| Literature DB >> 23680299 |
Antonio M Esquinas Rodriguez, Peter J Papadakos, Michele Carron, Roberto Cosentini, Davide Chiumello.
Abstract
Non-invasive mechanical ventilation (NIV) has proved to be an excellent technique in selected critically ill patients with different forms of acute respiratory failure. However, NIV can fail on account of the severity of the disease and technical problems, particularly at the interface. The helmet could be an alternative interface compared to face mask to improve NIV success. We performed a clinical review to investigate the main physiological and clinical studies assessing the efficacy and related issues of NIV delivered with a helmet. A computerized search strategy of MEDLINE/PubMed (January 2000 to May 2012) and EMBASE (January 2000 to May 2012) was conducted limiting the search to retrospective, prospective, nonrandomized and randomized trials. We analyzed 152 studies from which 33 were selected, 12 physiological and 21 clinical (879 patients). The physiological studies showed that NIV with helmet could predispose to CO₂ rebreathing and increase the patients' ventilator asynchrony. The main indications for NIV were acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema, hypoxemic acute respiratory failure (community-acquired pneumonia, postoperative and immunocompromised patients) and hypercapnic acute respiratory failure. In 9 of the 21 studies the helmet was compared to a face mask during either continous positive airway pressure or pressure support ventilation. In eight studies oxygenation was similar in the two groups, while the intubation rate was similar in four and lower in three studies for the helmet group compared to face mask group. The outcome was similar in six studies. The tolerance was better with the helmet in six of the studies. Although these data are limited, NIV delivered by helmet could be a safe alternative to the face mask in patients with acute respiratory failure.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23680299 PMCID: PMC3672531 DOI: 10.1186/cc11875
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Non-invasive ventilation and helmet in use on a patient with acute respiratory syndrome in the ICU.
Figure 2Flow chart of the studies analyzed. NIV, non-invasive ventilation.
Summary of the physiological studies
| Source | Type of non-invasive ventilation | Number of subjects | Interface | Control | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patroniti | CPAP | 8 | Helmet | FM | Higher CO2 rebreathing with helmet |
| Taccone | CPAP | 8 | Helmet | FM | Higher CO2 rebreathing with helmet |
| Patroniti | CPAP | 5 | Helmet with and without antisuffocation valve | - | CO2 rebreathing limited by safety valve |
| Milan | CPAP | 5 | Helmet with antisuffocation valve | - | CO2 rebreathing decreased by a higher diameter of safety valve |
| Costa | PSV | 8 | Helmet | - | CO2 rebreathing not affected by PEEP on PSV level; inspiratory effort decreased, increasing the PSV |
| Racca | PSV - CPAP | 10 | Helmet | - | Lower CO2 rebreathing with open circuit mechanical ventilators |
| Chiumello | PSV - CPAP | 6 | Helmet | FM | Similar breathing pattern and WOB during CPAP, higher reduction of WOB during PSV with FM |
| Racca | PSV | 6 | Helmet | FM | Higher CO2 rebreathing, inspiratory effort, autocycled breaths and dyspnea score with helmet during respiratory muscle load |
| Costa | PSV different inspiratory-expiratory cycling criteria | 8 | Helmet | FM | Shorter ventilator inspiratory time and longer with inspiratory-expiratory delay with helmet. The fast setting ameliorated patient-ventilator interaction |
| Moerer | PSV pneumatically versus neutrally triggered | 7 | Helmet | - | Shorter inspiratory-expiratory delays, lower wasted efforts and better comfort with neurally triggered PSV |
| Chiumello | CPAP | 10 | Helmet | - | Higher temperature and humidity of inspired gas compared to un-humidified medical gases |
| Cavaliere | PSV | 10 | Helmet | FM | Higher acoustic compliance with Helmet |
CO2, carbon dioxide; CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure; FM, face mask; PSV, pressure-support ventilation; WOB, work of breathing.
