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In medicine, mechanical ventilation method to assist or replace spontaneous breathing. Mechanical ventilation can be life-saving and is a mainstay of CPR, intensive care medicine, and anesthesia.
Mechanical ventilation is used when natural (spontaneous) breathing is absent (apnea) or insufficient. This may be the case in cases of intoxication, circulatory arrest, neurological disease or head trauma, paralysis of the breathing muscles due to spinal cord injury, or the effect of anesthetic or muscle relaxant drugs. Various pulmonary diseases or chest trauma, cardiac disease such as congestive heart failure, sepsis and shock may also necessitate ventilation.
Depending on the situation, mechanical ventilation may be continued for a few minutes or many years. While returning to spontaneous breathing is rarely a problem in routine anesthesia, weaning an intensive care patient from prolonged mechanical ventilation can take weeks or even months. Some patients never adequately regain the ability to breathe and require permanent mechanical ventilation. This is often the case with severe brain injury, spinal cord injury, or neurological disease.
While the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the bloodstream and the pulmonary airspace works by diffusion and requires no external work, air must be moved into and out of the lungs to make it available to the gas exchange process. In spontaneous breathing, a negative pressure is created in the pleural cavity by the muscles of respiration, and the resulting gradient between the atmospheric pressure and the pressure inside the thorax generates a flow of air. This is imitated by the negative-pressure ventilation that is employed in iron lungs. An iron lung works by creating an underpressure in a chamber which encloses the body and is sealed at the neck. With the patient's airways open, the resulting gradient to the atmospheric pressure serves to inflate the lungs.
All other techniques of ventilation are positive pressure ventilation techniques, meaning that air is forced into the lungs by an external overpressure.
The simplest form of positive pressure ventilation is mouth-to-mouth or mouth-to-nose expired air ventilation by a bystander. cardiopulmonary resuscitation In expired air ventilation it is not possible to deliver oxygen-enriched air. Patients may only receive about 16 percent oxygen, in contrast to 21 percent in ambient air or up to 100 percent in other methods. However it is more than adequate. There is also a risk of disease transmission through blood contact. Mechanical devices such as a bag-mask-valve system are therefore preferred where available, but only if the bystander has had sufficient training.
A bag-mask-valve system consists of a face mask that is pressed over the patient's nose and mouth to achieve a tight seal, an elastic self-inflating bag that can be manually compressed to deliver air to the patient, and a valve to direct air flow. A source of oxygen can be connected to a reservoir attached to the bag to achieve a higher concentration of oxygen than that of ambient air.
These simple techniques can maintain ventilation and consequently the life of an apnoeic patient for prolonged periods.
In anesthesia and intensive care, mechanical ventilators are routinely used.
Ventilators allow various modes of mechanical ventilation ranging from assisted spontaneous breathing to fully controlled ventilation. In some cases, a patient can breathe almost naturally, receiving only an occasional "push" of air to augment individual breaths. This is termed assisted (or augmented) ventilation. Assisted ventilation modes are used in anesthesia and in the process of weaning the patient from controlled ventilation.
In sicker patients, the degree of ventilator-driven respiration can be increased, and if necessary, the ventilator can take over the work of breathing entirely (controlled ventilation). Modern ventilators allow a continuous adaptation of the degree of mechanical assistance according to the patient's individual demands.
The lungs of ventilated patients have a tendency to collapse partially, leading to impaired gas exchange. Therefore, many ventilation modes allow the use of PEEP (positive end-expiratory pressure). With PEEP, there is a residual pressure at the end of a breathing cycle that keeps the lungs inflated.
Mechanical ventilation will be unsuccessful and dangerous unless the patient's airways are patent, meaning air can flow unimpeded back and forth into the lungs. It is also necessary to avoid air leakage so that air flow and pressure are maintained at the values set.
Another great risk is that of aspiration pneumonia. Aspiration is when stomach contents come back up the esophagus and enter the trachea to enter the lungs. When stomach contents get into the lungs, the patient can actually drown due to the volume of gastic material, or, with less material, suffer damage to the lung tissue due to the acid content of the stomach. Measures to prevent aspiration depend on the situation and the individual patient - endotracheal intubation is often necessary to protect against this.
There are various procedures and mechanical devices that provide protection against airway collapse, air leakage, and aspiration:
In most cases of mechanical ventilation, the patient's prognosis is determined by the underlying disease and its response to treatment. However, ventilation itself can cause significant problems that may prolong intensive care and sometimes lead to permanent injury and death. It is therefore desirable to limit mechanical ventilation to the shortest appropriate time.
Infectious complications, particularly pneumonia, occur in many patients who remain intubated for more than a few days. Tracheal intubation interferes with the natural defenses against lung infection, particularly with the process of "mucociliary clearance". This is a continuous transport of airway secretions from the lungs to the upper airways that serves to remove bacteria and foreign bodies. It is thought that the intubation-related disruption of this transport mechanism is a major factor in the development of pneumonia.
There is evidence that oxygen in higher concentrations may contribute to injury of lung tissue in ventilated patients. It is therefore recommended to set ventilators to deliver the lowest appropriate concentration of oxygen. However, in patients with severely impaired pulmonary gas exchange, high oxygen concentrations may be necessary for survival.
Most techniques of ventilation rely on an overpressure being applied to the lungs. In diseased lungs this may lead to further tissue injury caused by excessive mechanical stress (overdistension, shear forces, high peak pressure) and aggravated by inflammatory processes. Such mechanically induced lung injury can lead to severe impairment of the pulmonary gas exchange, thereby necessitating even more aggressive ventilation.
"Protective ventilation" is a collective term for strategies to minimize ventilation-associated lung injury, many of which rely on sophisticated ventilator settings to reduce overdistension of the lungs.
The iron lung was used through much of the middle 20th century, mostly for long-term ventilation. It was refined and used largely as a result of the polio epidemic that struck the world in the 1950s.
The machine is effectively a big elongated tank, which encases the patient up to the neck. The neck is sealed with a rubber gasket so that the patient's face (and airway) are exposed to the room air.
By means of a pump, the air is withdrawn mechanically to provide inspiration and released to room pressure to allow expiration.
Thus the patient inhales room air by a means of negative pressure applied to the patient's thoracic area. There are large portholes for nurse or home assistant access. patients could remain in these iron lungs for years at a time quite successfully. Some are still in use, notably with the Polio Wing Hospitals in England such as St Thomas' (by Westminster in London) and the John Radcliffe in Oxford.
The patients can talk and eat normally and see the world through a well placed series of mirrors.
A smaller device known as the curass was invented to place onto the chest wall like a giant plumber's suction plunger. It was prone to falling off and caused severe chaffing and skin damage and was not used as a long term device.
In recent years this device has re-surfaced as a modern polycarbonate shell with multiple seals and a high pressure oscillation pump. It has mostly been effective with children and is still in use in domiciliary ventilation in West England and Wales.