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Published in: Intensive Care Medicine 4/2007

01-04-2007 | Correspondence

Pseudo-double-triggering

Authors: Chang-Wen Chen, Wei-Chieh Lin, Chih-Hsin Hsu

Published in: Intensive Care Medicine | Issue 4/2007

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Excerpt

Sir: We read with great interest the paper by A.W. Thille et al. [1] reporting the incidence and patterns of patient-ventilator asynchrony during assisted mechanical ventilation. Double triggering, one of the major types of patient-ventilator asynchrony, was defined by the authors as two consecutive ventilator cycles separated by a very short expiratory time (< 50% of the mean inspiratory time) with the first cycle being patient triggered. Interestingly, double triggering is second to ineffective triggering in incidence and may account for 28% of the asynchrony occurrences in patients under assisted control ventilation. When we viewed the illustrative recordings showing double triggering (see Fig. 3 in [1]), we could not find evidence of pressure deflection in the triggering phase of the first breath. Minimal airway pressure changes during flow triggering may be one explanation [2]; however, we suspect that some of the first breaths in double triggering may not be patient triggered, but are instead controlled or autotriggered because the ventilator set rate is higher in patients having a greater number of double-triggering occurrences. A good example is given in Fig. 1, which depicts a recording from a mechanically ventilated patient in our hospital who had heart failure and pneumonia. The patient was ventilated in pressure-controlled mode, with a ventilator set rate of 25/min and a trigger sensitivity of −2 cmH2O. Esophageal pressure was used as a reference for the triggered breath. After the first breath, the subsequent double-triggering-like breaths were not a real double triggering because inspiratory activity occurred only after the machine delivered breath.
Literature
1.
go back to reference Thille AW, Rodriguez P, Cabello B, Lellouche F, Brochard L (2006) Patient-ventilator asynchrony during assisted mechanical ventilation. Intensive Care Med 32:1515–1522PubMedCrossRef Thille AW, Rodriguez P, Cabello B, Lellouche F, Brochard L (2006) Patient-ventilator asynchrony during assisted mechanical ventilation. Intensive Care Med 32:1515–1522PubMedCrossRef
2.
go back to reference Aslanian P, El Atrous S, Isabey D, Valente E, Corsi D, Harf A, Lemaire F, Brochard L (1998) Effects of flow triggering on breathing effort during partial ventilatory support. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 157:135–143PubMed Aslanian P, El Atrous S, Isabey D, Valente E, Corsi D, Harf A, Lemaire F, Brochard L (1998) Effects of flow triggering on breathing effort during partial ventilatory support. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 157:135–143PubMed
3.
go back to reference Georgopoulos D, Prinianakis G, Kondili E (2006) Bedside waveform interpretation as a tool to identify patient-ventilator asynchronies. Intensive Care Med 32:34–47PubMedCrossRef Georgopoulos D, Prinianakis G, Kondili E (2006) Bedside waveform interpretation as a tool to identify patient-ventilator asynchronies. Intensive Care Med 32:34–47PubMedCrossRef
4.
go back to reference Giannouli E, Webster K, Roberts D, Younes M (1999) Response of ventilator-dependent patients to different levels of pressure support and proportional assist. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 159:1716–1725PubMed Giannouli E, Webster K, Roberts D, Younes M (1999) Response of ventilator-dependent patients to different levels of pressure support and proportional assist. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 159:1716–1725PubMed
Metadata
Title
Pseudo-double-triggering
Authors
Chang-Wen Chen
Wei-Chieh Lin
Chih-Hsin Hsu
Publication date
01-04-2007
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Intensive Care Medicine / Issue 4/2007
Print ISSN: 0342-4642
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1238
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-007-0548-8

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