Mechanical Ventilation - Basics Flashcards
What determines the pressure required to push a flow of gas through a tube?
Resistance
Flow rate
What determines the pressure required to inflate a balloon?
Volume
Compliance
Volume/compliance
What is the formula for the pressure required to inflate the lung?
(Flow x resistance) + (volume/compliance)
What is the formula for the AIRWAY pressure required to inflate the lungs?
Inflation pressure plus baseline pressure of the balloon.
Therefore
(Flow x resistance) + (volume / compliance) + PEEP
Of these variables, which can be set independently?
Pressure, flow, volume
These three variables are dependent on one another.
Therefore, only two can be independently changed. The third will change in response
How do you increase oxygenation by changing parameters on a ventilator?
You can:
- increase FiO2
Or, you can reduce shunt by:
- increasing PEEP
- Or increasing inspiratory time
How do you increase CO2 removal by changing parameters on a ventilator?
Increase respiratory rate
Or
Increase tidal volumes
What is a normal inspiratory to expiratory time ratio?
1:2
Or 30%
Three complications if mechanical ventilation
Nosocomial pneumonia
Gas trapping
Ventilator-associated lung injury
What can cause gas trapping?
High respiratory rates
Long inspiratory times (and therefore short expiratory times)
Large tidal volumes
Plus:
- Asthma
- COPD
What can you do on a ventilator to measure total PEEP?
Press the inspiratory hold button and allow the pressures to equilibrate.
Then measure airway pressure
Why does mechanical ventilation affect cardiac preload?
Normally venous return is enhanced by negative intrathoracic pressure produced on inspiration.
Positive pressure ventilation has the opposite effect.
What effect does mechanical ventilation have on afterload?
Afterload is the tension in the left ventricular wall during systole.
Mechanical ventilation decreases afterload by reducing transmural pressure
What is the overall effect of mechanical ventilation on cardiac output?
Decreasing preload and decreasing afterload have opposite effects on cardiac output.
Therefore, the overall effect can vary from patient to patient.
If their heart has reduced contractility by baseline, ventilation will increase output.
If their heart has normal contractility by baseline, ventilation will decrease output.
If they’re heart has