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Erschienen in: Journal of Anesthesia 3/2014

01.06.2014 | Original Article

Tidal volume and airway pressure under percutaneous transtracheal ventilation without a jet ventilator: comparison of high-flow oxygen ventilation and manual ventilation in complete and incomplete upper airway obstruction models

verfasst von: Nobuko Sasano, Akemi Tanaka, Ai Muramatsu, Yoshihito Fujita, Shoji Ito, Hiroshi Sasano, Kazuya Sobue

Erschienen in: Journal of Anesthesia | Ausgabe 3/2014

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Abstract

Purpose

Percutaneous transtracheal ventilation (PTV) can be life-saving in a cannot ventilate, cannot intubate situation. The aim of this study was to investigate the efficacy of PTV by measuring tidal volumes (VTs) and airway pressure (Paw) in high-flow oxygen ventilation and manual ventilation using a model lung.

Methods

We examined 14G, 16G, 18G, and 20G intravenous catheters and minitracheotomy catheters. In high-flow oxygen ventilation, the flow was set to 10 L/min, while the inspiratory:expiratory phases (I:E) were 1 s:4 s in the complete upper airway obstruction model and 1 s:1 s in the incomplete obstruction model. In manual ventilation, I:E were 2 s:4 s in the complete obstruction model and 2 s:3 s in the incomplete obstruction model. We ventilated through each catheter for 2 min and measured VT and Paw.

Results

In high-flow ventilation, the average VTs were approximately 150 ml and <100 ml with 14G catheters in complete and incomplete upper airway obstruction, respectively. The VTs obtained were reduced when the bore size was decreased. In manual ventilation, the average VTs were over 300 ml and approximately 260 ml with 14G catheters in complete and incomplete upper airway obstruction, respectively. In high-flow ventilation, the airway pressure tended to be higher. The minitracheotomy catheters produced over 800 ml of VT and created almost no positive end-expiratory pressure.

Conclusions

High-flow ventilation tends to result in higher airway pressure despite a smaller VT, which is probably due to a PEEP effect caused by high flow.
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Metadaten
Titel
Tidal volume and airway pressure under percutaneous transtracheal ventilation without a jet ventilator: comparison of high-flow oxygen ventilation and manual ventilation in complete and incomplete upper airway obstruction models
verfasst von
Nobuko Sasano
Akemi Tanaka
Ai Muramatsu
Yoshihito Fujita
Shoji Ito
Hiroshi Sasano
Kazuya Sobue
Publikationsdatum
01.06.2014
Verlag
Springer Japan
Erschienen in
Journal of Anesthesia / Ausgabe 3/2014
Print ISSN: 0913-8668
Elektronische ISSN: 1438-8359
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00540-013-1733-2

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