As a medical student in the ICU, you will surely get asked  several basic questions on mechanical ventilation.  Wrong answers to  these questions will bore your attending, amuse your residents, and feed  that desperate fear you have of accidentally killing your future  patients through your own ineptness.
With that being said,  correctly answering questions on the mechanical ventilation of your ICU  patients could make your team nod proudly, yes, proudly.  The simplified  basics of mechanical ventilation are described below.  Once you get the  basics, move on to the second article in this series, “How to determine  the initial settings for mechanical ventilation”.
There are two aspects medical students must understand about ventilation control settings:
1. Oxygenation and pH. 
2. Volume and Pressure
The  reason we want to control inspiratory volume and pressure is because we  are trying to walk a fine line between assisting the patient with  breathing without allowing their respiratory muscles to atrophy or  drastically decreasing the cardiac preload.
We want to control  the oxygen levels and pH of our patient’s bodies to sustain healthy  tissues and metabolic function.  The pH is reflected in our carbon  dioxide and bicarbonate balance.  So we adjust oxygen and carbon dioxide  levels as needed.
Oxygenation:
In the ICU, an oxygen  concentration on the arterial blood gas (pO2) can be as low as 70 and  still be considered acceptable.  How do we keep the pO2 at or above 70  mmHg?  Adjust the FiO2 and PEEP on the ventilator settings. Altering the  patient’s pO2 can be just that simple- FiO2 and PEEP
The FiO2 is the fraction of inspired oxygen, while PEEP is the positive end expiratory pressure.
Carbon dioxide and pH:
The  blood pH in your patient should be 7.4 plus or minus 0.5 and the carbon  dioxide levels on the arterial blood gas (pCO2) should read 40 mmHg  plus or minus 5.  How do we keep the pH and CO2 at safe levels? Adjust  the respiratory rate and tidal volume.  Again, it’s just that simple.   You can alter the pH and pCO2 for your patient by adjusting the  respiratory rate and the tidal volume on the ventilator. 
[Remember:  The rate multiplied by the tidal volume will give you the minute  ventilation (in units of L/min).  You may or may not get pimped on  minute ventilation but it’s easy enough to remember: tidal volume x  respiratory rate.]
So in short, the two basic goals of mechanical  ventilation are to get the oxygen and carbon dioxide on the arterial  blood gas close to perfect, and to do this with a pressure and volume  that is appropriate for the medical situation the patient is in.  Alter  the oxygen with the FiO2 and PEEP.  Alter the carbon dioxide (and thus  pH) with the respiratory rate and tidal volume

No comments:
Post a Comment