Abstract
INTRODUCTION:
High-frequency percussive ventilation (HFPV) is an increasingly used mode of mechanical ventilation, for which there is no proven real-time means of measuring delivered tidal volume (VT).
OBJECTIVE:
To validate a pneumotachograph for HFPV and then exploit flow-sensor data to describe the behavior of both low-frequency and high-frequency breaths.
METHODS:
Sensor performance was gauged during changes in high-frequency (4–12 Hz) and low-frequency rate and ratio, mean airway pressure, oxygen concentration, heated or heated-humidified gas flow, and endotracheal tube diameter. Glass bottle (adiabatic VT) and test lung (adiabatically derived low-frequency VT) based adiabatic conditions provided both an initial source for analog-signal calibration and an accepted standard comparator to flow-sensor measurement of high-frequency and low-frequency (flow-sensor-derived) VT), respectively.
RESULTS:
Pneumotachography proved accurate and precise over an array of tested settings and conditions when analyzing both high-frequency (difference between mean ± SD high-frequency VT and adiabatic VT was –0.2 ± 1.8%, 95% confidence interval –0.5 to 0.9%) and low-frequency breaths (mean ± SD difference between flow-sensor-derived low-frequency VT and adiabatically derived low-frequency VT was 0.6 ± 2.4%, 95% confidence interval 0.1–1.1%). High-frequency VT and frequency exhibited an exponential relationship. During HFPV, flow-sensor-derived low-frequency VT had a mean ± SD of 1,337 ± 700 mL, 95% confidence interval 1,175–1,499 mL.
CONCLUSIONS:
Readily available pneumotachography provided accurate measurements of low-frequency and high-frequency VT during HFPV. In the setting of acute lung injury, typical HFPV settings may deliver injurious VT.
Keywords
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