by Anne-Fleur Haudebourg, Tommaso Maraffi, Samuel Tuffet,
François Perier, Nicolas de Prost, Keyvan Razazi, Armand Mekontso Dessap and
Guillaume Carteaux
Annals of
Intensive Care volume 11,
Article number: 147 (2021)
Background
Ineffective triggering is frequent during pressure support
ventilation (PSV) and may persist despite ventilator adjustment, leading to
refractory asynchrony. We aimed to assess the effect of proportional assist
ventilation with load-adjustable gain factors (PAV+) on the occurrence of
refractory ineffective triggering.
Design
Observational assessment followed by prospective cross-over
physiological study.
Setting
Academic medical ICU.
Patients
Ineffective triggering was detected during PSV by a
twice-daily inspection of the ventilator’s screen. The impact of pressure
support level (PSL) adjustments on the occurrence of asynchrony was recorded.
Patients experiencing refractory ineffective triggering, defined as persisting
asynchrony at the lowest tolerated PSL, were included in the physiological
study.
Interventions
Physiological study: Flow, airway, and esophageal pressures
were continuously recorded during 10 min under PSV with the lowest
tolerated PSL, and then under PAV+ with the gain adjusted to target a muscle
pressure between 5 and 10 cmH2O.
Measurements
Primary endpoint was the comparison of asynchrony index
between PSV and PAV+ after PSL and gain adjustments.
Results
Among 36 patients identified having ineffective triggering
under PSV, 21 (58%) exhibited refractory ineffective triggering. The lowest
tolerated PSL was higher in patients with refractory asynchrony as compared to
patients with non-refractory ineffective triggering. Twelve out of the 21
patients with refractory ineffective triggering were included in the
physiological study. The median lowest tolerated PSL was 17 cmH2O [12–18] with
a PEEP of 7 cmH2O [5–8] and FiO2 of 40% [39–42]. The median gain during
PAV+ was 73% [65–80]. The asynchrony index was significantly lower during PAV+
than PSV (2.7% [1.0–5.4] vs. 22.7% [10.3–40.1], p < 0.001) and
consistently decreased in every patient with PAV+. Esophageal pressure–time
product (PTPes) did not significantly differ between the two modes (107 cmH2O/s/min
[79–131] under PSV vs. 149 cmH2O/s/min [129–170] under PAV+, p = 0.092),
but the proportion of PTPes lost in ineffective triggering was significantly
lower with PAV+ (2 cmH2O/s/min [1–6] vs. 8 cmH2O/s/min [3–30], p = 0.012).
Conclusions
Among patients with ineffective triggering under PSV, PSL
adjustment failed to eliminate asynchrony in 58% of them (21 of 36 patients).
In these patients with refractory ineffective triggering, switching from PSV to
PAV+ significantly reduced or even suppressed the incidence of asynchrony.
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