Positive-pressure ventilation modes (IPPV, HFPPV, and HFPPV/PEEP) produced no significant differences in cardiac output or stroke volume during acute cardiac tamponade in dogs.
Do different modes of positive-pressure ventilation (IPPV, HFPPV, HFPPV/PEEP) affect hemodynamics in dogs with acute cardiac tamponade?
8 dogs with acute cardiac tamponade (about 60% reduction in cardiac output) under light thiopental anesthesia
Volume-controlled high frequency positive-pressure ventilation (HFPPV) at f of 60/min without PEEP, and HFPPV at f of 60/min with PEEP
Intermittent positive-pressure ventilation (IPPV) at a ventilatory frequency (f) of 14/min
Hemodynamic effects (cardiac output and stroke volume)surrogate
In acute cardiac tamponade, the severe hemodynamic impairment caused by pericardial pressure overshadows any differences induced by various positive-pressure ventilation modes.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
In 8 dogs with acute cardiac tamponade, we studied the hemodynamic effects of three modes of positive-pressure ventilation: intermittent positive-pressure ventilation (IPPV) at a ventilatory frequency (f) of 14/min, volume-controlled high frequency positive-pressure ventilation (HFPPV) at f of 60/min without positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), and HFPPV at f of 60/min with PEEP. The study was carried out at normocarbia with light thiopental anesthesia at a standardized level of cardiac tam-ponade (about 60% reduction in cardiac output). Ventilator gas outputs were 7,380 ml/min with IPPV, 5,700 ml/min with HFPPV, and 8,800 ml/min with HFPPV/PEEP. Because of its small functional dead space, the system J HFPPV device produced normocarbia efficiently. Without cardiac tamponade, cardiac output and stroke volume were significantly higher with HFPPV than with IPPV or HFPPV/PEEP. When tamponade was present, however, these differences were not found. These findings indicate that in cardiac tamponade, effects induced by ventilatory flow/pressure patterns are overshadowed by the more pronounced cardiac impairment caused by pericardial pressures. The results suggest that sudden hemodynamic col-lapse in acute cardiac tamponade patients may not be caused by the institution of positive-pressure ventilation per se. If mechanical ventilation is required in patients with acute cardiac tamponade, either IPPV, HFPPV, or HFPPV/PEEP may be used to produce normocarbia, and PEEP may be applied if needed to increase arterial oxygenation.
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U. Sjöstrand
Linköping University
Mai-Elin Koller
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
R Brian Smith
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Respiratory Care
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
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Sjöstrand et al. (Wed,) reported a other. Positive-pressure ventilation modes (IPPV, HFPPV, and HFPPV/PEEP) produced no significant differences in cardiac output or stroke volume during acute cardiac tamponade in dogs.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69db35be4fe01fead37c4340 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/194336548302800607