| Mode | Mechanism | Indications | Contraindications |
|---|---|---|---|
| CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure) |
Constant pressure throughout respiratory cycle | Cardiogenic pulmonary edema, obstructive sleep apnea | Altered mental status, inability to protect airway, facial trauma, excessive secretions, hemodynamic instability, untreated pneumothorax |
| BiPAP (Bilevel Positive Airway Pressure) |
IPAP (inspiratory) + EPAP (expiratory). Pressure support = IPAP − EPAP | COPD exacerbation, acute hypercapnic respiratory failure, neuromuscular weakness |
| Feature | Volume Control (VC / AC‑VC) | Pressure Control (PC / AC‑PC) |
|---|---|---|
| Set parameter | Tidal Volume (Vᴛ) | Inspiratory Pressure (above PEEP) |
| Resulting variable | Pressure varies with compliance | Tidal volume varies with compliance |
| Advantage | Guaranteed minute ventilation | Limits barotrauma, improves synchrony |
| Disadvantage | Risk of high pressures (barotrauma) | Hypoventilation if compliance drops suddenly |
| Waveform | Square flow pattern | Decelerating flow pattern |
| Mode | Description | Clinical Use |
|---|---|---|
| Assist‑Control (AC) | Every breath (triggered or mandatory) delivers full set Vᴛ or pressure. Patient can trigger additional breaths. | Initial mode for most critically ill patients. Guarantees support but may cause hyperventilation. |
| Synchronized Intermittent Mandatory Ventilation (SIMV) | Set number of mandatory breaths; spontaneous breaths between mandatory breaths receive only pressure support (or none). | Weaning mode (though less favored now). Reduces respiratory muscle atrophy. |
| Pressure Support Ventilation (PSV) | Spontaneous breathing mode; patient triggers all breaths, ventilator provides set pressure boost. | Weaning (spontaneous breathing trials) and for comfortable spontaneous ventilation. |
| Airway Pressure Release Ventilation (APRV) | High continuous pressure (P‑high) with brief releases (T‑low) to allow CO₂ clearance. Inverse I:E ratio. | Severe ARDS with refractory hypoxemia; improves oxygenation and may reduce sedation needs. |
| Setting | Typical Starting Value | Rationale / Adjustment |
|---|---|---|
| FiO₂ | 100% (then titrate down) | Target SpO₂ 88–95% (or 94–98% non‑COPD). Wean FiO₂ to ≤60% ASAP to avoid O₂ toxicity. |
| Tidal Volume (Vᴛ) | 6–8 mL/kg ideal body weight (IBW) | ARDS: 6 mL/kg IBW. IBW male: 50 + 2.3 × (height in inches − 60); female: 45.5 + 2.3 × (height in inches − 60). |
| Respiratory Rate (RR) | 12–16 breaths/min | Adjust to achieve desired PaCO₂ and pH. Avoid auto‑PEEP with high rates. |
| PEEP | 5 cm H₂O | Prevents atelectasis. Increase for hypoxemia (ARDS). Caution: high PEEP can ↓ venous return. |
| Inspiratory Flow Rate | 60 L/min | Higher flow → shorter inspiratory time, longer expiration (helps in obstructive disease). |
| I:E Ratio | 1:2 to 1:3 | Normal inspiration ~1 sec, expiration ~2 sec. Inverse ratio (2:1) used in APRV for oxygenation. |
| FiO₂ | 0.3 | 0.4 | 0.5 | 0.6 | 0.7 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 1.0 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PEEP (Lower) | 5 | 5–8 | 8–10 | 10 | 10–14 | 14 | 14–18 | 18–24 |
Prone Positioning: Recommended for moderate‑severe ARDS (PaO₂/FiO₂ <150) for ≥16 hours/day. Improves V/Q matching and reduces mortality.
→ Increased airway resistance
Examples: bronchospasm, mucus plug, kinked ETT, biting tube
→ Decreased lung compliance
Examples: ARDS, pulmonary edema, pneumothorax, abdominal distension
| Complication | Mechanism | Prevention / Management |
|---|---|---|
| Ventilator‑Associated Pneumonia (VAP) | Aspiration of colonized secretions around ETT cuff | Head of bed >30°, subglottic suction, daily SBT, oral care with chlorhexidine |
| Barotrauma / Volutrauma | Excessive pressure (Pplat >30) or volume | Low Vᴛ strategy, limit Pplat, monitor driving pressure |
| Ventilator‑Induced Diaphragm Dysfunction | Disuse atrophy from controlled ventilation | Daily SBT, maintain spontaneous breathing efforts |
| Hemodynamic Compromise | ↑ intrathoracic pressure ↓ venous return (preload) | Optimize PEEP, consider fluids, lower Vᴛ if auto‑PEEP |
| Oxygen Toxicity | Free radical injury from high FiO₂ | Wean FiO₂ to ≤0.6 as soon as possible |
| Auto‑PEEP / Air Trapping | Incomplete exhalation | Decrease RR, increase flow, treat bronchospasm |
| Alarm | Common Causes | Initial Action |
|---|---|---|
| High Pressure Alarm | Secretions, biting tube, bronchospasm, pneumothorax, coughing, kinked circuit | Listen to breath sounds, suction, check ETT position, assess for pneumothorax |
| Low Pressure / Low Volume Alarm | Disconnection, leak in circuit, cuff leak, ETT displacement | Check connections, assess cuff pressure, confirm ETT depth |
| Low Minute Ventilation Alarm | Apnea, patient not triggering, sedation | Check patient effort, ensure backup rate set |
| High Respiratory Rate Alarm | Pain, anxiety, metabolic acidosis, hypoxemia | Treat underlying cause; adjust ventilator if dyssynchrony |
| Apnea Alarm | No spontaneous breaths in spontaneous mode | Switch to AC mode, assess sedation, check for ETT obstruction |
| Problem | Parameter to Adjust | Direction | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypoxemia (low PaO₂) | FiO₂, PEEP | ↑ FiO₂ first, then ↑ PEEP | Consider recruitment maneuver, prone positioning |
| Hypercapnia (high PaCO₂) | Respiratory Rate, Tidal Volume | ↑ RR or ↑ Vᴛ (if Pplat safe) | In ARDS, tolerate permissive hypercapnia to keep Vᴛ 6 mL/kg |
| Hypocapnia (low PaCO₂) | Respiratory Rate | ↓ RR | If on AC, may need sedation to reduce patient triggering |
| High Plateau Pressure (>30) | Tidal Volume | ↓ Vᴛ (even if PaCO₂ rises) | Use IBW; consider switching to PC mode |
| Auto‑PEEP / Air Trapping | RR, Inspiratory Flow | ↓ RR, ↑ Flow | Increase expiratory time (lower I:E ratio) |