Ventilation modes: Difference between revisions
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==Background== | |||
*Ventilation modes define the pattern of breath delivery by a [[Mechanical ventilation (main)|mechanical ventilator]] | |||
*Understanding modes is critical for optimizing oxygenation and ventilation while minimizing [[Ventilator associated lung injury|ventilator-associated lung injury]] | |||
*Mode selection is determined by the clinical scenario, degree of [[Respiratory failure|respiratory failure]], and patient effort | |||
*All modes control some combination of volume, pressure, and flow during the respiratory cycle | |||
*The variable that is set (controlled) determines the mode category; the other variable becomes dependent | |||
===Key Terminology=== | |||
*'''Tidal volume (TV)''': volume of gas delivered per breath | |||
*'''Peak inspiratory pressure (PIP)''': maximum airway pressure during inspiration | |||
*'''Plateau pressure (Pplat)''': pressure measured during an inspiratory hold; reflects alveolar pressure | |||
**Goal Pplat < 30 cmH2O to minimize [[Ventilator associated lung injury|barotrauma]]<ref>The Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Network. Ventilation with lower tidal volumes as compared with traditional tidal volumes for acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2000;342(18):1301-1308.</ref> | |||
*'''Driving pressure''': Pplat minus PEEP; values < 14 cmH2O associated with improved survival<ref>Amato MB, Meade MO, Slutsky AS, et al. Driving pressure and survival in the acute respiratory distress syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2015;372(8):747-755.</ref> | |||
*'''PEEP''': positive end-expiratory pressure; prevents alveolar collapse and improves oxygenation | |||
*'''FiO2''': fraction of inspired oxygen | |||
*'''I:E ratio''': ratio of inspiratory to expiratory time | |||
*'''Trigger''': mechanism by which patient initiates a breath (flow or pressure) | |||
*'''Cycle''': mechanism by which inspiration ends and expiration begins | |||
===Volume Control vs. Pressure Control=== | |||
*'''Volume-controlled modes''': TV is set; airway pressure is variable | |||
**Guarantees minute ventilation | |||
**PIP varies with changes in compliance and resistance | |||
*'''Pressure-controlled modes''': inspiratory pressure is set; TV is variable | |||
**Limits peak airway pressures | |||
**TV varies with compliance and resistance changes | |||
**Decelerating flow pattern may improve gas distribution | |||
==Modes== | ==Modes== | ||
===Assist Control (AC)=== | |||
*Preset rate and TV | ===Volume Assist Control (AC)=== | ||
* | *'''The recommended default mode for ED ventilation'''<ref name="weingart">Weingart SD. Managing Initial Mechanical Ventilation in the Emergency Department. Ann Emerg Med. 2016;68:614-617.</ref> | ||
*Prevents patient fatigue by offering full respiratory support with every breath | |||
*Beneficial for patients requiring a high minute | *The safety and ease of this mode typically outweighs the theoretical benefits of other modes<ref name="weingart"/> | ||
*May worsen obstructive airway disease by air trapping or breath stacking | *Preset rate and TV; every breath (mandatory and triggered) delivers the full set tidal volume | ||
*Set: RR, FiO2, PEEP, TV, I:E ratio | *Patient able to trigger additional breaths above set rate (each delivers full assisted tidal volume) | ||
*Beneficial for patients requiring a high minute ventilation (reduces O2 consumption and CO2 production of the respiratory muscles) | |||
*May worsen [[Asthma|obstructive airway disease]] by air trapping or breath stacking | |||
**Consider deep [[Sedation|sedation]] ± [[Neuromuscular blockade|paralysis]] if breath stacking occurs | |||
*Set: RR, FiO2, PEEP, TV, I:E ratio (or inspiratory flow rate) | |||
