To Identify the Proportionality of Respiratory Work Under Different NAVA Level
- Conditions
- Respiratory Failure
- Registration Number
- NCT01663480
- Lead Sponsor
- Ling Liu
- Brief Summary
The primary purpose of mechanical ventilation is to sufficiently unload the respiratory muscles and maintain adequate ventilation in spontaneously breathing patients. When the mechanical ventilatory assist is synchronized to the patient's inspiratory effort, both the patient and the mechanical ventilator will contribute to the lung-distending pressure, necessary to overcome inspiratory load and generate the tidal volume (Vt). Unfortunately, conventional modes of mechanical ventilation cannot quantify the impact of the ventilatory assist performed by the ventilator and the patient. Inadequate levels of assist are associated with adverse effects such as development of fatigue or patient-ventilator dissynchrony and diaphragm impairment, and over assist also lead to diaphragm atrophy and weaning delay.
The newly introduced neurally adjusted ventilatory assist (NAVA) has made it possible to measure the neural activity of the respiratory centers (expressed by the diaphragm electrical activity, EAdi). EAdi is a validated variable to quantify the neural respiratory drive, little is known about its usefulness to evaluate the contribution of the patient's inspiratory muscle effort relative to that of the mechanical ventilator, which would be of crucial importance to appropriately titrate the level of assist.
During NAVA, the patient's efficiency to transform neural effort (EAdi) into Vt, expressed as neuroventilatory efficiency (NVE), may be a useful predictor for determining the contribution of the patient and the ventilator to generate a breath.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 12
(1) Intubated or tracheostomied patients with ARF due to COPD (10 patients) or other reasons (10 patients) who were undergoing assisted mechanical ventilation, (2) be able to tolerate short time (30 minutes) spontaneous breathing (PEEP≤5cmH2O, without assist), (3) awake and do not need high dose of sedation
(1) age <18 or >80 years, (2) ready for extubation, (3) history of esophageal varices, (4) gastro-esophageal surgery in the previous 12 months or gastro-esophageal bleeding in the previous 30 days, (5) coagulation disorders (INR ratio>1.5 and APTT>44 s), (6) history of acute central or peripheral nervous system disorder or severe neuromuscular disease, (7) history of leukemia, severe chronic liver or chronic cardiac disease, (8) solid organ transplantation, (9) malignant tumor.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method PVBC index every 3 mins PVBC2predicts the contribution of the inspiratory muscles versus that of the ventilator during NAVA
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Southeast Univerity
🇨🇳Nanjing, Jiangsu, China