator 2 at the LVR pressure (or at a pressure above the LVR pressure, due to the optional operation 216) for a hold time interval. The hold time interval during the hold phase of the LVR cycle can be determined based on detecting an airway flow decreasing to zero, or can be for a predetermined time period (e.g., three seconds). The LVR volume during this hold phase can be recorded and stored in in the non-transitory computer medium 15. At an operation 220, the exhalation phase of the LVR cycle begins as the patient P exhales to a pressure level at the recorded PEEP level, thus ending the exhalation phase. This decrease can be done passively, or in some examples controlled by the air delivered to the patient by the mechanical ventilator 2.
At an operation 222, airway pressure is applied by the ventilator 2 to hold the airway pressure at the PEEP of the LVR cycle, until the inhalation phase of the next LVR cycle is triggered. The next phase can be triggered in various ways, e.g. by detecting respiratory effort by the patient as an airflow change, or by the patient triggering the next LVR cycle using a handheld button or so forth.
Once the calibration operation 102 is complete, the LVR method 100 proceeds to an operation 104, which includes an inspiration phase of a next LVR cycle is performed, in which air is delivered to an upper airway of the patient P by the mechanical ventilator 2 to ramp an airway pressure up to the LVRP of the LVR cycle. For example, the inspiratory airway pressure can start at the PEEP value (from the operation 220) and can be gradually ramped or increase by the predetermined constant k until the inspiratory pressure approaches the recorded LVRP pressure.
At an operation 106, similarly to the operation 218, a hold phase occurs, in which the airway pressure is maintained by the mechanical ventilator 2 at the LVR pressure or at a pressure above the LVR pressure for a hold time interval. The hold time interval during the hold phase of the LVR cycle can again be determined based on detecting an airway flow decreasing to zero, or for a predetermined time period (e.g., three seconds). The LVR volume during this hold phase can be recorded and stored in in the non-transitory computer medium 15. At an operation 107, in the expiration phase the patient P exhales to a pressure level at the recorded PEEP level at which point the expiration phase of the LVR cycle is complete.
At an operation 108, similar to the operation 222, the ventilator 2 is operated to hold the PEEP until the triggering of the next LVR cycle. Upon triggering of the next LVR cycle, flow passes back to the operation 104 to initiate the inspiration phase of the next LVR cycle.
The termination of the LVR therapy 100 can be done in various ways. In one example, at an operation 110, the electric controller 13 determines, for each LVR cycle, the LVR volume as a highest lung volume measured during the LVR cycle. If the most recently completed LVR cycle results in a LVR volume value being no larger than the LVR volume of a preceding LVR cycle, then the LVR therapy method 100 is terminated. In another example, the electronic controller 13 performs a predetermined number of LVR cycles for the LVR therapy session.
As shown in
Referring back to
At the time interval C, an (optional) inspiratory pause occurs at a predetermined time interval (e.g., one second). This corresponds to the operation 222 of the calibration LVR cycle or to the operation 106 of the subsequent LVR cycles.
At the time interval D, the expiratory phase occurs with a passive patient exhalation towards the PEEP pressure level. This corresponds to the operation 220 of the calibration LVR cycle or to the operation 107 of the subsequent LVR cycles. In a variant embodiment, the ventilator 2 ramps the airway pressure down to control the rate of exhalation during the expiratory phase D.
At the time interval E, the mechanical ventilator 2 operates to hold the PEEP pressure until the next LVR cycle commences. an expiratory pause occurs for an arbitrary amount of time, or until the patient P produces an inspiratory pressure. This corresponds to the operation 222 of the calibration LVR cycle or to the operation 108 of the subsequent LVR cycles.
Referring particularly to the lowermost plot of
At an operation 302, an inspiratory pressure inspiration phase occurs in which air is delivered to an upper airway of the patient P by the mechanical ventilator 2 to ramp an airway pressure up to the P_initial value entered by the medical professional. This ramp up occurs for a predetermined time entered by the medical professional (e.g., time_P_initial).
At an operation 304, the airway pressure plateaus when delivered airway pressure reaches the P_initial value.
At an operation 306, the electronic controller 13 determines whether one or more predetermined conditions exist for a subsequent pressure ramp. These conditions can include determining whether a current therapy time exceeds the predetermined time entered by the medical professional (e.g., time_P_initial); whether the air flow to the patient P is zero; or whether a patient trigger occurs. The operation 304 is repeated until one of these conditions is satisfied.
