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Home Ventilator
Education
An Easy Guide to Understanding Home Ventilator Terminology
©Delphine Cull
Understanding the terminology used for mechanical
ventilators can be confusing to people with little or no experience in
the medical field.
This confusion can cause anxiety and uncertainty for
those who are now faced with caring for a ventilator dependent patient
at home. The following definitions are stated in simple, everyday words
anyone can understand.
Regardless of the type of ventilator your home care
company has provided, certain basic settings are common to all
ventilators.
Modes on the Ventilator
A mode determines how the air is delivered to the
patient. The physician will order a pressure or volume mode, depending
on the needs of the patient.
-
Pressure Modes:
During Pressure Control mode, the ventilator delivers a pre-set
amount of pressure with each breath. The lungs expand with this
pressure and inspiration occurs. The volume of each breath is
determined by how much pressure is set.
-
Volume Modes:
During SIMV or Volume Control, the ventilator delivers a pre-set
volume of air with each breath. The lungs expand with this volume
and inspiration occurs.
-
Spontaneous
Modes: CPAP and Pressure
Support are used to assist the patient who can breathe on her own.
CPAP is a continuous airway pressure that holds the airways open and
prevents collapse of lung sacs. Pressure support will boost the
patient's inspiratory effort with additional pressure, thus
increasing the volume received with each breath.
-
In a pressure mode, the pressure is set and the
volume of the breath may vary. In a volume mode, the volume of the
breath is set and the pressure may vary.
Respiratory Rate:
The ventilator knows how often to give the patient a
breath because of the set respiratory rate. For instance, if the
ventilator rate is set at 12 breaths, the patient will receive 12
breaths every 60 seconds, or one breath every five seconds. If the
patient is capable of breathing on his own, he can initiate an
additional respiration in any mode.
PEEP: Positive End Expiratory Pressure
This is simply a term that means a constant positive
pressure is being delivered through the ventilator to the lungs to keep
the alveoli (tiny air sacs) from collapsing after the patient exhales.
PEEP keeps these air sacs open to increase their surface area, which
means more opportunity for oxygen to move into the blood.
Fi02: Fraction of Inspired Oxygen
This term is used to communicate how much oxygen a
patient is receiving. Right now, people on Earth are breathing 21%
oxygen from the atmosphere. A patient on supplemental oxygen, such as a
ventilator patient, may be breathing anywhere from 21% to 100%. If the
oxygen a patient is receiving is expressed in a percentage instead of
liters per minute, it is called Fi02.
I Time or Inspiratory Time
Imagine the cycle of a normal breath. When you
breathe in, it's inspiratory time. When you breathe out, it's expiratory
time. Inspiratory time on a ventilator determines how long it will take
for the ventilator to deliver the inspiratory part of the breathing
cycle.
Apnea and Pressure Alarms
Apnea occurs when a patient stops breathing. The
apnea alarm senses respiratory effort, and it will alarm to alert you
that the patient has stopped breathing, or the ventilator tubing has
become disconnected.
Pressure alarms limit how high the patient's airway
pressure can get. This alarm will occur if the patient needs suctioning
or is coughing, the tracheostomy is occluded, and so on. An abrupt or
steady increase in airway pressure can signify a change in the patient's
condition and the physician should be contacted.
For the safety of the patient, never turn off the
ventilator alarms.
By understanding basic ventilator terminology, you
will be able to communicate more effectively with the physicians and
health care professionals. You will also feel more comfortable caring
for your loved one at home.
The copyright of the article Home
Ventilator Education in
Patient
Health Education is owned by
Delphine
Cull. Permission to republish Home Ventilator Education
in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.