by Daniele Natalini, Domenico L. Grieco, Maria Teresa
Santantonio, Lucrezia Mincione, Flavia Toni, Gian Marco Anzellotti, Davide
Eleuteri, Pierluigi Di Giannatale, Massimo Antonelli and Salvatore Maurizio
Maggiore
Annals
of Intensive Care volume 9,
Article number: 114 (2019)
Background
High-flow oxygen therapy via nasal cannula (HFOTNASAL)
increases airway pressure, ameliorates oxygenation and reduces work of
breathing. High-flow oxygen can be delivered through tracheostomy (HFOTTRACHEAL),
but its physiological effects have not been systematically described. We
conducted a cross-over study to elucidate the effects of increasing flow rates
of HFOTTRACHEAL on gas exchange, respiratory rate and endotracheal
pressure and to compare lower airway pressure produced by HFOTNASAL and
HFOTTRACHEAL.
Methods
Twenty-six tracheostomized patients underwent standard
oxygen therapy through a conventional heat and moisture exchanger, and then
HFOTTRACHEAL through a heated humidifier, with gas flow set at 10, 30 and
50 L/min. Each step lasted 30 min; gas flow sequence during HFOTTRACHEAL was
randomized. In five patients, measurements were repeated during HFOTTRACHEAL before
tracheostomy decannulation and immediately after during HFOTNASAL. In each
step, arterial blood gases, respiratory rate, and tracheal pressure were
measured.
Results
During HFOTTRACHEAL, PaO2/FiO2 ratio and tracheal
expiratory pressure slightly increased proportionally to gas flow. The mean
[95% confidence interval] expiratory pressure raise induced by 10-L/min
increase in flow was 0.2 [0.1–0.2] cmH2O (ρ = 0.77, p < 0.001).
Compared to standard oxygen, HFOTTRACHEAL limited the negative inspiratory
swing in tracheal pressure; at 50 L/min, but not with other settings, HFOTTRACHEAL increased
mean tracheal expiratory pressure by (mean difference [95% CI]) 0.4 [0.3–0.6]
cmH2O, peak tracheal expiratory pressure by 0.4 [0.2–0.6] cmH2O, improved PaO2/FiO2 ratio
by 40 [8–71] mmHg, and reduced respiratory rate by 1.9 [0.3–3.6] breaths/min
without PaCO2 changes. As compared to HFOTTRACHEAL, HFOTNASAL produced
higher tracheal mean and peak expiratory pressure (at 50 L/min, mean difference
[95% CI]: 3 [1–5] cmH2O and 4 [1–7] cmH2O, respectively).
Conclusions
As compared to standard oxygen, 50 L/min of HFOTTRACHEAL are
needed to improve oxygenation, reduce respiratory rate and provide small degree
of positive airway expiratory pressure, which, however, is significantly lower
than the one produced by HFOTNASAL.
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