Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 154, No. 6, 12 1996, 1857-1863.
Glottic aperture and effective minute ventilation during nasal two- level positive pressure ventilation in spontaneous mode
VF Parreira, P Delguste, V Jounieaux, G Aubert, M Dury and DO Rodenstein
Pneumology Unit, Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc, Universite Catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium.
Our goal was to verify glottic behavior and its effects on effective minute
ventilation during intermittent positive pressure ventilation applied at
increasing inspiratory pressure levels through a nasal mask (nIPPV) using a
two-level positive pressure ventilator (two-level IPPV) in spontaneous
mode. Ten subjects were studied while awake. The spontaneous mode was used
at three levels of inspiratory positive airway pressure (IPAP): 10, 15, and
20 cm H2O. The expiratory pressure was kept at 4 cm H2O. Records of
spontaneous breathing without nIPPV were also performed. The glottis was
continuously monitored through a fiberoptic bronchoscope. We measured,
breath by breath, the widest inspiratory angle formed by the vocal cords at
the anterior commissure, the corresponding tidal volume (with respiratory
inductive plethysmography), the respiratory frequency and other indices.
Our data during wakefulness show that inspiratory pressures of 10 and 15 cm
H2O did not result in increases in effective minute ventilation with
respect to spontaneous breathing. Only at 20 cm H2O of IPAP did effective
minute ventilation increase. This was due essentially to a decrease in
respiratory frequency with increasing pressures, offsetting increases in
tidal volume at 10 and 15, but not at 20 cm H2O of inspiratory pressure.
Changes in end-tidal CO2 suggest that alveolar ventilation increased due to
the change in breathing pattern. Contrary to what we observed previously
with either two-level IPPV used in the controlled mode, or nIPPV performed
with volumetric ventilators, the glottis did not play any noticeable role
in the control of effective minute ventilation.
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Copyright © 1996 American Thoracic Society
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