Friday, November 11, 2011

INITIAL VENTILATION

Mode of ventilation

After deciding to start positive-pressure ventilation with a volume-cycled ventilator, the clinician must now select the safest initial mode of machine operation.



In most circumstances, the initial mode of ventilation should be the assist-control mode, in which a tidal volume and rate are preset and guaranteed. The patient can affect the frequency and timing of the breaths. If the patient makes an inspiratory effort, the ventilator senses a decrease in the circuit pressure and delivers the preset tidal volume. In this way, the patient can dictate a comfortable respiratory pattern and may trigger additional machine-assisted breaths above the set rate. If the patient does not initiate inspiration, the ventilator automatically delivers the preset rate and tidal volume, ensuring minimum minute ventilation. In the assist-control mode, the work of breathing is reduced to the amount of inspiration needed to trigger the inspiratory cycle of the machine. This trigger is adjusted by setting the sensitivity of the machine to the degree of pressure decrease desired in the circuit (see image below).






The pressure, volume, and flow to time waveforms for assist-control ventilation.

Assist-control differs from controlled ventilation because the patient can trigger the ventilator to deliver a breath and, thereby, adjust their minute ventilation. In controlled ventilation, the patient receives only breaths initiated by the ventilator at the preset rate (see image below).





The pressure, volume, and flow to time waveforms for controlled ventilation.

Although the work of breathing is not eliminated, this mode gives the respiratory muscles the greatest amount of rest because the patient needs only to create enough negative pressure to trigger the machine. An added advantage is that the patient can achieve the required minute ventilation by triggering additional breaths above the set back-up rate.



In most cases, a minute ventilation that provides a reasonable pH based on the respiratory rate is determined by the patient's chemoreceptors and stretch receptors. The respiratory center in the central nervous system receives input from the chemical receptors (arterial blood gas tensions) and neural pathways that sense the mechanical work of breathing (mechanoreceptors). The respiratory rate and respiratory pattern are the result of input from these chemoreceptors and mechanical receptors, which allow the respiratory center to regulate gas exchange. In the assist-control mode, this process is accomplished with the minimum work of breathing.



A second possible advantage of this mode of mechanical ventilation is that cycling the ventilator into the inspiratory phase maintains normal ventilatory activity and, therefore, prevents atrophy of the respiratory muscles.



A potential disadvantage of the assist-control mode is respiratory alkalosis in a small subset of patients whose respiratory drive supersedes the chemoreceptors and mechanical receptors. Patients with a potential for alveolar hyperventilation and hypocapnia in the assist-control mode include those with end-stage liver disease, those in the hyperventilatory stage of sepsis, and those with head trauma. These conditions are typically identified with the first arterial blood gas results, and the assist-control mode of ventilation can then be changed to an alternate mode.



Another possible disadvantage is the potential for serial preset positive-pressure breathes to retard venous return to the right side of heart and to affect global cardiac output. Nevertheless, the assist-control mode may be the safest initial choice for mechanical ventilation. It may be switched to another option if hypotension or hypocarbia are evident from the first arterial blood gas results.



Tidal volume and rate

For a patient without preexisting lung disease, the tidal volume and rate are traditionally selected by using the 12-12 rule. A tidal volume of 12 mL for each kilogram of lean body weight is programmed to be delivered 12 times a minute in the assist-control mode.



For patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the tidal volume and rate are slightly reduced to the 10-10 rule to prevent overinflation and hyperventilation. A tidal volume of 10 mL/kg lean body weight is delivered 10 times a minute in the assist-control mode.



In acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), the lungs may function best and volutrauma (see Complications of Mechanical Ventilation) is minimized with low tidal volumes of 6-8 mL/kg. Tidal volumes are preset at 6-8 mL/kg of lean body weight in the assist-control mode. This ventilatory strategy is called lung-protective ventilation. These lowered volumes may lead to slight hypercarbia. An elevated PCO2 is typically recognized and accepted without correction, leading to the term permissive hypercapnia. However, the degree of respiratory acidosis allowable is a pH not less than 7.25. The respiratory rate of the ventilator may need to be adjusted upward to increase the minute ventilation lost by using smaller tidal volumes.



Double-checking the selected tidal volume

After a tidal volume is selected, the peak airway pressure necessary to deliver a single breath should be determined. As the tidal volume increases, so does the pressure required to force that volume into the lung. Persistent breath-to-breath peak pressures greater than 45 cm water are a risk factor for barotrauma (see Complications of Mechanical Ventilation). The tidal volume suggested by the above rules may need to be decreased in some patients to keep the peak airway pressure less than 45 cm water (see image below).



The components of mechanical ventilation inflation pressures. Paw is airway pressure, PIP is peak airway pressure, Pplat is plateau pressure.

Some researchers have suggested that plateau pressures should be monitored as a means to prevent barotrauma in the patient with ARDS. Plateau pressures are measured at the end of the inspiratory phase of a ventilator-cycled tidal volume. The ventilator is programmed not to allow expiratory airflow at the end of the inspiration for a set time, typically half a second. The pressure measured to maintain this lack of expiratory airflow is the plateau pressure. Barotrauma is minimized when the plateau pressure is maintained at less than 30-35 cm water (see image above). Monitoring the peak and plateau pressures allows physicians to make clinical judgments on the progress of their patient (see image below).






The effects of increased airway resistance (A) and decreased respiratory system compliance on the pressure-time waveform.

Sighs

Because a spontaneously breathing individual typically sighs 6-8 times each hour to prevent microatelectasis, some investigators once recommended that periodic machine breaths that were 1.5-2 times the preset tidal volume be given 6-8 times per hour. However, the peak pressure often needed to deliver such a volume was high enough to predispose the patient to barotrauma. At present, accounting for sighs is not recommended if the patient is receiving tidal volumes of 10-12 mL/kg or if the patient requires positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP). When a low tidal volume is used, sighs are preset at 1.5-2 times the tidal volume and delivered 6-8 times an hour if the peak and plateau pressures are within acceptable limits.



Initial FIO2

The highest priority at the start of mechanical ventilation is providing effective oxygenation. For the patient's safety after intubation, the FIO2 should always be set at 100% until adequate arterial oxygenation is documented. A short period with an FIO2 of 100% is not dangerous to the patient receiving mechanical ventilation and offers the clinician several advantages. First, an FIO2 of 100% protects the patient against hypoxemia if unrecognized problems occur as a result of the intubation procedure. Second, using the PaO2 measured with an FIO2 of 100%, the clinician can easily calculate the next desired FIO2 and quickly estimate the shunt fraction.



The degree of shunt with 100% FIO2 can be estimated by applying this general rule: The measured PaO2 is subtracted from 700 mm Hg. For each difference of 100 mm Hg, the shunt is 5%. A shunt of 25% should prompt the clinician to consider the use of PEEP.



Inadequate oxygenation despite the administration of 100% oxygen should lead to a search for complications of endotracheal intubation (eg, mainstem intubation) or positive-pressure breathing (pneumothorax). If such complications are not present, PEEP is needed to treat the intrapulmonary shunt pathology. Because only a few disease processes can create an intrapulmonary shunt, a clinically significant estimated shunt should narrow the potential source of hypoxemia to the following conditions:



Alveolar collapse - Major atelectasis

Alveolar filling with something other than gas - Lobar pneumonia

Water and protein - ARDS

Water - Congestive heart failure

Blood - Hemorrhage

Positive end-expiratory pressure

PEEP is a mode of therapy used in conjunction with mechanical ventilation. At the end of mechanical or spontaneous exhalation, PEEP maintains the patient's airway pressure above the atmospheric level by exerting pressure that opposes passive emptying of the lung. This pressure is typically achieved by maintaining a positive pressure flow at the end of exhalation. This pressure is measured in centimeters of water.



PEEP therapy can be effective when used in patients with a diffuse lung disease that results in an acute decrease in functional residual capacity (FRC), which is the volume of gas that remains in the lung at the end of a normal expiration. FRC is determined by primarily the elastic characteristics of the lung and chest wall. In many pulmonary diseases, FRC is reduced because of the collapse of the unstable alveoli. This reduction in lung volume decreases the surface area available for gas exchange and results in intrapulmonary shunting (unoxygenated blood returning to the left side of the heart). If FRC is not restored, a high concentration of inspired oxygen may be required to maintain the arterial oxygen content of the blood in an acceptable range.



Applying PEEP increases alveolar pressure and alveolar volume. The increased lung volume increases the surface area by reopening and stabilizing collapsed or unstable alveoli. This splinting, or propping open, of the alveoli with positive pressure improves the ventilation-perfusion match, reducing the shunt effect.



After a true shunt is modified to a ventilation-perfusion mismatch with PEEP, lowered concentrations of oxygen can be used to maintain an adequate PaO2. PEEP therapy may also be effective in improving lung compliance. When FRC and lung compliance are decreased, additional energy and volume are required to inflate the lung. By applying PEEP, the lung volume at the end of exhalation is increased. The already partially inflated lung requires less volume and energy than before for full inflation.



