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Accuracy of P0.1 measurements performed by ICU ventilators: a bench study

BACKGROUND: Occlusion pressure at 100 ms (P0.1), defined as the negative pressure measured 100 ms after the initiation of an inspiratory effort performed against a closed respiratory circuit, has been shown to be well correlated with central respiratory drive and respiratory effort. Automated P0.1 m...

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Autores principales: Beloncle, François, Piquilloud, Lise, Olivier, Pierre-Yves, Vuillermoz, Alice, Yvin, Elise, Mercat, Alain, Richard, Jean-Christophe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6744533/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31520230
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13613-019-0576-x
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author Beloncle, François
Piquilloud, Lise
Olivier, Pierre-Yves
Vuillermoz, Alice
Yvin, Elise
Mercat, Alain
Richard, Jean-Christophe
author_facet Beloncle, François
Piquilloud, Lise
Olivier, Pierre-Yves
Vuillermoz, Alice
Yvin, Elise
Mercat, Alain
Richard, Jean-Christophe
author_sort Beloncle, François
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Occlusion pressure at 100 ms (P0.1), defined as the negative pressure measured 100 ms after the initiation of an inspiratory effort performed against a closed respiratory circuit, has been shown to be well correlated with central respiratory drive and respiratory effort. Automated P0.1 measurement is available on modern ventilators. However, the reliability of this measurement has never been studied. This bench study aimed at assessing the accuracy of P0.1 measurements automatically performed by different ICU ventilators. METHODS: Five ventilators set in pressure support mode were tested using a two-chamber test lung model simulating spontaneous breathing. P0.1 automatically displayed on the ventilator screen (P0.1(vent)) was recorded at three levels of simulated inspiratory effort corresponding to P0.1 of 2.5, 5 and 10 cm H(2)O measured directly at the test lung and considered as the reference values of P0.1 (P0.1(ref)). The pressure drop after 100 ms was measured offline on the airway pressure–time curves recorded during the automated P0.1 measurements (P0.1(aw)). P0.1(vent) was compared to P0.1(ref) and to P0.1(aw). To assess the potential impact of the circuit length, P0.1 were also measured with circuits of different lengths (P0.1(circuit)). RESULTS: Variations of P0.1(vent) correlated well with variations of P0.1(ref). Overall, P0.1(vent) underestimated P0.1(ref) except for the Löwenstein(®) ventilator at P0.1(ref) 2.5 cm H(2)O and for the Getinge group(®) ventilator at P0.1(ref) 10 cm H(2)O. The agreement between P0.1(vent) and P0.1(ref) assessed with the Bland–Altman method gave a mean bias of − 1.3 cm H(2)O (limits of agreement: 1 and − 3.7 cm H(2)O). Analysis of airway pressure–time and flow–time curves showed that all the tested ventilators except the Getinge group(®) ventilator performed an occlusion of at least 100 ms to measure P0.1. The agreement between P0.1(vent) and P0.1(aw) assessed with the Bland–Altman method gave a mean bias of 0.5 cm H(2)O (limits of agreement: 2.4 and − 1.4 cm H(2)O). The circuit’s length impacted P0.1 measurements’ values. A longer circuit was associated with lower P0.1(circuit) values. CONCLUSION: P0.1(vent) relative changes are well correlated to P0.1(ref) changes in all the tested ventilators. Accuracy of absolute values of P0.1(vent) varies according to the ventilator model. Overall, P0.1(vent) underestimates P0.1(ref). The length of the circuit may partially explain P0.1(vent) underestimation.
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spelling pubmed-67445332019-09-27 Accuracy of P0.1 measurements performed by ICU ventilators: a bench study Beloncle, François Piquilloud, Lise Olivier, Pierre-Yves Vuillermoz, Alice Yvin, Elise Mercat, Alain Richard, Jean-Christophe Ann Intensive Care Research BACKGROUND: Occlusion pressure at 100 ms (P0.1), defined as the negative pressure measured 100 ms after the initiation of an inspiratory effort performed against a closed respiratory circuit, has been shown to be well correlated with central respiratory drive and respiratory effort. Automated P0.1 measurement is available on modern ventilators. However, the reliability of this measurement has never been studied. This bench study aimed at assessing the accuracy of P0.1 measurements automatically performed by different ICU ventilators. METHODS: Five ventilators set in pressure support mode were tested using a two-chamber test lung model simulating spontaneous breathing. P0.1 automatically displayed on the ventilator screen (P0.1(vent)) was recorded at three levels of simulated inspiratory effort corresponding to P0.1 of 2.5, 5 and 10 cm H(2)O measured directly at the test lung and considered as the reference values of P0.1 (P0.1(ref)). The pressure drop after 100 ms was measured offline on the airway pressure–time curves recorded during the automated P0.1 measurements (P0.1(aw)). P0.1(vent) was compared to P0.1(ref) and to P0.1(aw). To assess the potential impact of the circuit length, P0.1 were also measured with circuits of different lengths (P0.1(circuit)). RESULTS: Variations of P0.1(vent) correlated well with variations of P0.1(ref). Overall, P0.1(vent) underestimated P0.1(ref) except for the Löwenstein(®) ventilator at P0.1(ref) 2.5 cm H(2)O and for the Getinge group(®) ventilator at P0.1(ref) 10 cm H(2)O. The agreement between P0.1(vent) and P0.1(ref) assessed with the Bland–Altman method gave a mean bias of − 1.3 cm H(2)O (limits of agreement: 1 and − 3.7 cm H(2)O). Analysis of airway pressure–time and flow–time curves showed that all the tested ventilators except the Getinge group(®) ventilator performed an occlusion of at least 100 ms to measure P0.1. The agreement between P0.1(vent) and P0.1(aw) assessed with the Bland–Altman method gave a mean bias of 0.5 cm H(2)O (limits of agreement: 2.4 and − 1.4 cm H(2)O). The circuit’s length impacted P0.1 measurements’ values. A longer circuit was associated with lower P0.1(circuit) values. CONCLUSION: P0.1(vent) relative changes are well correlated to P0.1(ref) changes in all the tested ventilators. Accuracy of absolute values of P0.1(vent) varies according to the ventilator model. Overall, P0.1(vent) underestimates P0.1(ref). The length of the circuit may partially explain P0.1(vent) underestimation. Springer International Publishing 2019-09-13 /pmc/articles/PMC6744533/ /pubmed/31520230 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13613-019-0576-x Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
spellingShingle Research
Beloncle, François
Piquilloud, Lise
Olivier, Pierre-Yves
Vuillermoz, Alice
Yvin, Elise
Mercat, Alain
Richard, Jean-Christophe
Accuracy of P0.1 measurements performed by ICU ventilators: a bench study
title Accuracy of P0.1 measurements performed by ICU ventilators: a bench study
title_full Accuracy of P0.1 measurements performed by ICU ventilators: a bench study
title_fullStr Accuracy of P0.1 measurements performed by ICU ventilators: a bench study
title_full_unstemmed Accuracy of P0.1 measurements performed by ICU ventilators: a bench study
title_short Accuracy of P0.1 measurements performed by ICU ventilators: a bench study
title_sort accuracy of p0.1 measurements performed by icu ventilators: a bench study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6744533/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31520230
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13613-019-0576-x
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