*ED Pearl: Start with lung protective settings (TV 6-8 mL/kg [[Ideal body weight estimation|ideal body weight]], RR 16-18, PEEP 5, FiO2 100% and wean)<ref>Brower RG, et al. Ventilation with lower tidal volumes as compared with traditional tidal volumes for acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2000;342(18):1301-1308.</ref> | |||
===Pressure Assist Control (Pressure Control Ventilation, PCV)=== | |||
*Set inspiratory pressure, PEEP, RR, and inspiratory time | |||
*Every breath (mandatory and triggered) delivers gas at the set pressure | |||
*TV varies based on lung compliance and airway resistance | |||
*Decelerating flow pattern may improve gas distribution and comfort | |||
*Useful when high peak pressures are problematic (e.g., bronchopleural fistula, subcutaneous emphysema) | |||
*Limitation: TV not guaranteed; must closely monitor for hypoventilation if compliance changes | |||
*Set: inspiratory pressure, PEEP, RR, I-time, FiO2 | |||
===Synchronous Intermittent Mandatory Ventilation (SIMV)=== | ===Synchronous Intermittent Mandatory Ventilation (SIMV)=== | ||
*Preset mandatory breaths delivered in coordination with the patient's respiratory effort | |||
*Preset breaths in coordination with the respiratory effort | *Spontaneous breathing allowed between mandatory breaths | ||
*Spontaneous breathing allowed between breaths | **Spontaneous breaths receive only whatever pressure support is additionally set (not full TV) | ||
*Synchronization attempts to limit | *Synchronization attempts to limit barotrauma by not delivering a breath when already maximally inhaled (vs. older IMV) | ||
*Because of need for patient effort, ''not recommended for tired or [[Sepsis|septic]] patients'' | |||
*Because of need for | *Historically believed to ease [[Weaning mechanical ventilation|weaning]] but has ''not'' demonstrated superiority over AC for weaning<ref>Esteban A, Frutos F, Tobin MJ, et al. A comparison of four methods of weaning patients from mechanical ventilation. N Engl J Med. 1995;332(6):345-350.</ref> | ||
*Set: RR, FiO2, PEEP, TV, I:E ratio | *For the paralyzed patient, there is no difference in minute ventilation or airway pressures between AC and SIMV | ||
*Set: RR, FiO2, PEEP, TV, I:E ratio, PS (for spontaneous breaths) | |||
===Pressure Support Ventilation (PSV)=== | |||
*Patient-triggered, pressure-limited, flow-cycled mode | |||
===Pressure Support ( | *Level of pressure set (not TV) to augment each spontaneous effort | ||
* | |||
*Limits barotrauma and decreases the work of breathing in the spontaneously breathing patient | *Limits barotrauma and decreases the work of breathing in the spontaneously breathing patient | ||
* | *Breath terminates when inspiratory flow drops below a threshold (typically 25% of peak flow) | ||
*Most ventilators allow back-up respiratory rate (in case of apnea | *Most ventilators allow a back-up respiratory rate (apnea backup) in case of apnea | ||
*Mode of choice in patients whose respiratory failure is not severe and who have | *Mode of choice in patients whose [[Respiratory failure|respiratory failure]] is not severe and who have adequate respiratory drive | ||
*Set: | **Improved patient comfort, reduced cardiovascular effects, reduced risk of barotrauma, improved gas distribution<ref>MacIntyre NR. Respiratory function during pressure support ventilation. Chest. 1986;89(5):677-683.</ref> | ||
*Commonly used during [[Weaning mechanical ventilation|weaning]] and spontaneous breathing trials | |||
*'''Limitation:''' TV not guaranteed; should not be used in patients with unreliable respiratory drive | |||
*'''Set:''' PS level, FiO2, PEEP (RR is patient-determined) | |||
===Pressure Regulated Volume Control (PRVC)=== | ===Pressure Regulated Volume Control (PRVC)=== | ||
*Provides | *Dual-control mode that combines features of volume and pressure control | ||
*Ventilator adjusts pressure breath to breath based on | *Provides pressure-limited breaths with a decelerating flow pattern | ||
