High-frequency Jet Ventilation in Postoperative Respiratory Failure
Open Access
- 1 October 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Anesthesiology
- Vol. 59 (4) , 281-287
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-198310000-00003
Abstract
Critically ill patients (24) in postoperative respiratory failure received high-frequency jet ventilation (HFJV). In 15 patients (Group A), respiratory frequency was maintained at 100/min and 3 different inspiratory/expiratory time (I/E) ratios were used at random: 0.25, 0.43 and 0.67. In 9 patients (Group B) I/E ratio was maintained at 0.43, and 6 respiratory frequencies were used at random: 100/min, 200/min; 300/min, 400/min, 500/min and 600/min. HFJV significantly increased PaO2 [arterial partial pressure of O2] in both groups. Mean airway pressure did not alter with respiratory frequency but increased with I/E ratio. In Group A patients, a significant relationship was found between improvement in PaO2 and the increase in mean airway pressure (r = 0.897, P < 0.001). A very close relationship was observed between mean alveolar pressure and mean airway pressure (r = 0.973, P < 0.001), suggesting that a PEEP [positive end-expiratory pressure] effect was created at the alveolar level. The increase in mean airway pressure induced an increase in pulmonary volume. In Group A patients, the mean increase in pulmonary volume above apneic functional residual capacity was +362 ml for an I/E ratio of 0.25, +1095 ml for an I/E ratio of 0.43 and +1936 ml for an I/E ratio of 0.67. In Group B patients, the mean increase in pulmonary volume above apneic functional residual capacity did not alter significantly with respiratory frequency. For a given ventilatory setting, the greater the static respiratory compliance, the greater was the increase in pulmonary volume. Mean airway pressure is apparently a principal determinant of arterial O2 tension during HFJV and I/E ratio rather than respiratory frequency influences PaO2 during this type of ventilation.This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tidal Volume and Frequency Dependence of Carbon Dioxide Elimination by High-Frequency VentilationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1981
- High-frequency Jet Ventilation During the Treatment of Acute Fulminant Pulmonary EdemaChest, 1981
- Hemodynamic and metabolic effects of morphine in the critically ill.Circulation, 1981
- Influence of Positive End-Expiratory Pressure on Left Ventricular PerformanceNew England Journal of Medicine, 1981
- CLINICAL-EVALUATION OF HIGH-FREQUENCY POSITIVE-PRESSURE VENTILATION (HFPPV) IN PATIENTS SCHEDULED FOR OPEN-CHEST SURGERY1981
- FUNCTIONAL RESIDUAL CAPACITY AND VENTILATORY PRESURES DURING POSITIVE-PRESSURE VENTILATION AT HIGH FREQUENCIESBritish Journal of Anaesthesia, 1980
- EFFECTS OF HIGH-FREQUENCY POSITIVE-PRESSURE VENTILATION (HFPPV) AND GENERAL-ANESTHESIA ON INTRA-PULMONARY GAS-DISTRIBUTION IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING DIAGNOSTIC BRONCHOSCOPY1980
- Variations in inspiratory: expiratory ratio and airway pressure wave form during mechanical ventilation: The significance of mean airway pressureThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1979
- The effect of independent variations in inspiratory-expiratory ratio and end expiratory pressure during mechanical ventilation in hyaline membrane disease: The significance of mean airway pressureThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1977
- Respiratory elastances in relaxed and paralyzed states in normal and abnormal men.Journal of Applied Physiology, 1967