Impact of PAV Versus NAVA on Patient-Ventilator Synchrony and Respiratory Muscle Unloading
Respiratory Failure
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for Respiratory Failure focused on measuring respiration, artificial
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Age 18 years or older
- Respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation
- Spontaneously breathing (able to generate flow/ pressure/ volume triggers on control modes of ventilation or on a mode of mechanically assisted spontaneous breathing)
- Requiring FiO2< 60% and PEEP< 10cm H2O to maintain oxygen saturations >90%
Exclusion Criteria:
- Pregnancy
- Inability to tolerate spontaneous breathing
- Gastro-esophageal pathology (including but not limited to recent gastric or esophageal surgery, history of varices, known anatomical gastric or esophageal defects such as strictures, hernias or fistulas)
- Agitation necessitating major sedative infusions
- Hemodynamic instability necessitating active adjustments in vasopressor therapy
- Coagulopathy
- New intracranial pathology (stroke, hemorrhage, meningitis, encephalitis)
- Paralyzed diaphragm
Sites / Locations
- Massachusetts General Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
PAV Ventilation
NAVA Ventilation
PAV is a mode of ventilation in which the only set parameter is the proportion of work/effort that is provided regardless of the ventilatory pattern the patient chooses- the patient has full control over pressure, volume, flow and time of inspiration as well as respiratory rate. In this mode, the ventilator measures patient respiratory mechanics every 10-15 breaths and delivers a level of pressure proportional to patient effort, thereby maintaining a set proportion of patient effort regardless of the patient's ventilatory pattern. The patients will be on this mode of ventilation for 60 minutes.
With NAVA, delivery from the ventilator is triggered, controlled and cycled by the diaphragmatic EMG signal (Edi), which is measured by a specially designed nasogastric or orogastric catheter (NGT or OGT) containing EMG electrodes that cross the diaphragm. In this mode, the ventilator measures the Edi with each breath and instantaneously delivers a level of pressure proportional to Edi magnitude, thereby providing a set proportion of effort on a breath-to-breath basis. The patients will be on this mode of ventilation for 60 minutes.