*Benefits: minimum PIP, guaranteed tidal volume, patient can trigger | *Ventilator adjusts inspiratory pressure breath-to-breath to achieve a target tidal volume based on measured compliance | ||
*Not recommended for asthma or COPD | *Benefits: minimum PIP, guaranteed tidal volume, patient can trigger additional breaths, breath-by-breath adaptation | ||
*Set: FiO2, RR, TV, upper pressure limit, I:E ratio, PEEP | *'''Not recommended for [[Asthma|asthma]] or [[COPD]]''' (auto-PEEP may cause the ventilator to inappropriately lower pressure support) | ||
*'''Set:''' FiO2, RR, TV (target), upper pressure limit, I:E ratio, PEEP | |||
=== | ===Airway Pressure Release Ventilation (APRV)=== | ||
* | ''Main article: [[Airway pressure release ventilation]]'' | ||
* | *Pressure-controlled, time-cycled mode with inverse I:E ratio | ||
*Set: | *Sustained high constant pressure (P<sub>high</sub>) for alveolar recruitment with brief intermittent releases (T<sub>low</sub>) for ventilation | ||
*Allows unrestricted spontaneous breathing at both pressure levels | |||
*"Open lung" ventilation strategy used as rescue therapy in severe [[Acute respiratory distress syndrome|ARDS]] | |||
*''Cannot be used with [[Neuromuscular blockade|paralysis]]'' (requires spontaneous breathing for full benefit) | |||
*Main limitation is hypercarbia/[[Respiratory acidosis|respiratory acidosis]] due to short release times | |||
*Set:P<sub>high</sub>, P<sub>low</sub>, T<sub>high</sub>, T<sub>low</sub>, FiO2 | |||
===CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure)=== | |||
*Provides constant positive pressure throughout the respiratory cycle to a '''spontaneously breathing''' patient | |||
*Equivalent to PEEP without additional inspiratory support | |||
*Recruits collapsed alveoli, improves oxygenation, reduces work of breathing | |||
*Not appropriate for fatiguing patients or those with inadequate respiratory drive | |||
*Invasive CPAP is used during [[Weaning mechanical ventilation|weaning]]/spontaneous breathing trials | |||
*Noninvasive CPAP - see [[Noninvasive ventilation]] | |||
*'''Set:''' FiO2, PEEP (CPAP level), back-up RR (if available) | |||
===Control Mode=== | ===Control Mode (CMV)=== | ||
* | *Ventilator initiates and controls every breath; no patient triggering allowed | ||
* | *Fixed rate and TV | ||
* | *Primarily used in the OR setting | ||
*Requires patient to be fully [[Sedation|sedated]] or [[Neuromuscular blockade|paralyzed]] | |||
*Not used in the ED | |||
===High Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation (HFOV)=== | |||
*Delivers very small tidal volumes at extremely high respiratory rates (3-15 Hz) | |||
*Maintains near-constant airway pressure (mean airway pressure) with minimal tidal excursion | |||
*Historically considered a rescue mode for refractory [[Acute respiratory distress syndrome|ARDS]] | |||
*'''OSCILLATE and OSCAR trials showed no mortality benefit and possible harm; largely abandoned'''<ref>Ferguson ND, Cook DJ, Guyatt GH, et al. High-frequency oscillation in early acute respiratory distress syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2013;368(9):795-805.</ref><ref>Young D, Lamb SE, Shah S, et al. High-frequency oscillation for acute respiratory distress syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2013;368(9):806-813.</ref> | |||
==ED-Specific Considerations== | |||
===Mode Selection by Clinical Scenario=== | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
|- | |||
! Clinical Scenario !! Recommended Mode !! Key Settings | |||
|- | |||
| Default / undifferentiated || Volume AC || TV 6-8 mL/kg IBW, RR 16-18, PEEP 5 | |||
|- | |||
| [[Acute respiratory distress syndrome|ARDS]] || Volume AC (lung protective) || TV 6 mL/kg IBW, Pplat <30, PEEP per ARDSnet table | |||
|- | |||
| [[Asthma]] / [[COPD]] || Volume AC || TV 6-8 mL/kg IBW, RR 10, I:E 1:4-1:5, PEEP 0-5 | |||
|- | |||
| Severe [[Metabolic acidosis]] || Volume AC || TV 6-8 mL/kg IBW, high RR (match pre-intubation minute ventilation) | |||