When used to treat patients with a diffuse lung disease, PEEP should improve compliance, decrease dead space, and decrease the intrapulmonary shunt effect. The most important benefit of the use of PEEP is that it enables the patient to maintain an adequate PaO2 at a low and safe concentration of oxygen (< 60%), reducing the risk of oxygen toxicity (see Complications of Mechanical Ventilation).



Because PEEP is not a benign mode of therapy and because it can lead to serious hemodynamic consequences, the ventilator operator should have a definite indication to use it. The addition of external PEEP is typically justified when a PaO2 of 60 mm Hg cannot be achieved with an FIO2 of 60% or if the estimated initial shunt fraction is greater than 25%. No evidence supports adding external PEEP during initial setup of the ventilator to satisfy misguided attempts to supply prophylactic PEEP or physiologic PEEP.



Many clinicians use the least-PEEP philosophy, which recommends using the lowest positive pressure that provides an adequate PaO2 with a safe FIO2. Another manner of selecting the optimal PEEP is based on identifying the low inflection point on the volume-pressure curve generated breath to breath by using modern mechanical ventilators. PEEP should be set 1-2 cm of water pressure above this measured low inflection point to obtain the optimal PEEP.



Because trials comparing higher versus lower levels of PEEP in adults with acute lung injury or acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) have been underpowered to detect small but potentially important effects on mortality or to explore subgroup differences, Briel et al performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of data from 2299 patients in 3 trials. Treatment with higher versus lower levels of PEEP was not associated with improved hospital survival: 374 hospital deaths occurred in 1136 patients (32.9%) assigned to treatment with higher PEEP, and 409 hospital deaths occurred in 1163 patients (35.2%) assigned to lower PEEP (adjusted relative risk [RR], 0.94; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.86-1.04; P = .25). However, in the subgroup of patients with ARDS, higher levels were associated with improved survival: 324 hospital deaths (34.1%) occurred in the higher PEEP group and 368 (39.1%) occurred in the lower PEEP group (adjusted RR, 0.90; 95% CI, 0.81-1.00; P = .049).[1]



Because PEEP basically resets the baseline of the pressure-volume curve, the peak and plateau pressures will be affected. The clinician should pay close attention to the status of these pressure measurements (see image below).





Determination of the lower inflection point to estimate the best (optimal) positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) from the pressure-volume hysteresis curve.

Summary of initial ventilator setup

Initial settings for ventilation may be summarized as follows:



Assist-control mode

Tidal volume set depending on lung status - Normal = 12 mL/kg ideal body weight; COPD = 10 mL/kg ideal body weight; ARDS = 6-8 mL/kg ideal body weight

Rate of 10-12 breaths per minute

FIO2 of 100%

Sighs rarely needed

PEEP only as indicated after first arterial blood gas determination, ie, shunt greater than 25%

Inability to oxygenate with an FIO2 less than 60%

Monday, October 10, 2011

Careers In Mechanical Engineering

For those looking for a career in mechanical engineering, we have good news! Jobs are in excess in today's job market. Overall, mechanical engineering is right behind civil engineering in terms of number of engineers in the workplace today, according to the Occupational Outlook Handbook. The Handbook adds that mechanical engineers are projected to have an average rate of employment growth through 2014. Although total employment in manufacturing industries is expected to decline, employment of mechanical engineers in manufacturing is expected to actually increase because the demand for improved machinery and machine tools will grow, and industrial machinery and processes will become increasingly complex. Also, emerging technologies in biotechnology, materials science and nanotechnology will create new job opportunities for mechanical engineers.

Opportunities Abound

The need for mechanical engineers by EPC companies is in high demand, says Charles Nash, vice president of engineering for Yoh, a talent and outsourcing firm in the engineering community. And mechanical engineers have many options to apply their skill sets to the real world, he adds.
"As an example, in the chemical plant environment, they may work with the design or application of equipment or the stress characteristics of a process piping system," Nash says.
"In the food industry, they may be involved with development and design of conveying systems, or packing and packaging systems. In research and development, they may be involved with systems related to jet propulsion, space-travel, land-travel and sea- and sub-sea systems."
In a sense, Nash says, a mechanical engineer is an inventor of mechanical components and systems involving the application of principles of physics for analysis, design and manufacturing, and maintenance of mechanical systems.

Build Your Backup

With all of these opportunities, the only way to get started in the industry is by getting the proper education. An undergraduate engineering program usually requires four to five years of study.
"The coursework includes a foundational course in mathematics and physics, which provides the necessary background to study mechanical engineering," says Margaret Bailey, associate professor of mechanical engineering at Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT). "Core mechanical engineering courses are numerous and vary significantly in content, ranging from statics and dynamics to engineering design, heat transfer and numerical methods."
Bailey adds that in addition to core courses, students further explore their interest areas within mechanical engineering at RIT through completion of technical elective courses and completion of a capstone design.
"For example, at RIT we have developed several option areas which are closely aligned with our students' technical interests, including aerospace, energy and the environment, bioengineering and automotive," she says. "Within each option there are numerous courses to help students develop a depth of understanding.
At some engineering colleges, including RIT, students are required to complete a series of co-op educational experiences, which complement and strengthen their mechanical engineering foundation," Bailey explains. At RIT, students work outside of the classroom as "engineers-in-training" at locations around the country and the world.

In the Real World

"Once in the workplace, mechanical engineers can take on a number of functions," says David Bonifacic, managing principal of WB, a Manhattan-based mechanical/electrical/plumbing firm. "Consulting mechanical engineers design, plan and supervise the construction of new buildings or the renovation of existing facilities," he says. "Mechanical consulting engineers work on the complete infrastructure in a facility, including any part that moves such as people, air and water."
In addition to design and construction, mechanical engineers often work on due diligence studies of facilities.
"This involves developing life cycle costs analysis to verify if a project is worth undertaking," says Bonifacic. "Mechanical engineers in one field often work closely with specialists in other building disciplines—for example electrical engineers, plumbing and fire protection engineers, architects, structural and civil engineers. A lot of our time is spent outside of the office or in the field. We conduct site surveys, attend meetings and during construction we regularly visit the project site in order to monitor or direct operations or solve onsite problems."
In order to be successful as a mechanical engineer, Bailey says that there are a number of personal characteristics you should have. Being able to work together in teams is just one of many of these characteristics.
"Engineers must be able to work effectively on teams which consist of engineers from other disciplines as well as non-engineers, such as scientists, researchers, architects, industrial designers and medical professionals," she says. "Therefore, an ideal personal characteristic for an engineer is someone who likes working with people who may be quite different from themselves as far as educational background."
Engineers also need to be able to creatively solve problems. "People who enjoy problem solving and who push themselves towards creative solutions should consider engineering," she adds. "The problems that engineers solve are usually focused on people and affect quality of life. Therefore, having an interest in improving the quality of life is also quite common among engineers."

Now's the Time

With the shortage of engineers entering the field, Nash says now is the time to become a mechanical engineer, if it appeals to you.
"We currently are in short supply of all disciplines of engineering personnel as related to the typical energy engineering industry needs," he says. "This is in part due to the fact that many of our graduating engineers have chosen to focus their training in a different line of business, such as the information technology industry." Depending on the specific industry chosen, many mechanical engineers will earn six-figure salaries within a few years.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Home ventilation’ system cuts energy bills and improves health

The new Ventis system, is a revolutionary home health product that can cut a family’s heating bills by approximately half, as well as making the home environment healthier, by removing damp and mould.

THIS new technology, never seen before in NSW, simply takes the warmer air out of the roof space of a house, pushes it through hospital grade filters, taking out dust, pollens and other allergens and pushes fresh, clean air through the home, drying it out and warming homes in the coolers months.

It also cools homes in the summer months by taking the cooler, evening air from outside the home and filtering it into the home, so that people can sleep easier in cool, ventilated rooms, without having to leave windows open.

Similar product philosophies have been extensively tested in Europe, the States and New Zealand and had staggering results not just on customers’ power bills, but also on family health, improving the health of family members suffering from respiratory illnesses, such as asthma, as well as other allergic conditions, such as eczema.

The solution is tailor-made by the Ventis consultants to suit each home and is easy and hassle free to install.


Dave Kennedy from Ventis said about the new company and product, “We’re passionate about offering new environmental solutions to energy issues and to help improve family health.

“Additionally, we know that Sydney homes can suffer from damp and mould issues, all of which not only slowly degrade the structural aspects of your home, but are also extremely bad for people’s health long term. Breathing in mould has been proven to cause respiratory illnesses and black mould has been proven to be a carcenogen.


“We have already had amazing feedback from a customer who suffered badly from allergies, in particular, hayfever. Following the installation of their Ventis system, she has woken up without itchy and puffy eyes and feels more energized. This is what we are excited about, being able to offer the people of the Northern Beachers a way to make their homes even more comfortable,” continued Mr Kennedy.


