Cargando…
Short term evaluation of respiratory effort by premature infants supported with bubble nasal continuous airway pressure using Seattle-PAP and a standard bubble device
BACKGROUND: Almost one million prematurely born infants die annually from respiratory insufficiency, predominantly in countries with limited access to respiratory support for neonates. The primary hypothesis tested in the present study was that a modified device for bubble nasal continuous positive...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Public Library of Science
2018
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5874011/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29590143 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193807 |
_version_ | 1783310083436838912 |
---|---|
author | Welty, Stephen E. Rusin, Craig G. Stanberry, Larissa I. Mandy, George T. Gest, Alfred L. Ford, Jeremy M. Backes, Carl H. Richardson, C. Peter Howard, Christopher R. Hansen, Thomas N. Smith, Charles V. |
author_facet | Welty, Stephen E. Rusin, Craig G. Stanberry, Larissa I. Mandy, George T. Gest, Alfred L. Ford, Jeremy M. Backes, Carl H. Richardson, C. Peter Howard, Christopher R. Hansen, Thomas N. Smith, Charles V. |
author_sort | Welty, Stephen E. |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Almost one million prematurely born infants die annually from respiratory insufficiency, predominantly in countries with limited access to respiratory support for neonates. The primary hypothesis tested in the present study was that a modified device for bubble nasal continuous positive airway pressure (Bn-CPAP) would provide lower work of spontaneous breathing, estimated by esophageal pressure-rate products. METHODS: Infants born <32 weeks gestation and stable on Bn-CPAP with FiO(2) <0.30 were studied within 72 h following delivery. Esophageal pressures during spontaneous breathing were measured during 2 h on standard Bn-CPAP, then 2 h with Bn-CPAP using a modified bubble device presently termed Seattle-PAP, which produces a different pattern of pressure fluctuations and which provided greater respiratory support in preclinical studies, then 2 h on standard Bn-CPAP. RESULTS: All 40 infants enrolled completed the study and follow-up through 36 wks post menstrual age or hospital discharge, whichever came first. No infants were on supplemental oxygen at completion of follow-up. No infants developed pneumothoraces or nasal trauma, and no adverse events attributed to the study were observed. Pressure-rate products on the two devices were not different, but effort of breathing, assessed by areas under esophageal pressure-time curves, was lower with Seattle-PAP than with standard Bn-CPAP. CONCLUSION: Use of Seattle-PAP to implement Bn-CPAP lowers the effort of breathing exerted even by relatively healthy spontaneously breathing premature neonates. Whether the lower effort of breathing observed with Seattle-PAP translates to improvements in neonatal mortality or morbidity will need to be determined by studies in appropriate patient populations. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-5874011 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2018 |
publisher | Public Library of Science |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-58740112018-04-06 Short term evaluation of respiratory effort by premature infants supported with bubble nasal continuous airway pressure using Seattle-PAP and a standard bubble device Welty, Stephen E. Rusin, Craig G. Stanberry, Larissa I. Mandy, George T. Gest, Alfred L. Ford, Jeremy M. Backes, Carl H. Richardson, C. Peter Howard, Christopher R. Hansen, Thomas N. Smith, Charles V. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Almost one million prematurely born infants die annually from respiratory insufficiency, predominantly in countries with limited access to respiratory support for neonates. The primary hypothesis tested in the present study was that a modified device for bubble nasal continuous positive airway pressure (Bn-CPAP) would provide lower work of spontaneous breathing, estimated by esophageal pressure-rate products. METHODS: Infants born <32 weeks gestation and stable on Bn-CPAP with FiO(2) <0.30 were studied within 72 h following delivery. Esophageal pressures during spontaneous breathing were measured during 2 h on standard Bn-CPAP, then 2 h with Bn-CPAP using a modified bubble device presently termed Seattle-PAP, which produces a different pattern of pressure fluctuations and which provided greater respiratory support in preclinical studies, then 2 h on standard Bn-CPAP. RESULTS: All 40 infants