Special Events Related To Mechanical Ventilation
Beshoy Gamal Nazeem Saad;
Abstract
Acute respiratory failure is a common disease with numerous complications and high mortality rate. The ventilatory support is a cornerstone in management of ARF when the conservative measures fail. The use of invasive MV sometimes is inevitable life saving step in management of advanced cases of ARF. However, being associated with numerous complications, the invasive MV should be discontinued at the earliest possible time in the course of a patient's illness.
There are numerous indications for endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation, but in general, mechanical ventilation should be considered when there are clinical or laboratory signs that the patient cannot maintain an airway or adequate oxygenation or ventilation. The decision to initiate mechanical ventilation should be based on clinical judgment that considers the entire clinical situation and should not be delayed until the patient is in extremis.
The aim of this essay is to highlight on the incidence, possible hazards, how to treat and methods to prevent complications of mechanical ventilation.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has been working in conjunction with Critical Care Societies Collaborative and other professional groups to develop a new approach to Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) surveillance. The result is an algorithm based on objective criterion for the diagnosis of ventilator-associated events (VAE), that is, ventilator-associated conditions (VAC) and infection-related ventilator-associated complications (IVAC), instead of VAP episodes. This new approach was scheduled to replace the VAP classical definition in 2013 in the CDC network surveillance. The VAE definition algorithm is for use in surveillance; it is not a clinical definition algorithm and is not intended for use in the clinical management of patients.
There are numerous indications for endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation, but in general, mechanical ventilation should be considered when there are clinical or laboratory signs that the patient cannot maintain an airway or adequate oxygenation or ventilation. The decision to initiate mechanical ventilation should be based on clinical judgment that considers the entire clinical situation and should not be delayed until the patient is in extremis.
The aim of this essay is to highlight on the incidence, possible hazards, how to treat and methods to prevent complications of mechanical ventilation.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has been working in conjunction with Critical Care Societies Collaborative and other professional groups to develop a new approach to Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) surveillance. The result is an algorithm based on objective criterion for the diagnosis of ventilator-associated events (VAE), that is, ventilator-associated conditions (VAC) and infection-related ventilator-associated complications (IVAC), instead of VAP episodes. This new approach was scheduled to replace the VAP classical definition in 2013 in the CDC network surveillance. The VAE definition algorithm is for use in surveillance; it is not a clinical definition algorithm and is not intended for use in the clinical management of patients.
Other data
| Title | Special Events Related To Mechanical Ventilation | Other Titles | الأحداث الخاصة المتعلقة بجهاز التنفس الصناعي | Authors | Beshoy Gamal Nazeem Saad | Issue Date | 2017 |
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