Monday, July 18, 2011

Ventilation for the Prevention of Airborne Contagion

Background

Tuberculosis (TB) is a major cause of ill health and death worldwide, with around one-third of the world's population infected with the bacterium that causes it (Mycobacterium tuberculosis). One person with active tuberculosis can go on to infect many others; the bacterium is passed in tiny liquid droplets that are produced when someone with active disease coughs, sneezes, spits, or speaks. The risk of tuberculosis being transmitted in hospital settings is particularly high, because people with tuberculosis are often in close contact with very many other people. Currently, most guidelines recommend that the risk of transmission be controlled in certain areas where TB is more likely by making sure that the air in rooms is changed with fresh air between six and 12 times an hour. Air changes can be achieved with simple measures such as opening windows and doors, or by installing mechanical equipment that forces air changes and also keeps the air pressure in an isolation room lower than that outside it. Such "negative pressure," mechanically ventilated systems are often used on tuberculosis wards to prevent air flowing from isolation rooms to other rooms outside, and so to prevent people on the tuberculosis ward from infecting others.



Why Was This Study Done?

In many parts of the world, hospitals do not have equipment even for simple air conditioning, let alone the special equipment needed for forcing high air changes in isolation rooms and wards. Instead they rely on opening windows and doors in order to reduce the transmission of TB, and this is called natural ventilation. However, it is not clear whether these sorts of measures are adequate for controlling TB transmission. It is important to find out what sorts of systems work best at controlling TB in the real world, so that hospitals and wards can be designed appropriately, within available resources.



What Did the Researchers Do and Find?

This study was based in Lima, Peru's capital city. The researchers studied a variety of rooms, including tuberculosis wards and respiratory isolation rooms, in the city's hospitals. Rooms which had only natural measures for encouraging airflow were compared with mechanically ventilated, negative pressure rooms, which were built much more recently. A comparison was also done between rooms in old hospitals that were naturally ventilated with rooms in newer hospitals that were also naturally ventilated. The researchers used a particular method to measure the number of air changes per hour within each room, and based on this they estimated the risk of a person with TB infecting others using a method called the Wells-Riley equation. The results showed that natural ventilation provided surprisingly high rates of air exchange, with an average of 28 air changes per hour. Hospitals over 50 years old, which generally had large windows and high ceilings, had the highest ventilation, with an average of 40 air changes per hour. This rate compared with 17 air changes per hour in naturally ventilated rooms in modern hospitals, which tended to have lower ceilings and smaller windows. The rooms with modern mechanical ventilation were supposed to have 12 air changes per hour but in reality this was not achieved, as the systems were not maintained properly. The Wells-Riley equation predicted that if an untreated person with tuberculosis was exposed to other people, within 24 hours this person would infect 39% of the people in the mechanically ventilated room, 33% of people in the naturally ventilated new hospital rooms, and only 11% of the people in the naturally ventilated old hospital rooms.



What Do These Findings Mean?

These findings suggest that natural methods of encouraging airflow (e.g., opening doors and windows) work well and in theory could reduce the likelihood of TB being carried from one person to another. Some aspects of the design of wards in old hospitals (such as large windows and high ceilings) are also likely to achieve better airflow and reduce the risk of infection. In poor countries, where mechanical ventilation systems might be too expensive to install and maintain properly, rooms that are designed to naturally achieve good airflow might be the best choice. Another advantage of natural ventilation is that it is not restricted by cost to just high-risk areas, and can therefore be used in many different parts of the hospital, including emergency departments, outpatient departments, and waiting rooms, and it is here that many infectious patients are to be found.




Thursday, May 26, 2011

Minimum Quantity Of Outside Air For Mechanical Ventilation.

§  27-754  Minimum quantity of outside air for mechanical ventilation.
  The minimum quantity of outside air required for mechanical  ventilation
  in  any  occupiable  room,  where  not  otherwise  prescribed,  shall be
  determined according to table 12-2.
 
         Table 12-2 Required Minimum Outdoor Air Supply and Exhaust
                              (cfm per sq. ft.)
  ========================================================================
  Ventilated Rooms    Ventilated Rooms with Natural       without  Natural
  Index for           Ventilation        Ventilation       Air Conditioned
  Ventilation           Openings           Openings             Rooms
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Supply  Exhaust     Supply  Exhaust    Supply Exhaust
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     0- 300...       2.5     2.0         2.5     2.0        1.5     1.5
   301- 520...       2.0     1.5         2.0     1.5        1.2     1.2
   521- 850...       1.5     1.25        1.5     1.25       0.9     0.9
   851-1250...        ..     1.0         1.0     1.0        0.6     0.6
  1251-1650...        ..     0.67        0.67    0.67       0.5     0.5
  over 1650...        ..      ..         0.33    0.33       0.4     0.4
  ========================================================================
 
    (a)  Window requirements. To be credited as ventilating openings under
  the provisions of this subchapter, windows or other openings shall  meet
  the  requirements  of  section 27-749 of article six of this subchapter,
  and where mechanical supply ventilation is not provided,  shall  have  a
  free  openable  area  of at least one square foot per one hundred square
  feet of floor area.
    (b) Air conditioning.
    (1) In air conditioned rooms, the windows and other openings shall not
  be credited  as  such  in  computing  the  index  for  ventilation.  Air
  conditioned rooms shall be considered as interior rooms.
    (2)  Air  that has been exhausted from an air conditioned space may be
  reconditioned  by  air  conditioning  apparatus  and   recirculated   as
  equivalent  outdoor  air,  provided  that the total of supply air is not
  less than required for air conditioned rooms by table 12-2 and that  the
  amount  of actual outdoor air is at least thirty-three and one-third per
  cent of the required total. The actual outdoor  air  supply  shall  not,
  under  any circumstances, be reduced to less than five cfm per occupant,
  except that these minimum requirements may be reduced by fifty per  cent
  as provided in section 27-755 of this article.
    (c)  Required exhaust. Required exhaust may be accomplished by raising
  the pressure within the space with consequent leakage through doors  and
  windows, or by drawing the vitiated air from air conditioned spaces into
  the  return  air  duct  of air conditioning apparatus or into an exhaust
  duct discharging directly to the outdoor air.
    (d) Make-up air. A sufficient quantity of  air  to  make  the  exhaust
  system  effective  shall be provided to the space being exhausted by one
  or by any combination of the following methods:
    (1) By supplying air to the space by means of a blower system.
    (2) By infiltration through louvres,  registers,  or  other  permanent
  openings  in  walls, doors, or partitions, adjoining spaces where air is
  supplied by one of these methods.
    (3) By infiltration through cracks around window sash and doors.
    (4) By other methods acceptable to the commissioner.
    (e) Prohibited use of recirculated air. Air  drawn  from  any  of  the
  following  spaces  may not be recirculated; mortuary rooms; bathrooms or
  toilet rooms; or any space where an objectionable quantity of  flammable


  vapors,  dust,  odors, or noxious gases is present. Air drawn from rooms
  that must be isolated to prevent the spread of infection  shall  not  be
  recirculated, except that air drawn from hospital operating rooms may be
  recirculated, if in compliance with the following requirements:
    (1)  There  shall  be  a  minimum of twenty-five total air changes per
  hour, of which five air changes per hour shall be outdoor air.
    (2) All fans serving exhaust systems shall be located at the discharge
  end of the system.
    (3) Outdoor air intakes shall be located  at  least  twenty-five  feet
  from   exhaust   outlets   of  ventilation  systems  and  other  exhaust
  discharges,  combustion  equipment  stacks,  medical   surgical   vacuum
  systems,  and  plumbing  vent  stacks,  from  areas  which  may  collect
  vehicular exhaust such as off-street loading bays, and from areas  which
  may  collect  other  noxious  fumes.  The  bottom of outdoor air intakes
  serving central systems if installed above a roof, shall be  located  at
  least three feet above roof level.
    (4) Positive air pressure shall be maintained at all times in relation
  to adjacent areas.
    (5)  All  ventilation  or  air conditioning systems serving such rooms
  shall be equipped with a filter bed of twenty-five per  cent  efficiency
  upstream  of  the  air conditioning equipment and a filter bed of ninety
  per cent efficiency downstream of  the  supply  fan,  any  recirculating
  spray  water  systems  and  water reservoir type humidifiers. All filter
  efficiencies shall be average atmospheric dust spot efficiencies  tested
  in accordance with ASHRAE standard 52-68.
    (6) A manometer shall be installed across each filter bed.
    (7) Duct linings shall not be used in ventilation and air conditioning
  systems  serving  such  rooms unless terminal filters of at least ninety
  per cent efficiency are installed downstream of linings.
    (8) Air supplied shall be delivered at or near the  ceilings  and  all
  exhaust air shall be removed near floor level, with at least two exhaust
  outlets not less than three inches above the floor.
    (f)  Outdoor  air  intakes.  For  high-rise  office  buildings erected
  pursuant to new building applications filed on or  after  the  effective
  date  of  this  section,  outdoor  air  intakes serving spaces above the
  second story and serving spaces greater than ten thousand square feet of
  floor area shall be located at least twenty feet above ground level,  at
  least  twenty feet from exhaust outlets of ventilation systems and other
  exhaust discharges, and at least twenty feet from areas that may collect
  vehicular exhaust such as off-street loading bays.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Music May Ease Stress of Mechanical Ventilation

The sound of music played for patients on mechanical ventilation may help soothe their anxiety and distress, a Cochrane review showed.

