Positive pressure ventilation (PPV) is the most important intervention in neonatal resuscitation. During PPV, it is important to hold the face-mask with care, as applying excessive pressure could cause injury to the infant, while insufficient pressure could be a contributor of mask leak and reduced effective ventilation. Application of positive pressure to face structures may trigger a vagally mediated reflex via the trigeminal nerve that innervates the skin of the face leading to apnoea and a decrease in heart rate (TCR, trigeminal-cardiac reflex). The force exerted by providers during neonatal ventilation to improve mask seal might result in pressure lesions and the elicitation of the trigeminal-cardiac reflex. The height of the resuscitation could influence the forces applied to the face and the quality of the procedure. Information about the applied forces in relation to the height of the resuscitation table is unknown.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
28
Participants will be invited to administer face-mask ventilation setting the table height to the operator's xiphoid process in a neonatal manikin.
Participants will be invited to administer face-mask ventilation setting the table height to the operator's superior anterior iliac spines in a neonatal manikin.
Azienda Ospedaliera di Padova, University of Padova
Padua, Italy
Applied forces on the manikin face
The forces applied by the participants to the manikin face will be measured by sensors positioned on the manikin face
Time frame: 1 minute after initiation of ventilation
Cuff pressure
The pressure inside the mask will be measured during the procedure
Time frame: 1 minute after initiation of ventilation
Percentage of ventilation time with leak less than 25% around the mask
The mask leak will be measured by using a respiratory function monitoring during the procedure
Time frame: 1 minute after initiation of ventilation
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