OBJECTIVE: To compare sleep quality between two types of ventilators commonly used for noninvasive ventilation: conventional ICU ventilators and dedicated noninvasive ventilators; and to evaluate sleep during and between noninvasive ventilation sessions in critically ill patients. DESIGN: Physiological sleep study with a randomized assessment of the ventilator type. SETTING: Medical ICU in a university hospital. PATIENTS: Twenty-four patients admitted for acute hypercapnic respiratory failure requiring noninvasive ventilation. INTERVENTIONS: Patients were randomly assigned to receive noninvasive ventilation with either an ICU ventilators (n = 12) or a dedicated noninvasive ventilators (n = 12), and their sleep and respiratory parameters were recorded by polysomnography from 4 PM to 9 AM on the second, third, or fourth day after noninvasive ventilation initiation. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:Sleep architecture was similar between ventilator groups, including sleep fragmentation (number of arousals and awakenings/hr), but the dedicated noninvasive ventilators group showed a higher patient-ventilator asynchrony-related fragmentation (28% [17-44] vs. 14% [7.0-22]; p = 0.02), whereas the ICU ventilators group exhibited a higher noise-related fragmentation. Ineffective efforts were more frequent in the dedicated noninvasive ventilators group than in the ICU ventilators group (34 ineffective efforts/hr of sleep [15-125] vs. two [0-13]; p < 0.01), possibly as a result of a higher tidal volume (7.2 mL/kg [6.7-8.8] vs. 5.8 [5.1-6.8]; p = 0.04). More sleep time occurred and sleep quality was better during noninvasive ventilation sessions than during spontaneous breathing periods (p < 0.05) as a result of greater slow wave and rapid eye movement sleep and lower fragmentation. CONCLUSIONS: There were no observed differences in sleep quality corresponding to the type of ventilator used despite slight differences in patient-ventilator asynchrony. Noninvasive ventilation sessions did not prevent patients from sleeping; on the contrary, they seem to aid sleep when compared with unassisted breathing.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: To compare sleep quality between two types of ventilators commonly used for noninvasive ventilation: conventional ICU ventilators and dedicated noninvasive ventilators; and to evaluate sleep during and between noninvasive ventilation sessions in critically illpatients. DESIGN: Physiological sleep study with a randomized assessment of the ventilator type. SETTING: Medical ICU in a university hospital. PATIENTS: Twenty-four patients admitted for acute hypercapnic respiratory failure requiring noninvasive ventilation. INTERVENTIONS:Patients were randomly assigned to receive noninvasive ventilation with either an ICU ventilators (n = 12) or a dedicated noninvasive ventilators (n = 12), and their sleep and respiratory parameters were recorded by polysomnography from 4 PM to 9 AM on the second, third, or fourth day after noninvasive ventilation initiation. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Sleep architecture was similar between ventilator groups, including sleep fragmentation (number of arousals and awakenings/hr), but the dedicated noninvasive ventilators group showed a higher patient-ventilator asynchrony-related fragmentation (28% [17-44] vs. 14% [7.0-22]; p = 0.02), whereas the ICU ventilators group exhibited a higher noise-related fragmentation. Ineffective efforts were more frequent in the dedicated noninvasive ventilators group than in the ICU ventilators group (34 ineffective efforts/hr of sleep [15-125] vs. two [0-13]; p < 0.01), possibly as a result of a higher tidal volume (7.2 mL/kg [6.7-8.8] vs. 5.8 [5.1-6.8]; p = 0.04). More sleep time occurred and sleep quality was better during noninvasive ventilation sessions than during spontaneous breathing periods (p < 0.05) as a result of greater slow wave and rapid eye movement sleep and lower fragmentation. CONCLUSIONS: There were no observed differences in sleep quality corresponding to the type of ventilator used despite slight differences in patient-ventilator asynchrony. Noninvasive ventilation sessions did not prevent patients from sleeping; on the contrary, they seem to aid sleep when compared with unassisted breathing.
Authors: Lluís Blanch; Ana Villagra; Bernat Sales; Jaume Montanya; Umberto Lucangelo; Manel Luján; Oscar García-Esquirol; Encarna Chacón; Anna Estruga; Joan C Oliva; Alberto Hernández-Abadia; Guillermo M Albaiceta; Enrique Fernández-Mondejar; Rafael Fernández; Josefina Lopez-Aguilar; Jesús Villar; Gastón Murias; Robert M Kacmarek Journal: Intensive Care Med Date: 2015-02-19 Impact factor: 17.440
Authors: Chithra Poongkunran; Santosh G John; Arun S Kannan; Safal Shetty; Christian Bime; Sairam Parthasarathy Journal: Am J Med Date: 2015-06-11 Impact factor: 4.965
Authors: Damien Contou; Chiara Fragnoli; Ana Córdoba-Izquierdo; Florence Boissier; Christian Brun-Buisson; Arnaud W Thille Journal: Ann Intensive Care Date: 2015-06-07 Impact factor: 6.925