In three studies, the state anxiety of patients on vents was reduced by 1.06 standard deviations (P=0.04) when researchers played prerecorded music, according to Joke Bradt, PhD, a music therapist at Drexel University in Philadelphia, and colleagues.

Listening to music also reduced patients' heart rates by an average of nearly 5 bpm across five studies and respiratory rates by more than 3 bpm across six studies (P≤0.001 for both), suggesting a relaxation effect.

There were no significant effects from hearing music on patients' blood pressures or oxygen saturation, and no information was available about quality of life, patient satisfaction, post-discharge outcomes, mortality, or cost-effectiveness related to the music interventions.
"Because of these results, and because music listening is an easy intervention to implement, it is recommended that music listening be offered as a stress-management intervention to these critically ill patients," Bradt and her colleagues wrote.
Because mechanical ventilation often causes major distress and anxiety in patients, analgesia and sedation are considered important treatment options. But both options may lead to prolonged hospitalization resulting from associated complications, such as weakened immune function and venous thrombosis and pressure damage from immobility.
Music interventions have been used to ease anxiety and distress in patients with various conditions, but studies looking specifically at patients on mechanical ventilation have been small.
To evaluate the evidence for music interventions in this patient population, the researchers searched for randomized and quasi-randomized controlled trials that compared standard care with standard care plus a music intervention. They identified eight trials involving 213 participants.
Only one of the eight studies used a trained music therapist and involved the selection of live music to match the respiratory rate of the patients. The rest used prerecorded music delivered through headphones.
The intervention in all of the studies was delivered in a single session.
As measured using the Spielberger State and Trait Anxiety Inventory-State Anxiety Short Form, mean state anxiety was lower with a music intervention than in the control group. However, results were not consistent across the three studies included in the anxiety analysis, and the quality of the evidence was rated as very low by the researchers.
In addition, Bradt and her colleagues noted that the results should be interpreted with caution because of the small sample size.
The findings concerning heart rate and respiratory rate were more consistent, but were still based on evidence rated as very low to low.
The researchers noted that the mean reduction in heart rate may not be clinically significant when the resting heart rate is within the normal range, but added that the reduction may be important when the rate is tachycardiac.
They called for more research on the effects of music interventions delivered by trained music therapists, rather than by other healthcare professionals, pointing to evidence that music therapists seem to be more effective for numerous outcomes.
"This difference might be attributed to the fact that music therapists individualize their interventions to meet patients' specific needs; more actively engage the patients in the music making; and employ a systematic therapeutic process, including assessment, treatment, and evaluation," Bradt and her colleagues wrote.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Mechanical Ventilation

Benefits of Mechanical Ventilation

Moisture, odors, and other pollutants can build up inside a home if it does not have mechanical ventilation to provide fresh air. Mechanical ventilation systems circulate fresh air using ducts and fans rather than relying on airflow through small holes or cracks in a home’s construction assemblies (e.g., walls, roofs, or windows). Homeowners can breathe easier knowing their home has good ventilation.
The benefits of proper home ventilation include the following:
  1. Better Indoor Air Quality: Indoor air can be many times more polluted than outdoor air, yet the average American spends 90 percent of the day inside. Ventilation systems can significantly improve a home’s air quality by removing allergens, pollutants, and moisture that can cause mold problems. Mechanical ventilation allows for proper ventilation of your home resulting in your breathing cleaner air.
  2. More Control: When homes rely on air flow through construction assemblies for ventilation, the air delivery rate is unpredictable; and there is no control over the source or amount of air. In fact, air leaking into the house may come from undesirable areas such as the garage, attic, or crawl space. Mechanical ventilation systems, however, provide proper fresh air flow along with appropriate locations for intake and exhaust.
  3. Improved Comfort. Mechanical ventilation systems allow a constant flow of outside air into the home and can also provide filtration, dehumidification, and conditioning of the incoming outside air.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Responsibilities of a Mechanical Engineer

Many mechanical engineering employers will ask for at least two years experience within the industry, but it does vary depending on the company. Mechanical engineers have to spend some of their time reviewing mechanical designs and processes and providing suggestions for enhancement and improvement.

Mechanical engineers also have to set up new systems from scratch and take them through to the final stage. This includes monitoring progress along the way and adapting designs that show signs of weakness or malfunction.
Some of the more general responsibilities of a mechanical engineer have been mentioned above. However, some employers will ask for very specific skills and in order to prepare you for this some of them are listed below:

• Industrial Fire Protection knowledge.
• Materials handling.
• Equipment sizing.
• Equipment designing.
• Product reliability tests.
• Mathematical modelling and Computer Aided Design.
• Putting together product specifications.
• Testing mechanical engineering theories.
• Explaining how to solve complex problems to other team members and clients.
• Project management.
• Training up other mechanical engineers.
• Development of new materials and technologies.

If you are thinking of becoming a mechanical engineer then you will need to obtain several qualifications and get yourself some solid experience. You will need to get a high quality honours degree in order to get noticed by employers. However, don't be put off because good work experience is equally valued by employers.

If you want to become a chartered engineer then you will need to get an accredited MEng degree. There are some other courses you can take that essentially mean the same thing, but before you do any courses make sure that they are accredited by and engineering industry expert. Some employers will also ask for a relevant masters degree or equivalent. There are lots of different training courses available that will help you to top up your skills and enhance your CV

Friday, March 11, 2011

How to Build a Great Relationship with Your Auto Mechanic

If you own a car, chances are you have had (or will have) to take it to a repair shop at some point. Unfortunately, tales of crooked mechanics are as prevalent as crooked politician stories, resulting in most car owners being wary or downright defensive before they even walk in a repair shop’s door. Referrals for auto repair shops, when their service and quality of work result in a positive experience that customers share with their friends, family and coworkers, hold a great deal of weight when car-owners are deciding who will service their car. Auto technicians are car-owners too, and know how it feels to be on both sides of that service counter. Below are a local shop manager’s suggestions for dealing with your automotive technician/repair shop in a way that will benefit both of you.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Diaphragm Fibers in Mechanically Ventilated Humans

Rapid Disuse Atrophy of Diaphragm Fibers in Mechanically Ventilated Humans

Mechanical ventilation is a critical component of modern intensive care medicine, but the process of discontinuing mechanical ventilation can be difficult.Laboratory studies have shown that the combination of diaphragmatic inactivity and mechanical ventilation for prolonged periods (more than 18 hours) is associated with atrophy of myofibers in the rat diaphragm. 
  We hypothesized that similar changes occur in the human diaphragm and that disuse atrophy of human diaphragm myofibers could be a major contributor to the weaning problems that occur in some of our patients.
We evaluated the diaphragms of brain-dead organ donors, who show respiratory-muscle inactivity and undergo mechanical ventilation for prolonged periods, to determine whether disuse atrophy of the diaphragm occurs in ventilated humans. We compared intraoperative biopsy specimens obtained from the costal diaphragms of 14 brain-dead organ donors before harvest (case subjects) and compared them with intraoperative biopsy specimens obtained from the diaphragms of 8 patients who were undergoing surgery for either benign lesions or stage 1 lung cancer (control subjects). Case subjects with diaphragmatic inactivity underwent mechanical ventilation for 18 to 69 hours, whereas in control subjects, the combination of diaphragm inactivity and mechanical ventilation was limited to 2 to 3 hours.

Methods

Subjects

Our protocol for case subjects was approved by the Gift of Life Donor Program (http://www.donors1.org), and our protocol for control subjects was approved by the University of Pennsylvania institutional review board; the protocols appear in the Supplementary Appendix, available with the full text of this article at www.nejm.org. All biopsy specimens were obtained with appropriate written informed consent.

Biopsies

Full-thickness biopsy specimens (about 20 to 24 mm by 6 to 8 mm in size) were obtained from the same region of the right anterior costal diaphragm in all case and control subjects, frozen in isopentane after 3 to 5 minutes for length equilibration, and then transferred to liquid nitrogen and stored at −80°C until used. Specimens from case subjects were obtained before circulatory arrest or removal of any organs, and specimens from control subjects were obtained during the surgery for their lung lesions. In addition, to determine whether our hypothesis regarding atrophy was limited to the diaphragm or primary respiratory muscles, we obtained specimens of the pectoralis major muscle at the level of the third interspace in six subjects from each group. (These subjects were the only ones for whom appropriate consent was obtained for these biopsies.) To avoid surgical trauma to this superficial muscle, these specimens were obtained immediately after the skin incision and processed in the same manner as the diaphragm specimens.