Summary of the clinical studies
| Source | Study design | Inclusion criteria | Enrolled patients | Type of non-invasive ventilation | Interface | Control | Arterial oxygenation | Intubation rate | Outcome | Tolerance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Foti | Observational | Presumed acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema | 121 | CPAP | Helmet | O2 therapy | Higher with helmet | No data | No data | No difference |
| Tonnelier | Prospective with matched control | Acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema | 11 | CPAP | Helmet | FM | No difference | No data | No data | No difference |
| Antonelli | Prospective with matched control | Hypoxemic ARF | 33 | PSV | Helmet | FM | Higher with FM | No difference | No difference | Higher intolerance in FM versus helmet (38% versus 0%) |
| Cammarota | Cross-over | Hypoxemic ARF | 24 | CPAP with or without sigh | Helmet | Venturi mask | Higher during sigh in bilateral lung involvement | No data | No data | No difference |
| Isgrò | Cross-over | Hypoxemic ARF | 21 | CPAP with or without sigh and BIPAP | Helmet | - | Higher oxygenation during sigh and BIPAP | No data | No data | Similar tolerance |
| Cammarota | Cross-over | Post-extubation ARF | 10 | PSV - NAVA | Helmet | - | No difference | No difference | No difference | No data |
| Principi | Prospective with historical group | Hematological malignancy with hypoxemic ARF | 17 | CPAP | Helmet | FM | No difference | Favor helmet | Favor helmet | Higher intolerance in FM versus helmet (11% versus 0%) |
| Rocco | Matched-control group | Immunocompromised patients with hypoxemic ARF | 19 | PSV | Helmet | FM | No difference | No difference | No difference | Higher intolerance in FM versus helmet (47% versus 10%) |
| Rabitsch | Prospective observational | Immunocompromised patients with hypoxemic ARF | 10 | PSV | Helmet | - | Increased | 20% | No data | No data |
| Carron | Prospective observational | Hypoxemic ARF | 67 | PSV | Helmet | - | Lower in NIV failure | 56% | Lower in NIV failure | No data |
| Cosentini | Randomized controlled | Hypoxemic ARF | 47 | CPAP | Helmet | O2 therapy | Higher in helmet | No difference | No difference | No difference |
| Belenguer-Muncharaz | Retrospective observational | Hypoxemic ARF due to influenza H1N1 | 5 | CPAP - PSV | Helmet | Boussignac - FM | No difference | 0% | 100% alive | No data |
| Squadrone | Randomized controlled unblinded | Postoperative patients with acute hypoxemia | 209 | CPAP | Helmet | O2 therapy | Higher with helmet | Favor helmet | No difference | No difference |
| Conti | Matched-control | Postoperative ARF | 25 | PSV | Helmet | FM | No difference | Favor helmet | No difference | Higher intolerance in FM versus helmet(32% versus 12%) |
| Redondo Calvo | Prospective observational | Postoperative patients with hypoxemia | 99 | CPAP | Helmet | - | Increased | 25% | No data | No data |
| Barbagallo | Randomized unblinded | Postoperative thoracic surgery | 50 | CPAP | Helmet | O2 therapy | Higher with helmet | No difference | No difference | No data |
| Antonelli | Case-control | Acute exacerbation of COPD | 33 | PSV | Helmet | FM | Similar oxygenation but lower CO2 improvement with helmet | No difference | No difference | Higher intolerance in FM versus helmet (36% versus 0%) |
| Antonaglia | Randomized controlled | Acute exacerbation of COPD | 53 | PSV | Helmet | FM | Similar oxygenation but lower CO2 improvement with helmet | Lower with helmet | No difference | Higher intolerance in FM versus helmet (40% versus 5%) |
| Navalesi | Randomized cross-over | Acute exacerbation of COPD | 10 | PSV | Helmet | FM | No difference | No difference | No difference | No difference |
| Vargas | Cross-over | Post-extubation ARF | 11 | PSV | Helmet | FM | No data | No data | No data | No difference |
| Antonelli | Prospective observational | ARF requiring FOB | 4 | PSV | Helmet | - | No change | No data | No data | No data |
| Rocco | Prospective observational | ARF that required NIV interruption | 36 | PSV | Helmet | FM | No change | 39% | 28% | No difference |
ARF, acute respiratory failure; BIPAP, bi-level positive airway pressure; CO2, carbon dioxide; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure; FM, face mask; FOB, fiberoptic bronchoscopy; NAVA, neurally adjusted ventilatory assist; O2, oxygen; PSV, pressure-support ventilation.
Major advantages and disvantages of the helmet
| Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|
| Nutrition and hydration | Noise |
| Lower air leaks | Large dead space |
| No facial skin lesions | Claustrophobia |
| No eye irritation | Vascular complications |
| Independent of the patient's | Skin lesions at the collar neck |
| anatomy | Desyncrhonization between patient and ventilator |
Suggested key points for non-invasive ventilation delivered by helmet
| General recommendations |
|---|
| Use helmet in case of long duration non-invasive ventilation |
| Use helmet in case of face skin lesions |
| Use helmet in case of major air leaks |
| Use helmet in edentulous patients |
| Use helmet if mask intolerance |
| Avoid CPAP delivered by mechanical ventilator |
| Promote inter-change between helmet and face mask during long treatment |
| Frequent assessment of gas exchange in the first hours |
| Continuous flow CPAP |
| Use inspiratory gas flow >40 L/minute |
| Pressure-support ventilation |
| Apply higher PEEP and pressure support level (50% higher than those applied with face mask) |
| Use the maximum pressurization rate |
CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure; PEEP, positive end-expiratory pressure.