Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 153, No. 6, 06 1996, 1817-1824.
Tracheal gas insufflation: catheter effectiveness determined by expiratory flush volume
SA Ravenscraft, RS Shapiro, A Nahum, WC Burke, AB Adams, G Nakos and JJ Marini
Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of Minnesota, St. Paul-Ramsey Medical Center, St. Paul 55101-2595, USA.
Used adjunctively during mechanical ventilation, tracheal gas insufflation
(TGI) improves CO2 elimination, principally by decreasing effective
anatomic dead space. Continuing lung deflation at end- expiration raises
the end-expiratory C02 concentration within the proximal airway, and could
theoretically reduce the efficiency of a given catheter flow. To test this
possibility, we designed a series of experiments that examined the
influence of TGI delivery patterns on the efficiency of CO2 elimination.
Using a gating device, catheter flow was delivered selectively during
desired portions of expiration. Paralyzed, ventilated dogs were studied at
short and extended inspiratory time fractions (TI/TT) with inspiratory
tidal volume and ventilator frequency held constant. The expiratory flush
volume, not the pattern of gas delivery, determined the observed decline in
PaCO2, provided that the end-expiratory period was included in the catheter
flush period. Despite continuing end-expiratory lung deflation (extended
TI/TT), catheter effectiveness remained the same at matched expiratory
flush volumes. To determine if enhanced distal mixing at the higher
catheter flows required during the extended TI/TT (to match expiratory
flush volume) masked a decrease in efficiency, we repeated the experiment
with a tip-inverted catheter. We again found that matched catheter
delivered expiratory volumes were similarly effective. With or without
ongoing lung deflation, the volume of gas flushed during the expiratory
period determined the effectiveness of TGI, provided that inspired minute
ventilation remains unchanged and end-expiration is included in the
catheter flush period.
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Copyright © 1996 American Thoracic Society
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