Measurements

We carried out histologic, biochemical, and gene-expression measurements on diaphragm specimens. Only histologic data were obtained from the pectoralis specimens.
We measured fiber-type proportions, fiber-type cross-sectional areas, and area fractions to characterize fiber atrophy in diaphragm-biopsy specimens. We also measured the concentrations of glutathione, active caspase-3, and procaspase-3. Glutathione-concentration analyses were used to assess the presence of oxidative stress; we used active caspase-3 and procaspase-3 as indicators of caspase activity. Active caspase is known to dissociate proteins from the myofibrillar lattice, which is a critical step in muscle proteolysis.
We quantitatively assessed the number of messenger RNA (mRNA) transcripts for atrogin-1 and MuRF-1 relative to MBD4, a housekeeping gene, using real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. Atrogin-1 and MuRF-1 are ubiquitin ligases that are key components of the ubiquitin–proteasome pathway for proteolysis.
Histologic studies were carried out using previously described immunohistologic methods, and a minimum of 400 fibers were studied in each specimen. Biochemical and gene-expression studies were performed in triplicate on each specimen. Glutathione was measured using an enzyme-recycling assay kit (glutathione assay kit, Cayman Chemicals). Caspase measurements were conducted using sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, followed by immunoblotting with monoclonal antibodies specific for the 32- and 17-kD fragments. We used the relative standard curve method to compute the gene-expression level in each of our diaphragm samples. Complete details for all methods are available in the Supplementary Appendix.

Statistics

Means (±SD) and medians are presented for all continuous data. Demographic, histologic, biochemical, and gene-expression variables were compared between case and control groups using t tests for normally distributed continuous data, Mann–Whitney tests for non-normally distributed data, and Fisher's exact tests for categorical variables.

Results

Characterization of Experimental Cohort

Demographic information, reason for inclusion in the study, and medical history for case and control subjects are summarized in Table 1 
Table 1Summary of Demographic Characteristics, Reason for Surgery, and Medical History for Control and Case Subjects.; ventilator settings, measurements of arterial blood gases, and vital signs are summarized in Table 2


Table 2Summary of Ventilator Settings, Arterial Blood Gas Measurements, and Vital Signs for Control and Case Subjects.

Clinical data for each of the case subjects are presented in the Supplementary Appendix in Table S1; Tables S2 and S3 contain histologic data for case and control subjects; and Table S4 contains usual laboratory measurements. Case subjects were younger than control subjects (mean age, 35±16 years vs. 57±18; P=0.008). The two groups did not differ with respect to proportions of men and women or to body-mass index. After brain death, case subjects' diaphragms were inactive for 18 to 69 hours, whereas inactivity in control subjects' diaphragms was limited to 2 to 3 hours; the mean inactivity time for case subjects' diaphragms was appreciably greater — more than 10 times that of control subjects' diaphragms (2.4±0.5 vs. 34±16, P<0.001).

Analysis of Diaphragm-Biopsy Specimens

Histology

A comparison of Figure 1A and 1B
 Figure 1Comparison of Representative Case and Control Diaphragm-Biopsy Specimens with Respect to Fiber Size. indicates that the fibers in the diaphragm-biopsy specimens from case subjects were appreciably smaller than those from control subjects.

Figure 1C, 1D, 1E, and 1F show that both slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers in the case specimens were affected by atrophy. Importantly, all panels in Figure 1 indicate that fiber atrophy in case specimens was not accompanied by an inflammatory-cell infiltrate.
In case specimens, the mean cross-sectional areas of slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers were 2025±745 and 1871±589 μm2, respectively, whereas in control specimens these cross-sectional areas were 4725±1547 and 3949±1805 μm2, respectively. Therefore, in case specimens, the cross-sectional area of slow-twitch fibers decreased 57% (P=0.001) as compared with control values, and the cross-sectional area of fast-twitch fibers decreased 53% (P=0.01) (Figure 2A
 Figure 2Group Comparisons of Case and Control Diaphragm-Biopsy Specimens with Respect to Histologic Features.).


Case and control specimens did not differ with respect to the numerical proportions or area fractions of slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers (Figure 2B and 2C). In addition, in an age-matched subgroup of five case and five control subjects, the cross-sectional areas of both slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers did not differ statistically from those of the full groups; in this subgroup, slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers in case specimens exhibited mean decreases in cross-sectional areas of 39% (P=0.004) and 41% (P=0.02), respectively, as compared with controls.

Biochemistry

Total glutathione concentration in diaphragm-biopsy specimens from case subjects was 1.03±0.17 mM, whereas that in control specimens was 1.35±0.21 mM; therefore, case specimens exhibited a decrease of 23% (P=0.01) from that noted in controls (Figure 3A
 Figure 3Group Comparisons of Case and Control Diaphragm-Biopsy Specimens with Respect to Measurements of Glutathione, Active Caspase, and Procaspase.).


Figure 3B and 3C show immunoblots and a quantitative comparison of case and control specimens with respect to the expression of the active 17-kD caspase-3 fragment and the 32-kD inactive procaspase fragment. Figure 3C shows that active caspase-3 in case specimens had a value of 1.52±1.15 optical-density units, whereas that in controls had a value of 0.66±0.45 optical-density unit; therefore, the diaphragm-biopsy specimens from case subjects showed an increase of 154% above controls (P=0.05). In addition, Figure 3C shows that procaspase in case specimens measured 0.72±0.40 optical-density unit, whereas that in control specimens was 1.13±0.51 optical-density units; this higher value of procaspase in the control specimens approached but did not reach statistical significance (P=0.07).

Gene Expression

Expression of MBD4 was used to normalize the number of transcripts of atrogin-1 and MuRF-1 (the two ubiquitin ligases of interest), since its expression in the diaphragm-biopsy specimens from case and control subjects did not differ (data not shown). Control specimens contained 72±19 arbitrary normalized copy units (ANCU) of atrogin-1, whereas case specimens contained 216±67 ANCU. In addition, control specimens contained 128±51 ANCU of MuRF-1, whereas case specimens contained 885±294 ANCU. Therefore, the case specimens showed 3.0 times as much expression of atrogin-1 mRNA transcripts (P=0.002) and 6.9 times as much expression of MuRF-1 mRNA transcripts (P=0.001) as control specimens (Figure 4 
Figure 4Group Comparisons of Case and Control Diaphragm-Biopsy Specimens with Respect to mRNA Expression for Atrogin-1 and MuRF-1 Normalized to a Housekeeping Gene.).

Histology of Pectoralis Major–Biopsy Specimens

The cross-sectional areas of slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers in the biopsy specimens from the pectoralis major in case subjects were 3084±796 and 2933±1343 μm2, respectively, whereas the cross-sectional areas of these fiber-types in the control specimens were 3325±1256 and 3418±1281 μm2, respectively. These data show that the pectoralis fibers from case and control subjects did not differ with respect to cross-sectional area of any fiber type (see Figure S1 in the Supplementary Appendix). Likewise, these case and control specimens did not differ with respect to the numerical proportion or area fractions of slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers (Table S7 in the Supplementary Appendix).

