Patient-ventilator interaction and sleep in mechanically ventilated patients: Pressure support versus proportional assist ventilation

被引:197
作者
Bosma, Karen
Ferreyra, Gabriela
Ambrogio, Cristina
Pasero, Daniela
Mirabella, Lucia
Braghiroli, Alberto
Appendini, Lorenzo
Mascia, Luciana
Ranieri, V. Marco
机构
[1] Univ Turin, Osped S Giovanni Battista Molinette, Dipartimento Anestesiol & Rianimaz, I-10126 Turin, Italy
[2] Fdn Salvatore Maugeri, IRCCS, Ist Sci Veruno, Veruno, Italy
关键词
sleep; weaning; pressure support ventilation; proportional assist ventilation; patient-ventilator interaction;
D O I
10.1097/01.CCM.0000260055.64235.7C
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Objectives. To understand the role of patient-ventilator asynchrony in the etiology of sleep disruption and determine whether optimizing patient-ventilator interactions by using proportional assist ventilation improves sleep.. Design: Randomized crossover clinical trial. Setting. A tertiary university medical-surgical intensive care unit. Patients., Thirteen patients during weaning from mechanical ventilation. Interventions., Patients were randomized to receive pressure support ventilation or proportional assist ventilation on the first night and then crossed over to the alternative mode for the second night. Polysomnography and measurement of light, noise, esophageal pressure, airway pressure, and flow were performed from 10 pm to 8 am. Ventilator settings (pressure level during pressure support ventilation and resistive and elastic proportionality factors during proportional assist ventilation) were set to obtain a 50% reduction of the inspiratory work (pressure time product per minute) performed during a spontaneous breathing trial. Measurements and Main Results: Arousals per hour of sleep time during pressure support ventilation were 16 (range 2-74) and 9 (range 1-41) during proportional assist ventilation (p =.02). Overall sleep quality was significantly improved on proportional assist ventilation (p <.05) due to the combined effect of fewer arousals per hour, fewer awakenings per hour (3.5 [0-24] vs. 5.5 [1-24]), and greater rapid eye movement (9% [0-31] vs. 4% [0-23]), and slow wave (3% [0-16] vs. 1% [0-10]) sleep. Tidal volume and minute ventilation were lower on proportional assist ventilation, allowing for a greater increase in Paco(2) during the night. Patient-ventilator asynchronies per hour were lower with proportional assist ventilation than with pressure support ventilation (24 15 vs. 53 59; p =.02) and correlated with the number of arousals per hour (R-2 =.65, p =.0001). Conclusions. Patient ventilator discordance causes sleep disruption. Proportional assist ventilation seems more efficacious than pressure support ventilation in matching ventilatory requirements with ventilator assistance, therefore resulting in fewer patient-ventilator asynchronies and better quality of sleep.
引用
收藏
页码:1048 / 1054
页数:7
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