enrolled completed the study and follow-up through 36 wks post menstrual age or hospital discharge, whichever came first. No infants were on supplemental oxygen at completion of follow-up. No infants developed pneumothoraces or nasal trauma, and no adverse events attributed to the study were observed. Pressure-rate products on the two devices were not different, but effort of breathing, assessed by areas under esophageal pressure-time curves, was lower with Seattle-PAP than with standard Bn-CPAP. CONCLUSION: Use of Seattle-PAP to implement Bn-CPAP lowers the effort of breathing exerted even by relatively healthy spontaneously breathing premature neonates. Whether the lower effort of breathing observed with Seattle-PAP translates to improvements in neonatal mortality or morbidity will need to be determined by studies in appropriate patient populations. Public Library of Science 2018-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5874011/ /pubmed/29590143 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193807 Text en © 2018 Welty et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. |
spellingShingle | Research Article Welty, Stephen E. Rusin, Craig G. Stanberry, Larissa I. Mandy, George T. Gest, Alfred L. Ford, Jeremy M. Backes, Carl H. Richardson, C. Peter Howard, Christopher R. Hansen, Thomas N. Smith, Charles V. Short term evaluation of respiratory effort by premature infants supported with bubble nasal continuous airway pressure using Seattle-PAP and a standard bubble device |
title | Short term evaluation of respiratory effort by premature infants supported with bubble nasal continuous airway pressure using Seattle-PAP and a standard bubble device |
title_full | Short term evaluation of respiratory effort by premature infants supported with bubble nasal continuous airway pressure using Seattle-PAP and a standard bubble device |
title_fullStr | Short term evaluation of respiratory effort by premature infants supported with bubble nasal continuous airway pressure using Seattle-PAP and a standard bubble device |
title_full_unstemmed | Short term evaluation of respiratory effort by premature infants supported with bubble nasal continuous airway pressure using Seattle-PAP and a standard bubble device |
title_short | Short term evaluation of respiratory effort by premature infants supported with bubble nasal continuous airway pressure using Seattle-PAP and a standard bubble device |
title_sort | short term evaluation of respiratory effort by premature infants supported with bubble nasal continuous airway pressure using seattle-pap and a standard bubble device |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5874011/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29590143 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193807 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT weltystephene shorttermevaluationofrespiratoryeffortbyprematureinfantssupportedwithbubblenasalcontinuousairwaypressureusingseattlepapandastandardbubbledevice AT rusincraigg shorttermevaluationofrespiratoryeffortbyprematureinfantssupportedwithbubblenasalcontinuousairwaypressureusingseattlepapandastandardbubbledevice AT stanberrylarissai shorttermevaluationofrespiratoryeffortbyprematureinfantssupportedwithbubblenasalcontinuousairwaypressureusingseattlepapandastandardbubbledevice AT mandygeorget shorttermevaluationofrespiratoryeffortbyprematureinfantssupportedwithbubblenasalcontinuousairwaypressureusingseattlepapandastandardbubbledevice AT gestalfredl shorttermevaluationofrespiratoryeffortbyprematureinfantssupportedwithbubblenasalcontinuousairwaypressureusingseattlepapandastandardbubbledevice AT fordjeremym shorttermevaluationofrespiratoryeffortbyprematureinfantssupportedwithbubblenasalcontinuousairwaypressureusingseattlepapandastandardbubbledevice AT backescarlh shorttermevaluationofrespiratoryeffortbyprematureinfantssupportedwithbubblenasalcontinuousairwaypressureusingseattlepapandastandardbubbledevice AT richardsoncpeter shorttermevaluationofrespiratoryeffortbyprematureinfantssupportedwithbubblenasalcontinuousairwaypressureusingseattlepapandastandardbubbledevice AT howardchristopherr shorttermevaluationofrespiratoryeffortbyprematureinfantssupportedwithbubblenasalcontinuousairwaypressureusingseattlepapandastandardbubbledevice AT hansenthomasn shorttermevaluationofrespiratoryeffortbyprematureinfantssupportedwithbubblenasalcontinuousairwaypressureusingseattlepapandastandardbubbledevice AT smithcharlesv shorttermevaluationofrespiratoryeffortbyprematureinfantssupportedwithbubblenasalcontinuousairwaypressureusingseattlepapandastandardbubbledevice |