Discussion

In our case subjects, the combination of 18 to 69 hours of diaphragmatic inactivity and mechanical ventilation was associated with marked atrophy of both slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers of the diaphragm. Muscle inactivity is known to effect oxidative stress and increase cytosolic calcium concentration, perturbations known to elicit increases in the activity of proteases (e.g., caspases) that cause increased dissociation of the myofibrillar lattice, the critical initial step in proteolysis. In case subjects, the decrease in diaphragmatic glutathione concentration is consistent with oxidative stress, and the increases in active caspase-3 suggest an increased rate of protein release from the myofibrillar lattice.
After release from the lattice, the major route of proteolysis for muscle proteins is the ubiquitin–proteasome pathway, which consists of the following sequential steps: activation of the small protein cofactor ubiquitin (76 amino acid residues), formation of activated ubiquitin-chain moieties catalyzed by specific ubiquitin-conjugase enzymes (i.e., E2 enzymes), attachment of ubiquitin chains to specific proteins by ubiquitin-ligase enzymes (i.e., E3 enzymes such as atrogin-1 and MuRF-1), and recognition of specific ubiquitin-protein chains by the 26S proteasome, followed by release of ubiquitin residues and degradation of proteins to small peptides (8 to 11 amino acid residues) by the 20S catalytic core of the proteasome. In conditions characterized by degradation of muscle protein, there is an up-regulation of mRNAs coding for atrogin-1 and MuRF-1; therefore, the marked increases in these transcripts noted in the diaphragm-biopsy specimens from case subjects are consistent with increased proteolysis.
Since our data are histologic or biochemical, we can only speculate on the functional significance of our findings. One report re-emphasized the idea that weaning patients from ventilators is closely linked to diaphragm force generation (usually assessed clinically as transdiaphragmatic pressure). The question then becomes how measurements of fiber atrophy in our case subjects relate to force generation. If the findings in our samples occurred throughout the diaphragm, the degree of atrophy we observed would predict an approximately 55% decrease in transdiaphragmatic pressure (i.e., to 45% of control values). Therefore, we believe that fiber atrophy of the magnitude noted in case specimens could have clinical significance.
There are limitations to our study. We recognize that the decreases in fiber cross-sectional area — noted in the diaphragm-biopsy specimens from case subjects — can be explained by either artifactual increases in mean sarcomere length due to improper fixation or actual functional decreases in mean fiber volume. To distinguish between these possibilities, we used both longitudinal and transverse sections of case specimens and determined a mean sarcomere length of 2.0±0.2 μm for both slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers. This value is very similar to that noted for the diaphragm fibers from control subjects. On the basis of these observations, we conclude that the decrease in cross-sectional area of diaphragm fibers from case subjects could be attributed entirely to atrophy.
Another limitation is that our case subjects were younger than the control subjects. Although the preferred method for analyzing this type of data is a matched-pair design, we lacked a sufficient number of subjects to allow matching for both age and sex. The results from our previous study as well as the present data strongly suggest that sex is not a determinant of cross-sectional area in diaphragm fibers. Therefore, since we found no statistically significant differences in cross-sectional area between the age-matched (5 subjects) and full case (14 subjects) groups, we reason that the difference in age between case and control subjects does not account for the atrophy of diaphragm fibers from case subjects.
There are other possible causes of atrophy in the diaphragm fibers from case subjects. One or more of the following conditions may have played some role in eliciting the atrophy: systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) or sepsis, barotraum–volutrauma, brain death, or unmeasured humoral substances. Current concepts suggest that diaphragm atrophy associated with SIRS, sepsis, or barotrauma–volutrauma should be associated with an inflammatory-cell infiltrate or increased proinflammatory cytokines. Neither of these findings, however, was evident in the diaphragm fibers from case subjects (Figure 1A, and Table S5 in the Supplementary Appendix).
To assess the possibility that noncytokine humoral substances or other factors associated with brain death accounted for the diaphragm-fiber atrophy, we compared biopsy specimens from the pectoralis major muscle of six case subjects and six control subjects. The specimens from the two groups did not differ with respect to cross-sectional area of either slow-twitch or fast-twitch fibers (Figure S1 in the Supplementary Appendix). These observations suggest that neither brain death nor unmeasured humoral factors played a role in effecting fiber atrophy in case subjects' diaphragms.
There are factors affecting fiber atrophy in disuse states that could influence our results. Our data do not elucidate the complex relationships between conditions present in the diaphragms of case subjects — inactivity, level of phrenic motoneuron activity, diaphragm muscle lengths, and perhaps additional factors — and the marked atrophy of both slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers in the diaphragms. The orthopedic literature indicates that limb muscles that are used frequently show appreciably more inactivity-associated fiber atrophy than muscles used less frequently. Because the diaphragm is active in most people 24 hours a day, one might expect it to show a greater rate of atrophy than limb muscles that are rendered inactive by interventions such as spinal cord injury, microgravity, or bed rest.
In summary, our study indicates that the combination of 18 to 69 hours of diaphragm inactivity and mechanical ventilation is associated with marked atrophy of both slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers in the human diaphragm. Since our observations strongly suggest that increased proteolysis accounts for the fiber atrophy noted in the diaphragm-biopsy specimens from case subjects, we speculate that blocking or attenuating diaphragm proteolytic pathways in patients on mechanical ventilation might mitigate the weaning problems that occur in some patients.

 

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Mechanical Ventilation

Basic Principles

The indications for mechanical ventilation, as derived from a study of 1638 patients in eight countries, are acute respiratory failure (66 percent of patients), coma (15 percent), acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (13 percent), and neuromuscular disorders (5 percent). The disorders in the first group include the acute respiratory distress syndrome, heart failure, pneumonia, sepsis, complications of surgery, and trauma (with each subgroup accounting for about 8 to 11 percent of the overall group). The objectives of mechanical ventilation are primarily to decrease the work of breathing and reverse life-threatening hypoxemia or acute progressive respiratory acidosis.
Virtually all patients who receive ventilatory support undergo assist-control ventilation, intermittent mandatory ventilation, or pressure-support ventilation; the latter two modes are often used simultaneously. With assist-control ventilation, the most widely used mode, the ventilator delivers a set tidal volume when triggered by the patient's inspiratory effort or independently, if such an effort does not occur within a preselected time.
Intermittent mandatory ventilation was introduced to provide graded levels of assistance. With this mode, the physician sets the number of mandatory breaths of fixed volume to be delivered by the ventilator; between these breaths, the patient can breathe spontaneously. Patients often have difficulty adapting to the intermittent nature of ventilatory assistance, and the decrease in the work of breathing may be much less than desired.
Pressure-support ventilation also provides graded assistance but differs from the other two modes in that the physician sets the level of pressure (rather than the volume) to augment every spontaneous respiratory effort The level of pressure delivered by the ventilator is usually adjusted in accordance with changes in the patient's respiratory frequency. However, the frequency that signals a satisfactory level of respiratory-muscle rest has never been well defined, and recommendations range from 16 to 30 breaths per minute.
New modes of mechanical ventilation are often introduced. Each has an acronym, and the jargon is inhibiting to those unfamiliar with it. Yet each new mode involves nothing more than a modification of the manner in which positive pressure is delivered to the airway and of the interplay between mechanical assistance and the patient's respiratory effort. The purpose of a new mode of ventilation may be to enhance respiratory-muscle rest, prevent deconditioning, improve gas exchange, prevent lung damage, enhance the coordination between ventilatory assistance and the patient's respiratory efforts, and foster lung healing; the priority given to each goal varies.

Coordinating Respiratory Effort and Mechanical Ventilation

Probably the most common reason for instituting mechanical ventilation is to decrease the work of the respiratory muscles. The inspiratory effort expended by patients with acute respiratory failure is about four times the normal value, and it can be increased to six times the normal value in individual patients. Critically ill patients in whom this increased level of effort is sustained indefinitely are at risk of inspiratory-muscle fatigue, which can add structural injury to already overworked muscles. It is sometimes thought that the simple act of connecting a patient to a ventilator will decrease respiratory effort. Yet unless the settings are carefully selected, mechanical ventilation can actually do the opposite.
With careful selection of ventilator settings, inspiratory effort can be reduced to the normal range. But eliminating inspiratory effort is not desirable because it causes deconditioning and atrophy of the respiratory muscles. Surprisingly, researchers have not attempted to determine the desirable target for reducing inspiratory effort in patients with acute respiratory distress. To reduce effort markedly requires that the ventilator cycle in unison with the patient's central
respiratory rhythm 








 Flow, Airway Pressure, and Inspiratory and Expiratory Muscle Activity in a Patient with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Who Received Pressure-Support Ventilation at an Airway Pressure of 20 cm of Water.).

For perfect synchronization, the period of mechanical inflation must match the period of neural inspiratory time (the duration of inspiratory effort), and the period of mechanical inactivity must match the neural expiratory time.Difficulties in synchronization can arise at the onset of inspiratory effort, at the onset of flow delivered by the ventilator, during the period of ventilator-induced inflation, and at the switch between inspiration and expiration.
Almost all patients who undergo mechanical ventilation receive some form of assisted ventilation, with the patient's inspiratory effort triggering the ventilator. To ensure that the ventilator does not cycle too often, the clinician sets a threshold for airway pressure that will trigger the ventilator. This threshold, referred to as set sensitivity, is usually –1 to –2 cm of water. To reach this threshold, the patient must initiate an inspiratory effort. But when the threshold is reached, inspiratory neurons do not simply switch off. Consequently, the patient may expend considerable inspiratory effort throughout the machine-cycled inflation.
The display of airway pressure and flow tracings on ventilator screens has increased awareness that inspiratory effort is frequently insufficient to trigger the ventilator. At high levels of mechanical assistance, up to one third of a patient's inspiratory efforts may fail to trigger the machine. Surprisingly, unsuccessful triggering is not the result of poor inspiratory effort; indeed, the effort is more than a third greater when the threshold for triggering the ventilator is not reached than when it is reached. Breaths that do not reach the threshold for triggering the ventilator have higher tidal volumes and shorter expiratory times than do breaths that do trigger the ventilator. Consequently, elastic-recoil pressure builds up within the thorax in the form of intrinsic positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), or auto-PEEP. To trigger the ventilator, the patient's inspiratory effort first has to generate a negative intrathoracic pressure in order to counterbalance the elastic recoil and then must reach the set sensitivity. The consequences of wasted inspiratory efforts are not fully known, but they add an unnecessary burden in patients whose inspiratory muscles are already under stress.
The inspiratory flow rate is initially set at a default value, such as 60 liters per minute. If the delivered flow does not meet the patient's ventilatory needs, inspiratory effort will increase. Sometimes the flow is increased in order to shorten the inspiratory time and increase the expiratory time, especially in patients with inspiratory efforts that are insufficient to trigger the ventilator. But an increase in flow causes immediate and persistent tachypnea, and as a result, the expiratory time may be shortened. In one study, for example, increases in inspiratory flow from 30 liters per minute to 60 and 90 liters per minute caused increases in the respiratory rate of 20 and 41 percent, respectively.
In studies of interactions between the patient's respiratory effort and mechanical ventilation, remarkably little attention has been paid to the switch between inspiration and expiration. With the use of pressure-support ventilation, ventilatory assistance ceases when the patient's inspiratory flow falls by a preset amount (e.g., to 25 percent of the peak flow). Air flow changes more slowly in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease than in other patients, and patients often start to exhale while the ventilator is still pumping gas into their chests. In 5 of 12 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease who were receiving pressure support of 20 cm of water, expiratory muscles were recruited during ventilator-induced inflation.

