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Lung Protective Jet Ventilation Basic Lung Protective Strategy for Treating RDS and Air Leaks with HFJV.

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Presentation on theme: "Lung Protective Jet Ventilation Basic Lung Protective Strategy for Treating RDS and Air Leaks with HFJV."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lung Protective Jet Ventilation Basic Lung Protective Strategy for Treating RDS and Air Leaks with HFJV

2 Lung Protective Positive Pressure Ventilation 1.Recruit collapsed alveoli. 2.Stabilize alveoli with adequate PEEP and MAP (mean airway pressure). 3.Maintain adequate ventilation as gently as possible.

3 Lung Protective Ventilation with HFJV Recruitment Gentle Ventilation IMV from Conventional Vent Positive End-Expiratory (PEEP) & Mean Airway Pressure (MAP) Stabilization HFJV (Higher Rates Enable Smaller Tidal Volumes)

4 Recruitment with IMV IMV (“Sigh” breaths) are most useful for alveolar recruitment, but contraindicated when airleaks are present. The following experiment illustrates why...

5 Move your cursor over picture and click it to start video. Double click here to continue on to next slide. HFJV: 420 bpm PIP = 30 CV: 15 bpm PIP = 20 Note: CV breaths find the leak as path of least resistance while HFJV breaths continue to ventilate the other “alveoli”

6 Stabilization with PEEP / MAP Alveoli must be kept open, whether air leaks are present or not.

7 HFJV = Most Gentle Ventilation No other form of ventilation uses smaller tidal volumes. HFJV uses the least overall flow and airway pressure.

8 5 Keys to Optimal Patient Management 1.Start HFJV while maintaining MAP. 2.Use CV to recruit collapsed alveoli and find optimal PEEP. 3.Monitor Servo Pressure to stay on track.

9 5 Keys to Optimal Patient Management 4.Use HFJV rate to match lung time constants, encourage spontaneous breathing, & hasten extubation. 5.Wean to nasal CPAP.

10 HFJV Patient Management # 1 Don’t let MAP fall when initiating HFJV.

11 Conventional HFJV Pressure Time HFJV = Gentle Ventilation PEEP and MAP enable Stabilization / Oxygenation IMV enables Alveolar Recruitment You must raise PEEP to maintain MAP for Stabilization / Oxygenation when starting HFJV. Don’t Lose Mean Airway Pressure!

12 HFJV Patient Management # 2 Use Conventional Ventilator to Recruit Alveoli and Find Optimal PEEP

13 Alveolar Recruitment Open collapsed alveoli with CV “Sigh” breaths. V P Critical Opening Pressure 5 Big breaths open collapsed alveoli easier than little breaths.

14 CV + Low PEEP = Atelectrauma V P 5 8 PEEP Critical Closing Pressure Stabilize with PEEP Keep open alveoli from collapsing PEEP = 5 does not work when Critical Closing Pressure = 8.

15 Find & Set Optimal PEEP V P 5 9 25 Start HFJV and lower CV rate to 5 while keeping alveoli from collapsing by maintaining MAP with increased PEEP : 7 Maintain CV = 5 bpm & adjust FiO 2 to stabilize SaO 2 at 90%. PEEP Then switch CV to CPAP mode to test PEEP. Maintain HFJV at this PEEP level, weaning FiO 2 to maintain target SaO 2 until FiO 2 ~ 30%. Wean HFJV PIP to maintain target PCO 2. If SaO 2 falls, increase PEEP as necessary to keep SaO 2 stable with HFJV + CPAP. Does SaO 2 fall when 5 IMV breaths CPAP? Assume you started with CV and PEEP = 5, MAP = 10: MAP 10

16 HFJV Patient Management # 3 Monitor Servo Pressure If S.P. you may need to wean PIP to keep PaCO 2 and pH in target range. If S.P. you may need to suction, re- position ETT, or treat bronchospasms or pneumothoraces…

17 Reacting appropriately to Servo Pressure changes will enable continuous Lung Protective HFJV. V P Critical Closing Pressure Gentle, open-lung, lung-protective ventilation …

18 HFJV Patient Management # 4 Wean to nasal CPAP.

19 As ventilation improves: 1.Reduce HFJV PIP first. 2.Reduce HFJV Rate to encourage spontaneous breathing.

20 HFJV Rate I : E 600 bpm 1 : 4 420 1: 6 360 1 : 7 300 1 : 9 240 1 : 12 More time for spontaneous breathing!

21 Warning Reducing PIP for PCO 2 also reduces MAP.

22 0 20 15 10 5 25 PEEP P Time Reducing PIP Reduces V T (PaCO 2 ) and MAP (PaO 2 ) PIP MAP HFJV Waveform

23 0 20 15 10 5 25 Paw PIP P Time PEEP Reducing PIP and Raising PEEP ( V T, PaCO 2 ) keeps MAP ( and hopefully PaO 2 ) constant. How can one keep MAP constant?

24 What if patient is hyperventilated & hypoxemic?

25 0 20 15 10 5 25 P MAP PEEP Time PIP Increasing PEEP while keeping PIP constant raises MAP ( PaO 2 ) & decreases V T ( PaCO 2 ).

26 As oxygenation improves: 1.Wean big breaths first. (Get CV into CPAP mode.) 2.Wean FiO 2 before PEEP/MAP.

27 Wean to Nasal CPAP You may want to offer a short trial of low rate CV or endotracheal CPAP with Jet in Standby before extubation to gauge patient’s readiness…

28 5 10 15 20 0.00.51.0 Time, seconds cm H 2 O P 2.0 1.5 It’s time to extubate when… Patient is breathing spontaneously. HFJV PIP < 15, PEEP < 8, FiO 2 < 0.3 Set Nasal CPAP = HFJV MAP

29 Questions? -www.bunl.com -800-800-HFJV ( Available 24/7) Visit our website or give us a call:


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