| Literature DB >> 31980954 |
Katie A Hunt1,2, Theodore Dassios1,3, Anne Greenough4,5,6.
Abstract
Both proportional assist ventilation (PAV) and neurally adjusted ventilatory assist (NAVA) provide pressure support synchronised throughout the respiratory cycle proportional to the patient's respiratory demand. Our aim was to compare the effect of these two modes on oxygenation in infants with evolving or established bronchopulmonary dysplasia. Two-hour periods of PAV and NAVA were delivered in random order to 18 infants born less than 32 weeks of gestation. Quasi oxygenation indices ("OI") and alveolar-arterial ("A-a") oxygen gradients at the end of each period on PAV, NAVA and baseline ventilation were calculated using capillary blood samples. The mean "OI" was not significantly different on PAV compared to NAVA (7.8 (standard deviation (SD) 3.2) versus 8.1 (SD 3.4), respectively, p = 0.70, but lower on both than on baseline ventilation (mean baseline "OI" 11.0 (SD 5.0)), p = 0.002, 0.004, respectively). The "A-a" oxygen gradient was higher on PAV and baseline ventilation than on NAVA (20.8 (SD 12.3) and 22.9 (SD 11.8) versus 18.5 (SD 10.8) kPa, p = 0.015, < 0.001, respectively).Entities:
Keywords: Neurally adjusted ventilator assist; Oxygenation index; Proportional assist
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31980954 PMCID: PMC7220976 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-020-03584-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.183
Baseline demographic details
| N | 18 |
|---|---|
| Sex (male) | 8 |
| Gestational age (weeks) | 25.3 [23.6–30.3] |
| Birthweight (grams) | 750 [454–950] |
| Postnatal age at study (days) | 20.5 [8–58] |
| Weight at study (grams) | 865 [700–1800] |
Results are presented as median [range]
Fig. 1Consort diagram of recruitment and study protocol
Comparison of ventilatory, blood gas and diaphragmatic electrical activity parameters between baseline ventilation, PAV and NAVA
| Baseline | PAV | NAVA | p | Pairwise comparisons | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| “OI” | 11.0 [5.0] | 7.8 [3.2] | 8.1 [3.4] | 0.001 | n-p 0.70 b-p 0.002 b-n 0.004 |
| Mean airway pressure (cmH2O) | 9.5 [1.1] | 8.3 [1.1] | 9.0 [0.9] | <0.001 | n-p 0.025 b-p < 0.001 b-n 0.02 |
| FiO2 | 0.40 [0.15] | 0.39 [0.15] | 0.37 [0.13] | <0.001 | n-p 0.024 b-p 0.28 b-n 0.003 |
| “A-a” gradient (kPa) | 22.9 (11.8) | 20.8 (12.3) | 18.4 (10.8) | <0.001 | n-p 0.015 b-p 0.127 b- |
| SpO2/FiO2 | 268 [96] | 268 [92] | 295 [102] | 0.002 | n-p 0.04 b-p 1.0 b-n 0.04 |
| PO2/FiO2 | 104 (35) | 120 (40) | 126 (42) | 0.001 | n-p 0.79 b-p 0.033 b-n 0.002 |
| PCO2 [kPa] | 8.1 [1.7] | 8.9 [1.8] | 8.8 [1.7] | 0.026 | n-p 1.0 b-p 0.007 b-n 0.16 |
| PO2 [kPa] | 5.4 [0.76] | 5.66 [0.68] | 5.6 [1.0] | 0.69 | |
| Respiratory rate (breaths/min) | 61 [9] | 66 [8] | 56 [9] | 0.001 | n-p 0.003 b-p 0.19 b-n 0.093 |
| Expiratory tidal volume (ml/kg) | 6.2 [0.7] | 6.4 [1.0] | 6.5 [1.2] | 0.32 | |
| Peak inspiratory pressure (cmH2O)* | 17.8 [3.5] | 14.3 [3.0] | b- | ||
| Positive end-expiratory pressure (cmH2O)* | 5.6 [4.7–7] | 6 [5–7] | b-n 0.94 | ||
| pH | 7.31 [0.67] | 7.29 [0.68] | 7.3 [0.66] | 0.053 | |
| Peak electrical activity of the diaphragm (microvolts) | 13.6 [5.8–40.4] | 13.1 [2.4–38.4] | 11.3 [5.2–28.5] | 0.33 | |
| Minimum electrical activity of the diaphragm (microvolts) | 2.2 [0.9–4.2] | 2.3 [0.7–4.2] | 2.4 [0.7–4.5] | 0.92 |
Results are presented as mean (standard deviation) or median [range]
n-p = comparison between NAVA and PAV; b-p = comparison between baseline and PAV
b-n = comparison between baseline and NAVA
*Data unavailable for two infants
Fig. 2“Oxygenation index” of individual infants shown by linked data points on baseline ventilation, PAV and NAVA
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