Improving Oxygenation and Preventing Lung Injury

A primary goal of mechanical ventilation is to improve arterial oxygenation. Improvement is achieved partly through the use of endotracheal intubation to ensure the delivery of oxygen to the airway and partly through an increase in airway pressure. Satisfactory oxygenation is easily achieved in most patients with airway obstruction. The main challenge arises in patients with alveolar-filling disorders, especially the acute respiratory distress syndrome — a form of noncardiogenic pulmonary edema resulting from severe acute alveolar injury. It has long been recognized that arterial oxygenation can be achieved at a lower inspired oxygen concentration by increasing airway pressure. The goal of using the lowest possible oxygen concentration to achieve an arterial oxygen saturation of approximately 90 percent has not changed in decades. What has changed is how this goal is viewed in relation to other factors, particularly ventilator pressures. In recent years, there has been a growing tendency to be more concerned about high airway pressures than about oxygen toxicity, although this shift has been based on a consensus of opinion rather than on data from studies in patients and animals.
From the outset, clinicians recognized that mechanical ventilation could rupture alveoli and cause air leaks. In 1974, Webb and Tierney showed that mechanical ventilation could also cause ultrastructural injury, independently of air leaks.Their observations went largely unnoticed until a decade later, when several investigators confirmed and extended them. Alveolar overdistention causes changes in epithelial and endothelial permeability, alveolar hemorrhage, and hyaline-membrane formation in laboratory animals.
Diffuse infiltrates on chest radiographs originally led clinicians to infer that lung involvement was homogeneous. But computed tomography (CT) reveals a patchy pattern: about one third of the lung is unaerated, one third poorly aerated, and one third normally aerated. A ventilator-induced breath will follow the path of least impediment, travelling preferentially to the normally aerated areas. As a result, these regions are vulnerable to alveolar overdistention and the type of ventilator-induced lung injury found in laboratory animals.Figure 2



  

Lung Injury Caused by Mechanical Ventilation in a 31-Year-Old Woman with the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Due to Amniotic-Fluid Embolism.).


A new era of ventilatory management began in 1990, when Hickling et al.reported that lowering the tidal volume caused a 60 percent decrease in the expected mortality rate among patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome. In a subsequent trial, Amato et al. randomly assigned patients to a conventional tidal volume (12 ml per kilogram of body weight) or to a low tidal volume (less than 6 ml per kilogram). Mortality was decreased by 46 percent with the lower tidal volume. In a recent study of 861 patients, the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Network confirmed this benefit: mortality was decreased by 22 percent with a tidal volume of 6 ml per kilogram as compared with a tidal volume of 12 ml per kilogram. Lowering the tidal volume, however, failed to improve the outcome in three controlled trials. The discrepant findings can be explained by differences in trial design. Increased survival was demonstrable only when the patients undergoing conventional ventilation had a mean pressure during an end-inspiratory pause (the so-called plateau pressure, a surrogate for peak alveolar pressure) that exceeded 32 cm of water.
The pressures pertinent to ventilatory management are the peak inspiratory pressure, plateau pressure, and end-expiratory pressure. Patients with airway obstruction may have a very high peak pressure without any increase in the plateau pressure. Indeed, the gradient between the two is directly related to the resistance of the airway to airflow. An increase in the peak inspiratory pressure without a concomitant increase in the plateau pressure is unlikely to cause alveolar damage. The critical variable is not airway pressure itself but transpulmonary pressure — airway pressure during the end-inspiratory pause minus pleural pressure. The normal lung is maximally distended at a transpulmonary pressure between 30 and 35 cm of water, and higher pressures cause overdistention. Patients with stiff chest walls, such as those with the acute respiratory distress syndrome due to a nonpulmonary disorder (e.g., abdominal sepsis), have an elevated pleural pressure. In such patients, the airway plateau pressure may exceed 35 cm of water without causing alveolar overdistention.
Clinical decisions based on plateau pressure must take into account the relation between lung volume and airway pressure in the individual patient. The pressure–volume curve in patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome typically has a sigmoid shape with two discrete bends, called inflection points


 


Respiratory Pressure–Volume Curve and the Effects of Traditional as Compared with Protective Ventilation in a 70-kg Patient with the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome.).

Some investigators believe that a plateau pressure above the upper bend causes alveolar overdistention. Reducing the tidal volume lowers the plateau pressure, but at the cost of hypercapnia. In a study in which 25 patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome underwent mechanical ventilation with a tidal volume of 10 ml per kilogram, 20 had a plateau pressure that was 2 to 14 cm of water above the upper bend of the pressure–volume curve. Lowering the plateau pressure to a value that fell below the upper bend required a 22 percent decrease in the tidal volume, causing the partial pressure of carbon dioxide to increase from 44 to 77 mm Hg. The partial pressure of carbon dioxide, in turn, can be decreased by as much as 28 percent by removing tubing and thus decreasing dead space and increasing the frequency of ventilator-induced breaths. By virtue of their stiff lungs, patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome who do not have an underlying airway obstruction can tolerate a frequency of 30 breaths per minute without gas trapping. Severe hypercapnia can have adverse effects, including increased intracranial pressure, depressed myocardial contractility, pulmonary hypertension, and depressed renal blood flow. The view that these risks are preferable to the higher plateau pressure required to achieve normocapnia represents a substantial shift in ventilatory management.
Lowering the tidal volume is not without hazards. In addition to the potential harm of hypercapnia, the volume of aerated lung may be decreased, with a consequent increase in shunting and worsening oxygenation. One means of minimizing the loss of lung volume is the use of sighs (i.e., single breaths of large tidal volume). In one study, increasing the plateau pressure by at least 10 cm of water during sighs, applied three times a minute over a period of one hour, caused a 26 percent decrease in shunting, with a 50 percent increase in the partial pressure of oxygen. It is unknown whether sighs used at this low frequency cause injury from alveolar overdistention.
The more usual way of improving oxygenation is through the use of PEEP with the intention of recruiting previously nonfunctioning lung tissue. Selecting the right level of PEEP for a given patient with the acute respiratory distress syndrome is difficult, because the severity of injury varies throughout the lungs. PEEP can recruit atelectatic areas but may overdistend normally aerated areas. In a study involving six patients with acute lung injury, for example, the use of PEEP at 13 cm of water resulted in the recruitment of nonaerated portions of lung, with a gain of 320 ml in volume, but three patients had overdistention of already aerated portions of lung, with an excess volume of 238 ml.
Overall, about 30 percent of patients with acute lung injury do not benefit from PEEP or have a fall in the partial pressure of oxygen. With the patient in the supine posture, PEEP generally recruits the regions of the lung closest to the apex and sternum. Conversely, PEEP can increase the amount of nonaerated tissue in the regions close to the spine and the diaphragm. Among patients in the early stages of the acute respiratory distress syndrome, those with pulmonary causes, such as pneumonia, are less likely to benefit from PEEP than are those with nonpulmonary causes, such as intraabdominal sepsis or extrathoracic trauma. This distinction may be related to the type of morphologic involvement: pulmonary causes of the syndrome are characterized by alveolar filling, whereas nonpulmonary causes are characterized by interstitial edema and alveolar collapse. In the later stages of the acute respiratory distress syndrome, remodeling and fibrosis may eliminate this distinction between pulmonary and nonpulmonary causes.
To select the right level of PEEP, some experts recommend bedside calculation of the pressure–volume curve. With the ventilators currently used in the United States, calculating the pressure–volume curve is logistically difficult and technically demanding. Yet many ventilators have a computer screen, and minor software modifications would make it feasible to calculate the curve in as little as two minutes — as with the ventilators available in France. Providing this option on ventilators would increase clinicians' experience with the use of pressure–volume curves in ventilatory management.
Even if the pressure–volume curve is not calculated at the bedside, it is useful to select the PEEP level according to this conceptual framework. A level above the lower bend in the pressure–volume curve is thought to keep alveoli open at the end of expiration and thus prevent the injury that can result from shear forces created by the opening and closing of alveoli. This level of PEEP may also prevent an increase in the amount of nonaerated tissue and, thus, atelectasis. However, the notion that the lower bend signals the level of PEEP necessary to prevent end-expiratory collapse and that pressures above the upper bend signal alveolar overdistention is a gross oversimplification. The relation between the shape of the pressure–volume curve and events at the alveolar level is confounded by numerous factors and is the subject of ongoing research and debate. An understanding of this relation is also impeded by the difficulty in distinguishing collapsed lung units from fluid-filled units on CT.
Most patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome have an increase in the partial pressure of oxygen when there is a change from the supine to the prone position. In a study of 16 patients, for example, 12 had an increase of 9 to 73 mm Hg in the partial pressure of oxygen, and 4 had a decrease of 7 to 16 mm Hg. The mechanism responsible for the improvement in the partial pressure of oxygen is not clear. The attribution of this improvement to lung recruitment has not been proved. It is now posited that a prone position causes ventilation to be distributed more evenly to the various regions of the lungs, improving the relation between ventilation and perfusion.

