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Principles of Mechanical Ventilation Mazen Kherallah, M.D., FCCP Internal Medicine, Critical Care Medicine, and Infectious Diseases Initial Ventilatory Settings
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Modes of Mechanical Ventilation Volume-Cycled Control Mode Ventilation
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Indicated for patients who are unable to ventilate: –Drug intoxication –CNS disorders –Peripheral neurological disorders –Pharmacological Paralysis Limitations: –Patient-ventilator dysynchrony secondary to aborted ventilatory cycles when patient exhales during ventilator inspiratory cycle –Hypercapnea
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Modes of Mechanical Ventilation Assist-Control Ventilation
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Indications: – for patients who are awake, moderately sedated or paralyzed and able to initiates ventilation –increase metabolic demands: infection, burns, multisystem organ failure –Respiratory muscle strengthening and weaning Limitations: –patient-ventilator dysynchrony –ventilator assisted hyperventilation in agitated patients with increased inspiratory drive –auto-PEEP in COPD patients
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Modes of Mechanical Ventilation Intermittent Mandatory Ventilation
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Modes of Mechanical Ventilation Synchronized Intermittent Mandatory Ventilation
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Indications: –patients with minimal spontaneous respiratory efforts –respiratory muscle conditioning –ventilator weaning Limitations: –patient-ventilator dysynchrony especially in agitated patients –nonphysiologic way of respiratory muscle conditioning
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Modes of Mechanical Ventilation Pressure Support Ventilation
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Indications: –weaning –more physiologic conditioning of respiratory muscles: low pressure-high volume load –improved patient- ventilator dysynchrony Limitations:
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Modes of Mechanical Ventilation Inverse Ratio Ventilation
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Distribution of Normal Ventilation-Perfusion Ratios 1 10 0.10
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Oxygen-carbon dioxide diagram
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The Effect of Increasing Ventilation-Perfusion Inequality on Arterial Po2 and Pco2
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Ventilation-Perfusion Inequality Acute Exacerbation of COPD 0.01 0.1 1 10 100
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Ventilation-Perfusion Inequality Asthma 0.01 0.1 1 10 100
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Ventilation-Perfusion Inequality Pulmonary Embolism 0.01 0.1 1 10 100
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Shunting Process ARDS 0.01 1 10 100
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The effect of changing the inspired oxygen concentration on arterial Po2 for lung’s shunts of 10 to 50%
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Pulmonary Mechanics Peak pressure Plateau pressure IE Airway Resistance
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Static Pressure-volume curve in ARDS with PEEP of 0 and 12 12 PEEP 0 PEEP
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Auto-PEEP
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Normal Lung Mechanics and Gas Exchange
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Severe Airflow Obstruction
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Acute on Chronic Respiratory Failure
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Acute Hypoxemic Respiratory Failure
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