Clinical Trial: Impact of Proportional Assisted Ventilation on Dyspnea and Asynchrony in Mechanically Ventilated Patients

Study Status: Recruiting
Recruit Status: Recruiting
Study Type: Interventional




Official Title: Impact of Proportional Assisted Ventilation on Dyspnea and Asynchrony in Mechanically Ventilated Patients

Brief Summary:

Rational. The mismatch between the activity of the respiratory muscles and the assistance delivered by the ventilator results in patient-ventilator disharmony, which is commonly observed in ICU patients and is associated with dyspnea and patient-ventilator asynchrony. Both dyspnea and asynchrony are in turn associated with a worse prognosis. Unlike conventional modes of mechanical ventilation, such as pressure support ventilation (PSV) that deliver a constant level of assistance regardless of the patient effort, Proportional Assisted Ventilation (PAV) adjusts the level of ventilator assistance to the activity of respiratory muscles. To date, data on the impact of PAV on dyspnea and patient ventilator asynchrony are scarce and most studies have been conducted in healthy subjects or in ICU patients who had no severe dyspnea nor severe asynchrony. To our knowledge, there are no data in patients with severe patient-ventilator dysharmony.

Study Aim. To evaluate the impact of PAV on dyspnea and patient-ventilator asynchrony in ICU mechanically ventilated patients in intensive care with severe patient-ventilator disharmony defined as either severe dyspnea or severe patient-ventilator asynchrony.

Patients and Methods. Will be included 24 ICU mechanically ventilated patient exhibiting severe patient-ventilator dysharmony with PSV. The intensity of dyspnea will be assessed by the VAS, the ICRDOSS and by the electromyogram of extradiaphragmatic inspiratory muscles and pre inspiratory potential collected from the electroencephalogram. The prevalence of patient-ventilator asynchrony will be quantified.

Expected results. It is anticipated that the switch from PSV to PAV will decrease the prevalence and severity of dyspnea and the prevalence of patient-ventilator asynchrony.