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DISCONTINUATION OF VENTILATORY SUPPORT Prof. Mehdi Hasan Mumtaz
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DISCONTINUATION OF VENTILATORY SUPPORT Weaning – Discontinuing mechanical ventilation. Strict Sense – Weaning refers to a slow decrease in the amount of ventilator support with the patient gradually assuming a greater proportion of overall ventilation.
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PATHOPHYSIOLOGICAL DETERMINANTS A. Adequacy of pulmonary gas exchange. B. Performance of the respiratory muscle pump. C. Psychological factors.
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ADEQUACY OF PULMONARY GAS EXCHNAGE Hypoventilation. Impaired Pulmonary Gas Exchange. O2 Content of Venous Blood.
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RESPIRATORY MUSCLE PERFORMANCE a. Neuromuscular capacity. – Respiratory centre output. –Phrenic nerve dysfunction. – Respiratory muscle stregth/endurance. u Hyperinflation. u Chest wall motion abnormaliteis. u O2 supply. u Malnutrition. u Respiratory acidosis. u Metabolic abnormalities. u Endocrinopathy. u Drug induced abnormalities. u Disease muscle atrophy. u Respiratory muscle fatigue.
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RESPIRATORY MUSCLE PERFORMANCE B. Respiratory Muscle Pump Load. – Ventilatory Requirements. u CO2 Production. u Dead Space Ventilation. u Inappropriately Respiratory Drive. – Work of Breathing.
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RESPIRATORY N/MUSCULAR CAPACITY Respiratory Centre Output. –Respiratory acidosis. –Indices of drive. u Airway occlusion pressure at0.1sec. u Mean inspirtory flow (Po.1 V T /T1. –CO2 recruitment threshold.
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PHREMIC NERVE FUNCTION Coronary Bypass Operation. Hypothermic injury. Inadvertent sectioning. Stretching & compression of nerve. BF To vasavasorum of nerve
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RESPIRATORY MUSCLE FUNCTION “Hyperinflation” Adverse Effects Respiratory muscles operate at unfavrourable position of their length – tension curve. Flattening of diaphragm radius. Efficacy due to medial & horizontal orientation of fibres. Inwardly directed elastic recoil of chest wall – added elastic load.
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ABNORMALITIES IN CHEST WALL MOTION Asynchrony Paradox In Energy Cost.
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O 2 SUPPLY CO. Hypoxaemia. O2 content Anaemia O2 extraction – Sepsis. LVEJ.
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ACUTE RESPIRATORY ACIDOSIS Contractibility Endurance Time
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METABOLIC ABNORMALITIES Hypokalaemia. Hypophosphataemia. Hypercalcaemia Hypomagnisaemia.
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ENDOCINE DISTURBANCE Hyperthyroidism. Hypothyroidism. Corticosteroid therapy.
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RSP MUSCLE PUMP LOAD Ventilatory Requirements. – CO2 production. – VD ventilation. –Elevated respiratory drive. u Drive – Hypo ventilation. u Drive – Fatigue. –VD/VT >0.6 significant. – Cimpliance. – Resistance. Work of breathing
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WORK OF BREATHING (Determinant of Weaning Outcome) Compliance. Resistance. O2 Cost of Breathing. Total O2 consumption Total O2 consumption Spontaneous breathingon mechanical ventilation Normal <5% of total body O2 consumption Weaning >50%.
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PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS Cmv (dependence). –Insecurity. –Anxiety. –Fear. –Agony. –Panic
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PREDICTING WEANING OUTCOME “objective measurements” “predictive indices” Why? Avoid unnecessary prolongation. Identify fail trial. Prevent premature weaning. Suggest alterations in managements.
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PREDICTIVE VARIABLES. 1. Gas Exchange. PaO 2 a. PaO 2 >60(FIO 2 <35)= ---------- PAO 2 b. P(A-a)O 2 < 350. c. PaO2 / FIO2 > 200. d. PaO2 / PAO2 >.97.