|- | |||
| [[Acute respiratory distress syndrome|Refractory ARDS]] || [[Airway pressure release ventilation|APRV]] || P<sub>high</sub> ≤ 35, T<sub>high</sub> 4.5-6s, T<sub>low</sub> 0.5-0.8s | |||
|- | |||
| [[Weaning mechanical ventilation|Weaning trial]] || PSV or CPAP || PS 5-8, PEEP 5, FiO2 ≤0.4 | |||
|} | |||
===Common Pitfalls=== | |||
*Forgetting to use [[Ideal body weight estimation|ideal body weight]] for tidal volume calculation (obese patients are at high risk for volutrauma) | |||
*Not matching pre-intubation minute ventilation in patients with severe [[Metabolic acidosis]] (e.g., [[Diabetic ketoacidosis|DKA]], severe [[Sepsis|sepsis]]) | |||
**Can cause cardiovascular collapse from worsening acidosis post-intubation<ref>Weingart SD, Levitan RM. Preoxygenation and prevention of desaturation during emergency airway management. Ann Emerg Med. 2012;59(3):165-175.e1.</ref> | |||
*Inadequate [[Sedation|sedation]] leading to ventilator dyssynchrony and breath stacking | |||
*Using SIMV when patient cannot reliably generate adequate spontaneous breaths | |||
*Not reassessing ventilator settings after initial setup (check plateau pressure within 30 minutes) | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
{{Mechanical ventilation pages}} | {{Mechanical ventilation pages}} | ||
*[[EBQ:ARDSnet]] | *[[EBQ:ARDSnet]] | ||
==External Links== | |||
*[https://emcrit.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/Managing-Initial-Vent-ED.pdf EMCrit: Managing Initial Mechanical Ventilation in the ED] | |||
*[https://www.ardsnet.org/ ARDSnet] | |||
==References== | |||
<references/> | |||
[[Category:Critical Care]] | [[Category:Critical Care]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Pulmonary]] | ||
Latest revision as of 21:59, 25 March 2026
Background
- Ventilation modes define the pattern of breath delivery by a mechanical ventilator
- Understanding modes is critical for optimizing oxygenation and ventilation while minimizing ventilator-associated lung injury
- Mode selection is determined by the clinical scenario, degree of respiratory failure, and patient effort
- All modes control some combination of volume, pressure, and flow during the respiratory cycle
- The variable that is set (controlled) determines the mode category; the other variable becomes dependent
Key Terminology
- Tidal volume (TV): volume of gas delivered per breath
- Peak inspiratory pressure (PIP): maximum airway pressure during inspiration
- Plateau pressure (Pplat): pressure measured during an inspiratory hold; reflects alveolar pressure
- Goal Pplat < 30 cmH2O to minimize barotrauma[1]
- Driving pressure: Pplat minus PEEP; values < 14 cmH2O associated with improved survival[2]
- PEEP: positive end-expiratory pressure; prevents alveolar collapse and improves oxygenation
- FiO2: fraction of inspired oxygen
- I:E ratio: ratio of inspiratory to expiratory time
- Trigger: mechanism by which patient initiates a breath (flow or pressure)
- Cycle: mechanism by which inspiration ends and expiration begins
Volume Control vs. Pressure Control
- Volume-controlled modes: TV is set; airway pressure is variable
- Guarantees minute ventilation
- PIP varies with changes in compliance and resistance
- Pressure-controlled modes: inspiratory pressure is set; TV is variable
- Limits peak airway pressures
- TV varies with compliance and resistance changes
- Decelerating flow pattern may improve gas distribution
Modes
Volume Assist Control (AC)
- The recommended default mode for ED ventilation[3]
- Prevents patient fatigue by offering full respiratory support with every breath
- The safety and ease of this mode typically outweighs the theoretical benefits of other modes[3]
- Preset rate and TV; every breath (mandatory and triggered) delivers the full set tidal volume
- Patient able to trigger additional breaths above set rate (each delivers full assisted tidal volume)