Discontinuing Mechanical Ventilation

Because mechanical ventilation can have life-threatening complications, it should be discontinued at the earliest possible time. The process of discontinuing mechanical ventilation, termed weaning, is one of the most challenging problems in intensive care, and it accounts for a considerable proportion of the workload of staff in an intensive care unit.
When mechanical ventilation is discontinued, up to 25 percent of patients have respiratory distress severe enough to necessitate the reinstitution of ventilatory support. Our understanding of why weaning fails in some patients has advanced considerably in recent years. Among patients who cannot be weaned, disconnection from the ventilator is followed almost immediately by an increase in respiratory frequency and a fall in tidal volume — that is, rapid, shallow breathing



 
Tidal Volume, Pleural Pressure, and Pulmonary-Artery Pressure in a Patient Undergoing Assist-Control Ventilation and at the Start and End of a Failed Trial of Spontaneous Breathing.).

As a trial of spontaneous breathing is continued over the next 30 to 60 minutes, the respiratory effort increases considerably, reaching more than four times the normal value at the end of this period. The increased effort is mainly due to worsening respiratory mechanics. Respiratory resistance increases progressively over the course of a trial of spontaneous breathing, reaching about seven times the normal value at the end of the trial; lung stiffness also increases, reaching five times the normal value; and gas trapping, measured as auto-PEEP, more than doubles over the course of the trial.
 Before weaning is started, however, the respiratory mechanics in such patients are similar to those in whom subsequent weaning is successful. Thus, unknown mechanisms associated with the act of spontaneous breathing cause the worsening of respiratory mechanics in patients who cannot be weaned from mechanical ventilation.
In addition to the increase in respiratory effort, an unsuccessful attempt at spontaneous breathing causes considerable cardiovascular stress. Patients can have substantial increases in right and left ventricular afterload, with increases of 39 and 27 percent in pulmonary and systemic arterial pressures, respectively, most likely because the negative swings in intrathoracic pressure are more extreme. At the completion of a trial of weaning, the level of oxygen consumption is equivalent in patients who can be weaned and in those who cannot. But how the cardiovascular system meets the oxygen demand differs in the two groups of patients. In those who are successfully weaned, the oxygen demand is met through an increase in oxygen delivery, mediated by the expected increase in cardiac output on discontinuation of positive-pressure ventilation. In patients who cannot be weaned, the oxygen demand is met through an increase in oxygen extraction, and these patients have a relative decrease in oxygen delivery. The greater oxygen extraction causes a substantial decrease in mixed venous oxygen saturation, contributing to the arterial hypoxemia that occurs in some patients.
Over the course of a trial of spontaneous breathing, about half of patients in whom the trial fails have an increase in carbon dioxide tension of 10 mm Hg or more. The hypercapnia is not usually a consequence of a decrease in minute ventilation. Instead, hypercapnia results from rapid, shallow breathing, which causes an increase in dead-space ventilation. In a small proportion of patients who cannot be weaned, primary depression of respiratory drive may be responsible for the hypercapnia.
The discontinuation of mechanical ventilation needs to be carefully timed. Premature discontinuation places severe stress on the respiratory and cardiovascular systems, which can impede the patient's recovery. Unnecessary delays in discontinuation can lead to a host of complications. Decisions about timing that are based solely on expert clinical judgment are frequently erroneous. Several functional measures are used to aid decision making. The level of oxygenation must be satisfactory before one attempts to discontinue mechanical ventilation. Yet in many patients with satisfactory oxygenation, such attempts fail. The use of traditional predictors of the success or failure of attempts — maximal inspiratory pressure, vital capacity, and minute ventilation — frequently has false positive or false negative results. A more reliable predictor is the ratio of respiratory frequency to tidal volume (f/VT). The ratio must be calculated during spontaneous breathing; calculating it during pressure support markedly impairs its predictive accuracy. The higher the ratio, the more severe the rapid, shallow breathing and the greater the likelihood of unsuccessful weaning. A ratio of 100 best discriminates between successful and unsuccessful attempts at weaning. In a case of clinical equipoise — that is, a pretest probability of 50 percent — an f/VT of 80, which has a likelihood ratio of 7.5, is associated with almost a 95 percent post-test probability of successful weaning. If the f/VT is higher than 100, the likelihood ratio is 0.04 and the post-test probability of successful weaning is less than 5 percent.
Several groups of investigators have evaluated the predictive value of f/VT. Its positive predictive value — the proportion of patients who are successfully weaned among those for whom the ratio predicts success — has generally been high (0.8 or higher). The negative predictive value — the proportion of patients who cannot be weaned among those for whom the ratio predicts failure — has sometimes been reported to be low (0.5 or less). Low negative predictive values have often been reported for patients with a high likelihood of successful extubation — for example, patients undergoing routine postoperative ventilatory assistance and patients who have tolerated initial trials of weaning.
There are four methods of weaning. The oldest method is to perform trials of spontaneous breathing several times a day, with the use of a T-tube circuit containing an enriched supply of oxygen. Initially 5 to 10 minutes in duration, the trials are extended and repeated several times a day until the patient can sustain spontaneous ventilation for several hours. This approach has become unpopular because it requires considerable time on the part of intensive care staff.
The two most common approaches, intermittent mandatory ventilation and pressure support, decrease ventilatory assistance gradually by respectively lowering the number of ventilator-assisted breaths or the level of pressure. When a minimal level of ventilatory assistance can be tolerated, the patient is extubated. The minimal level of assistance, however, has never been well defined. For example, pressure support of 6 to 8 cm of water is widely used to compensate for the resistance imposed by the endotracheal tube and ventilator circuit. A patient who can breathe comfortably at this level of pressure support should be able to tolerate extubation. But if the upper airways are swollen because an endotracheal tube has been in place for several days, the work engendered by breathing through the swollen airways is about the same as that caused by breathing through an endotracheal tube. Accordingly, any amount of pressure support overcompensates and may give misleading information about the likelihood that a patient can tolerate extubation.
The fourth method of weaning is to perform a single daily T-tube trial, lasting for up to two hours. If this trial is successful, the patient is extubated; if the trial is unsuccessful, the patient is given at least 24 hours of respiratory-muscle rest with full ventilatory support before another trial is performed.
Until the early 1990s, it was widely believed that all weaning methods were equally effective, and the physician's judgment was regarded as the critical determinant. But the results of randomized, controlled trials clearly indicate that the period of weaning is as much as three times as long with intermittent mandatory ventilation as with trials of spontaneous breathing. In a study involving patients with respiratory difficulties on weaning, trials of spontaneous breathing halved the weaning time as compared with pressure support; in another study, the weaning time was similar with the two methods. Performing trials of spontaneous breathing once a day is as effective as performing such trials several times a day but much simpler. In a recent study, half-hour trials of spontaneous breathing were as effective as two-hour trials. However, this study involved all patients being considered for weaning, not just those for whom there were difficulties with weaning.
A two-stage approach to weaning — systematic measurement of predictors, including f/VT , followed by a single daily trial of spontaneous breathing — was compared with conventional management in a randomized trial. Although the patients assigned to the two-stage approach were sicker than those assigned to conventional weaning, they were weaned twice as rapidly. The rate of complications and the costs of intensive care were also lower with two-stage management than with conventional management.
When patients can sustain spontaneous ventilation without undue discomfort, they are extubated. About 10 to 20 percent of such patients require reintubation. Mortality among patients who require reintubation is more than six times as high as mortality among patients who can tolerate extubation. The reason for the higher mortality is unknown; it is not clearly related to the development of new problems after extubation or to complications of reinserting the tube. Indeed, the need for reintubation may simply be a marker of a more severe underlying illness.
In a controlled trial involving patients who could not sustain spontaneous ventilation, the patients who were extubated and then received noninvasive ventilation through a face mask had a shorter mean overall period of ventilatory support (10.2 days) than those who remained intubated and were weaned by decreasing pressure support (16.6 days). Although this result is promising, it is not clear how many such patients or which ones could benefit from this approach.

Other Approaches to Mechanical Ventilation

Noninvasive ventilation, an approach that is becoming more widespread, was reviewed in the Journal in 1997. Two new approaches under investigation are liquid ventilation and proportional-assist ventilation; they have not yet been approved for general clinical use.

Conclusions

Since my previous overview of mechanical ventilation in the Journal, we have gained a better understanding of the pathophysiology associated with unsuccessful weaning and have learned how to wean patients more efficiently. We have also learned how ventilator settings influence survival in patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome. Less progress has been made in determining how the ventilator can best be used to achieve maximal respiratory-muscle rest, which is the most common reason for providing mechanical ventilation. Although further research may lead to unexpected new insights, an important challenge for researchers is to identify elements of our current knowledge that can be incorporated into a clinical management scheme to improve the outcome for patients who require ventilatory assistance.
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