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PREDICTIVE VARIABLES. 2. Ventilation Pump a. VC>10-15ml/kg. b. Maximum inspiratory Pressure < -30cmH 2 O. c. MV < 10<. d. MV < twice. e.P0.1. f. f / VT.
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PREDICTIVE VARIABLES CROP Index. Integrative Index.
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AIRWAY OCCLUSION PRESSURE P 0.1
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RAPID SHALLOW BREATHING (F/VT Ratio= Breaths/min/L) Attractive features. –Easy to measure. –Independent of effort. –Accurate. –Rounded off value (100)
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RIB CAGE – ABDOMINAL MOTION “Cohen et al” MCAMaximum Compartmental Amplitude --------=----------------------------------------------- V T Tidal volume Integrative Indices
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INTEGRATIVE INDICES C dyn X P 1 max X ( PaO2 / PAO2 ) CROP Index = ------------------------------------------- Respiratory Rate Integrative index = P T1 X (V E 40 / VT sb)
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PHYSICAL EXAMINATION Careful physical examination. Elevated RR. Bed side VT. Clinical impression – Work of breathing. –Nasal flaring. –Accessory muscle use. –Suprasternal recession. –Intercostal recession. –Paradoxical movement.
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PHYSICAL EXAMINATION Auscultation. Dyspnoea Level. Mental Status. Blood Pressure. Heart Rate. Rhythm. Cyanosis.
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METHODS “discontinuing mechanical ventilation” Older – Spontaneous breathing trial. 1970s – Intermittent mandatory ventilation. 1980s – Pressure support ventilation. Continuous positive airway support.
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METHODS Spontaneous Breathing Trials “T-Piece Trial” 5min trial. FIO2 – 0.4. Duration. Expiratory limb 12” added. Flow twice x MV. Monitor – Blood gases.
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CNS Output Respiratory Drive Pump Capacity Respiratory Muscle Pump Load on the Pump The Fatiguing Process Weaning & Ventilatory Failure
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FACTORS THAT MAY IMPAIR RSP MUSCLE STRENGTH IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS Hypophosphataemia. Hypomagnisaemia. Hypocalcaemia. Hypoxia. Hypercarbia. Acidosis. Infection. Muscle atrophy. Malnutrition.
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FACTORS ing THE LOAD ON RESPIRATORY MUSCLES IN PATIENTS IN ICU Bronchoconstriction. Left Ventricular Failure. Hyperinflation. Intrinsic +ve End Expiratory Pressure. Artificial Airways. Ventilator Circuits.
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STEP-1 ASSESSMENT PRIOR TO WEANING Able to oxygenate with stable, low inspired O2 concentrations? Patient able to breath spontaneously for 10min? Reventilate patient with weaning mode No Yes
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STEP-2 INITIAL ASSESSMENT OF BREATHING Rapid Shallow Breathing Measure f/VT ratio after 5min of breathing on CPAP circuit
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STEP-3 INITIAL ASSESSMENT f / VT < 80 Measure f/VT ratio after 5min of breathing on CPAP circuit f/VT >80 but <105 Reassess after 30 min f/VT <80 Continue spontaneous breathing with CPAP Reassess after 30 min f/VT <80 Extubate after trial of T-piece breathing-9 Yes No
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STEP-4 FOLLOWING A WEANING TRIAL Reventilate patient with weaning mode Is the patient awake? Volume cycled SIMV Inspiratory Pressure Support Yes No
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STEP-5 CONSCIOUS LEVEL Patient awake & orientated? Is Patient triggering ventilator? Is Patient overventilated? Check PaCO2/ABG’s Adjust IPPV to Normocapnia Is Patient triggering ventilator? Continue IPPV until conscious level No
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STEP-6 ASSESSMENT OF RESPIRATORY MUSCLE STRENGTH (PI max) Measure Inspiratory Mouth Pressure PI Max < -20cmH 2 O
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STEP-7 LOAD APPLIED TO THE RESPIRATORY MUSCLES Measure Applied Load Wean Cautiously Recognising Likely Failure Cdyn < 50mls/cm H 2 O No
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