- Beneficial for patients requiring a high minute ventilation (reduces O2 consumption and CO2 production of the respiratory muscles)
- May worsen obstructive airway disease by air trapping or breath stacking
- Set: RR, FiO2, PEEP, TV, I:E ratio (or inspiratory flow rate)
- ED Pearl: Start with lung protective settings (TV 6-8 mL/kg ideal body weight, RR 16-18, PEEP 5, FiO2 100% and wean)[4]
Pressure Assist Control (Pressure Control Ventilation, PCV)
- Set inspiratory pressure, PEEP, RR, and inspiratory time
- Every breath (mandatory and triggered) delivers gas at the set pressure
- TV varies based on lung compliance and airway resistance
- Decelerating flow pattern may improve gas distribution and comfort
- Useful when high peak pressures are problematic (e.g., bronchopleural fistula, subcutaneous emphysema)
- Limitation: TV not guaranteed; must closely monitor for hypoventilation if compliance changes
- Set: inspiratory pressure, PEEP, RR, I-time, FiO2
Synchronous Intermittent Mandatory Ventilation (SIMV)
- Preset mandatory breaths delivered in coordination with the patient's respiratory effort
- Spontaneous breathing allowed between mandatory breaths
- Spontaneous breaths receive only whatever pressure support is additionally set (not full TV)
- Synchronization attempts to limit barotrauma by not delivering a breath when already maximally inhaled (vs. older IMV)
- Because of need for patient effort, not recommended for tired or septic patients
- Historically believed to ease weaning but has not demonstrated superiority over AC for weaning[5]
- For the paralyzed patient, there is no difference in minute ventilation or airway pressures between AC and SIMV
- Set: RR, FiO2, PEEP, TV, I:E ratio, PS (for spontaneous breaths)
Pressure Support Ventilation (PSV)
- Patient-triggered, pressure-limited, flow-cycled mode
- Level of pressure set (not TV) to augment each spontaneous effort
- Limits barotrauma and decreases the work of breathing in the spontaneously breathing patient
- Breath terminates when inspiratory flow drops below a threshold (typically 25% of peak flow)
- Most ventilators allow a back-up respiratory rate (apnea backup) in case of apnea
- Mode of choice in patients whose respiratory failure is not severe and who have adequate respiratory drive
- Improved patient comfort, reduced cardiovascular effects, reduced risk of barotrauma, improved gas distribution[6]
- Commonly used during weaning and spontaneous breathing trials
- Limitation: TV not guaranteed; should not be used in patients with unreliable respiratory drive
- Set: PS level, FiO2, PEEP (RR is patient-determined)
Pressure Regulated Volume Control (PRVC)
- Dual-control mode that combines features of volume and pressure control
- Provides pressure-limited breaths with a decelerating flow pattern
- Ventilator adjusts inspiratory pressure breath-to-breath to achieve a target tidal volume based on measured compliance
- Benefits: minimum PIP, guaranteed tidal volume, patient can trigger additional breaths, breath-by-breath adaptation
- Not recommended for asthma or COPD (auto-PEEP may cause the ventilator to inappropriately lower pressure support)
- Set: FiO2, RR, TV (target), upper pressure limit, I:E ratio, PEEP
Airway Pressure Release Ventilation (APRV)
Main article: Airway pressure release ventilation
- Pressure-controlled, time-cycled mode with inverse I:E ratio
- Sustained high constant pressure (Phigh) for alveolar recruitment with brief intermittent releases (Tlow) for ventilation
- Allows unrestricted spontaneous breathing at both pressure levels
- "Open lung" ventilation strategy used as rescue therapy in severe ARDS
- Cannot be used with paralysis (requires spontaneous breathing for full benefit)
- Main limitation is hypercarbia/respiratory acidosis due to short release times
- Set:Phigh, Plow, Thigh, Tlow, FiO2
CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure)
- Provides constant positive pressure throughout the respiratory cycle to a spontaneously breathing patient