At an operation 308, a subsequent ramp phase of the airway pressure is performed (e.g., P_ramp1) for a predetermined time (e.g., time_ramp1). At operations 310 and 312, the plateau operation and the predetermined conditions operation are repeated for the subsequent ramp phase.
At an operation 314, the electronic controller determines whether the number of ramp phase iterations reaches a final iteration entered by the medical professional (e.g., time_P_ramp_final). If the final iteration is reached, the LVR therapy method 300 ends. If the final iteration is not reached, the operations 308, 310, 312, 314 are repeated until the final iteration is reached.
The disclosed LVR method 100 advantageously delivers effective, automated lung volume recruitment maneuvers solely using inputs from a combination of pressure and flow signals, for example by identification of a zero-flow point as compared to a volume measurement, and provides a streamlined LVR approach suitable for both the hospital and for home environments where there may be no skilled clinician to deliver the LVR maneuver. The disclosed LVR method 100 is suitably employed in conjunction with a noninvasive patient accessory 8, which as a mask. This again facilitates home therapy and avoids a surgical procedure such as a tracheotomy. Because the LVR method 100 includes measuring airway pressure and airway flow (and hence lung volume), accurate leak estimation can be integrated into the LVR method 100 to determine whether an effective or successful automated lung volume recruitment maneuver was delivered to the patient, and can be used to initiate a feedback loop when adjustments in technique or mask seal were indicated (e.g., the mechanical ventilator 2 may inform the patient P via a display and/or synthesized voice to “reposition your facemask”). For example, leak detection can be done by detecting the total volume of air nominally inhaled during the inspiration phase (time interval A) is greater than the volume of air nominally exhaled during the expiration phase (time interval D). Another approach for leak detection is to detect that the airflow never goes to zero during the hold time interval B. For example, if the hold time interval B is terminated when the airway flow goes to zero, then if this does not occur within some predetermined time then the expiration phase is performed, and the patient is asked to adjust the mask seal.
Because the LVR method 100 is delivered via the upper airway of the patient P, there is the potential for the patient P to exhibit an inspiratory adduction reflex in response to the airway pressure ramp of the inspiratory phase of the LVR cycle. This can be handled in various ways. The inspiratory adduction reflex is readily detected as an interruption in the airway flow during the airway pressure ramp. In one remedial approach, the ramp may be stopped until the reflex terminates, and then continued. Alternatively, the LVR cycle may be aborted entirely in response to detection of the inspiratory adduction reflex, and the next LVR cycle may be initiated upon termination of the reflex and can employ a slower ramp (i.e. the pressure increase per unit time of the ramp is reduced) so as to reduce likelihood of inducing an inspiratory adduction reflex.
Because the disclosed LVR methods and systems are noninvasive, they can be advantageously implemented using any type of mechanical ventilator that is capable of applying positive airway pressure. For example, the mechanical ventilator 2 can be a continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) device, a Bi-Level Positive Airway Pressure (BiPAP) device, or a mechanical ventilator configured to deliver both positive airway pressure and negative airway pressure such as a Trilogy 100 or Trilogy EVO ventilator (available from Koninklijke Philips N.V.).
In other embodiments, the mechanical ventilator 2 can be a device designed to perform mechanical insufflation-exsufflation (MI-E), such as a CoughAssist airway clearance device (available from Koninklijke Philips N.V.). In this case, the disclosed LVR therapy can be advantageously performed in conjunction with MI-E therapy.
With reference to
The therapeutic combination shown in
With reference to
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Advantageously, any of the therapeutic sequences of
Furthermore, the LVR therapy 100 is suitable for use in a home therapy setting, either alone or in combination with MI-E therapy 200. In a home therapy setting, the calibration LVR cycle of the LVR therapy method 100 ensures that the LVRP is automatically tuned to the specific patient P. The illustrative calibration cycle also tunes the PEEP of subsequent LVR cycles for the specific patient P. The optional tuning of the hold time during time interval B (see
The disclosure has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments. Modifications and alterations may occur to others upon reading and understanding the preceding detailed description. It is intended that the exemplary embodiment be construed as including all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.
This patent application claims the priority benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application No. 63/113,232, filed on Nov. 13, 2020, the contents of which are herein incorporated by reference. The following relates generally to the ventilation therapy arts, and in particular to Lung Volume Recruitment (LVR) therapy, LVR as part of mechanical insufflation-exsufflation (MI-E) therapy, and related arts.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63113232 | Nov 2020 | US |