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Computational simulation to assess patient safety of uncompensated COVID-19 two-patient ventilator sharing using the Pulse Physiology Engine

BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic is stretching medical resources internationally, sometimes creating ventilator shortages that complicate clinical and ethical situations. The possibility of needing to ventilate multiple patients with a single ventilator raises patient health and safety concerns in...

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Autores principales: Webb, Jeffrey B., Bray, Aaron, Asare, Philip K., Clipp, Rachel B., Mehta, Yatin B., Penupolu, Sudheer, Patel, Aalpen A., Poler, S. Mark
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7688119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33237927
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242532
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author Webb, Jeffrey B.
Bray, Aaron
Asare, Philip K.
Clipp, Rachel B.
Mehta, Yatin B.
Penupolu, Sudheer
Patel, Aalpen A.
Poler, S. Mark
author_facet Webb, Jeffrey B.
Bray, Aaron
Asare, Philip K.
Clipp, Rachel B.
Mehta, Yatin B.
Penupolu, Sudheer
Patel, Aalpen A.
Poler, S. Mark
author_sort Webb, Jeffrey B.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic is stretching medical resources internationally, sometimes creating ventilator shortages that complicate clinical and ethical situations. The possibility of needing to ventilate multiple patients with a single ventilator raises patient health and safety concerns in addition to clinical conditions needing treatment. Wherever ventilators are employed, additional tubing and splitting adaptors may be available. Adjustable flow-compensating resistance for differences in lung compliance on individual limbs may not be readily implementable. By exploring a number and range of possible contributing factors using computational simulation without risk of patient harm, this paper attempts to define useful bounds for ventilation parameters when compensatory resistance in limbs of a shared breathing circuit is not possible. This desperate approach to shared ventilation support would be a last resort when alternatives have been exhausted. METHODS: A whole-body computational physiology model (using lumped parameters) was used to simulate each patient being ventilated. The primary model of a single patient with a dedicated ventilator was augmented to model two patients sharing a single ventilator. In addition to lung mechanics or estimation of CO(2) and pH expected for set ventilation parameters (considerations of lung physiology alone), full physiological simulation provides estimates of additional values for oxyhemoglobin saturation, arterial oxygen tension, and other patient parameters. A range of ventilator settings and patient characteristics were simulated for paired patients. FINDINGS: To be useful for clinicians, attention has been directed to clinically available parameters. These simulations show patient outcome during multi-patient ventilation is most closely correlated to lung compliance, oxygenation index, oxygen saturation index, and end-tidal carbon dioxide of individual patients. The simulated patient outcome metrics were satisfactory when the lung compliance difference between two patients was less than 12 mL/cmH(2)O, and the oxygen saturation index difference was less than 2 mmHg. INTERPRETATION: In resource-limited regions of the world, the COVID-19 pandemic will result in equipment shortages. While single-patient ventilation is preferable, if that option is unavailable and ventilator sharing using limbs without flow resistance compensation is the only available alternative, these simulations provide a conceptual framework and guidelines for clinical patient selection.
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spelling pubmed-76881192020-12-05 Computational simulation to assess patient safety of uncompensated COVID-19 two-patient ventilator sharing using the Pulse Physiology Engine Webb, Jeffrey B. Bray, Aaron Asare, Philip K. Clipp, Rachel B. Mehta, Yatin B. Penupolu, Sudheer Patel, Aalpen A. Poler, S. Mark PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic is stretching medical resources internationally, sometimes creating ventilator shortages that complicate clinical and ethical situations. The possibility of needing to ventilate multiple patients with a single ventilator raises patient health and safety concerns in addition to clinical conditions needing treatment. Wherever ventilators are employed, additional tubing and splitting adaptors may be available. Adjustable flow-compensating resistance for differences in lung compliance on individual limbs may not be readily implementable. By exploring a number and range of possible contributing factors using computational simulation without risk of patient harm, this paper attempts to define useful bounds for ventilation parameters when compensatory resistance in limbs of a shared breathing circuit is not possible. This desperate approach to shared ventilation support would be a last resort when alternatives have been exhausted. METHODS: A whole-body computational physiology model (using lumped parameters) was used to simulate each patient being ventilated. The primary model of a single patient with a dedicated ventilator was augmented to model two patients sharing a single ventilator. In addition to lung mechanics or estimation of CO(2) and pH expected for set ventilation parameters (considerations of lung physiology alone), full physiological simulation provides estimates of additional values for oxyhemoglobin saturation, arterial oxygen tension, and other patient parameters. A range of ventilator settings and patient characteristics were simulated for paired patients. FINDINGS: To be useful for clinicians, attention has been directed to clinically available parameters. These simulations show patient outcome during multi-patient ventilation is most closely correlated to lung compliance, oxygenation index, oxygen saturation index, and end-tidal carbon dioxide of individual patients. The simulated patient outcome metrics were satisfactory when the lung compliance difference between two patients was less than 12 mL/cmH(2)O, and the oxygen saturation index difference was less than 2 mmHg. INTERPRETATION: In resource-limited regions of the world, the COVID-19 pandemic will result in equipment shortages. While single-patient ventilation is preferable, if that option is unavailable and ventilator sharing using limbs without flow resistance compensation is the only available alternative, these simulations provide a conceptual framework and guidelines for clinical patient selection. Public Library of Science 2020-11-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7688119/ /pubmed/33237927 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242532 Text en © 2020 Webb 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
Webb, Jeffrey B.
Bray, Aaron
Asare, Philip K.
Clipp, Rachel B.
Mehta, Yatin B.
Penupolu, Sudheer
Patel, Aalpen A.
Poler, S. Mark
Computational simulation to assess patient safety of uncompensated COVID-19 two-patient ventilator sharing using the Pulse Physiology Engine
title Computational simulation to assess patient safety of uncompensated COVID-19 two-patient ventilator sharing using the Pulse Physiology Engine
title_full Computational simulation to assess patient safety of uncompensated COVID-19 two-patient ventilator sharing using the Pulse Physiology Engine
title_fullStr Computational simulation to assess patient safety of uncompensated COVID-19 two-patient ventilator sharing using the Pulse Physiology Engine
title_full_unstemmed Computational simulation to assess patient safety of uncompensated COVID-19 two-patient ventilator sharing using the Pulse Physiology Engine
title_short Computational simulation to assess patient safety of uncompensated COVID-19 two-patient ventilator sharing using the Pulse Physiology Engine
title_sort computational simulation to assess patient safety of uncompensated covid-19 two-patient ventilator sharing using the pulse physiology engine
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7688119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33237927
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242532
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