This project focuses on the analysis of the correlation between transpulmonary driving pressure and uneven lung ventilation and regional lung compliance in patients using prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV), in order to understand the clinical occurrence of failure of the final spontaneous breathing test and inability to breathe. Respiratory physiology impairments in patients successfully discharged from respirators.
This plan outlines a research project focusing on patients with prolonged ventilator use (PMV), an important manifestation of chronic critical illness (CCI) characterized by prolonged ventilator use after acute illness. This research team has sufficient experience in PMV clinical research and observed that even in the standardized process of weaning from the ventilator, the proportion of patients who successfully weaned from the ventilator was still low. Only 57.9% of the patients were successfully weaned from the ventilator, while the others were Transfer to a long-term care facility or face adverse outcomes. This research project aims to identify important respiratory physiology factors that increase the chances of PMV patients being weaned from ventilators and address a key unanswered question. PMV is often the result of CCI and involves complex clinical challenges such as organ dysfunction, dysregulated immune response, and recurrent infections. Patients' responses to disengagement training vary, often requiring individualized strategies. Conventional lung monitoring using electrical impedance imaging (EIT) can be used to quantify regional hyperinflation and collapse at each level. This method is based on pixel-level changes in respiratory system compliance and depends on whether the patient is fixed or Measured driving pressure, airway pressure (Paw), esophageal pressure (Pes) while accounting for assisted ventilation; EIT monitoring to quantify lung overinflation and collapse Use intrathoracic driving pressure (ΔPLdyn) changes to assess lung compliance at the pixel level change. We will use currently available methods, combining EIT and Pes monitoring, to measure ΔPLdyn in PMV patients. It has been shown in the literature that using ΔPLdyn rather than dynamic airway driving pressure to quantify regional lung overinflation and collapse, that is, compliance changes, is physiologically reasonable and clinically feasible. This method may represent a more accurate assessment of regional lung mechanics associated with the lowest inspiratory effort in the assisted ventilation setting. We hope to understand the changes in regional lung ventilation and compliance of PMV patients during the respirator weaning test through a series of clinical respiratory physiology research processes, in order to find ways to improve the patient's chances of weaning off.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
120
National Taiwan University Hospital
Taipei, Taiwan
RECRUITINGSIMV+PSV(Synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation + pressure support ventilation)
Timing points for measurement in respiratory physiology assessment include: 1) once when the ventilator is reduced to the lowest supported SIMV+PV mode, and once in the first and fourth hours of the four-hour weaning test period (collar mask), for a total of three times. The measurement tools were the EIT measuring instrument (PulmoVista 500, Dräger Medical, Lübeck, Germany) and the IC measuring instrument Engström Carestation (GE Healthcare, Madison, WI, USA) available in the Department of Respiratory Therapy of our hospital. The methods for measuring EIT 62,64 and IC 57 were as described in the literature30. Tubes will also be installed and connected to the instruments provided by the respiratory therapy department. The esophageal pressure measurement tube is an esophageal balloon similar to a nasogastric tube. The esophageal balloon used in this study has two functions of pressure measurement and nasogastric tube (Nutrivent®), which can be placed for 30 days and has the function of
Time frame: .up to 16 weeks
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