The ventilator of the future: key principles and unmet needs
Critical Care volume 28,
Article number: 284 (2024) Published: 29 August 2024
Abstract
Persistent shortcomings of invasive positive pressure
ventilation make it less than an ideal intervention. Over the course of more
than seven decades, clinical experience and scientific investigation have
helped define its range of hazards and limitations. Apart from compromised
airway clearance and lower airway contamination imposed by endotracheal
intubation, the primary hazards inherent to positive pressure ventilation may
be considered in three broad categories: hemodynamic impairment, potential for
ventilation-induced lung injury, and impairment of the respiratory muscle pump.
To optimize care delivery, it is crucial for monitoring and machine outputs to
integrate information with the potential to impact the underlying requirements
of the patient and/or responses of the cardiopulmonary system to ventilatory
interventions. Trending analysis, timely interventions, and closer
communication with the caregiver would limit adverse clinical trajectories.
Judging from the rapid progress of recent years, we are encouraged to think
that insights from physiologic research and emerging technological capability
may eventually address important aspects of current deficiencies.
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