- Equivalent to PEEP without additional inspiratory support
- Recruits collapsed alveoli, improves oxygenation, reduces work of breathing
- Not appropriate for fatiguing patients or those with inadequate respiratory drive
- Invasive CPAP is used during weaning/spontaneous breathing trials
- Noninvasive CPAP - see Noninvasive ventilation
- Set: FiO2, PEEP (CPAP level), back-up RR (if available)
Control Mode (CMV)
- Ventilator initiates and controls every breath; no patient triggering allowed
- Fixed rate and TV
- Primarily used in the OR setting
- Requires patient to be fully sedated or paralyzed
- Not used in the ED
High Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation (HFOV)
- Delivers very small tidal volumes at extremely high respiratory rates (3-15 Hz)
- Maintains near-constant airway pressure (mean airway pressure) with minimal tidal excursion
- Historically considered a rescue mode for refractory ARDS
- OSCILLATE and OSCAR trials showed no mortality benefit and possible harm; largely abandoned[7][8]
ED-Specific Considerations
Mode Selection by Clinical Scenario
| Clinical Scenario | Recommended Mode | Key Settings |
|---|---|---|
| Default / undifferentiated | Volume AC | TV 6-8 mL/kg IBW, RR 16-18, PEEP 5 |
| ARDS | Volume AC (lung protective) | TV 6 mL/kg IBW, Pplat <30, PEEP per ARDSnet table |
| Asthma / COPD | Volume AC | TV 6-8 mL/kg IBW, RR 10, I:E 1:4-1:5, PEEP 0-5 |
| Severe Metabolic acidosis | Volume AC | TV 6-8 mL/kg IBW, high RR (match pre-intubation minute ventilation) |
| Refractory ARDS | APRV | Phigh ≤ 35, Thigh 4.5-6s, Tlow 0.5-0.8s |
| Weaning trial | PSV or CPAP | PS 5-8, PEEP 5, FiO2 ≤0.4 |
Common Pitfalls
- Forgetting to use ideal body weight for tidal volume calculation (obese patients are at high risk for volutrauma)
- Not matching pre-intubation minute ventilation in patients with severe Metabolic acidosis (e.g., DKA, severe sepsis)
- Can cause cardiovascular collapse from worsening acidosis post-intubation[9]
- Inadequate sedation leading to ventilator dyssynchrony and breath stacking
- Using SIMV when patient cannot reliably generate adequate spontaneous breaths
- Not reassessing ventilator settings after initial setup (check plateau pressure within 30 minutes)
See Also
Mechanical Ventilation Pages
- Noninvasive ventilation
- Intubation
- Mechanical ventilation (main)
- Miscellaneous
External Links
References
- ↑ The Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Network. Ventilation with lower tidal volumes as compared with traditional tidal volumes for acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2000;342(18):1301-1308.
- ↑ Amato MB, Meade MO, Slutsky AS, et al. Driving pressure and survival in the acute respiratory distress syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2015;372(8):747-755.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Weingart SD. Managing Initial Mechanical Ventilation in the Emergency Department. Ann Emerg Med. 2016;68:614-617.
- ↑ Brower RG, et al. Ventilation with lower tidal volumes as compared with traditional tidal volumes for acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2000;342(18):1301-1308.
- ↑ Esteban A, Frutos F, Tobin MJ, et al. A comparison of four methods of weaning patients from mechanical ventilation. N Engl J Med. 1995;332(6):345-350.
- ↑ MacIntyre NR. Respiratory function during pressure support ventilation. Chest. 1986;89(5):677-683.
- ↑ Ferguson ND, Cook DJ, Guyatt GH, et al. High-frequency oscillation in early acute respiratory distress syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2013;368(9):795-805.
- ↑ Young D, Lamb SE, Shah S, et al. High-frequency oscillation for acute respiratory distress syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2013;368(9):806-813.
- ↑ Weingart SD, Levitan RM. Preoxygenation and prevention of desaturation during emergency airway management. Ann Emerg Med. 2012;59(3):165-175.e1.
