Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introductory Notes
- 1 Physiology of ventilation and gas exchange
- 2 Assessing the need for ventilatory support
- 3 Oxygen therapy, continuous positive airway pressure and non-invasive ventilation
- 4 Management of the artificial airway
- 5 Modes of mechanical ventilation
- 6 Oxygenation
- 7 Carbon dioxide balance
- 8 Sedation, paralysis and analgesia
- 9 Nutrition in the mechanically ventilated patient
- 10 Mechanical ventilation in asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- 11 Mechanical ventilation in patients with blast, burn and chest trauma injuries
- 12 Ventilatory support: extreme solutions
- 13 Heliox in airway obstruction and mechanical ventilation
- 14 Adverse effects and complications of mechanical ventilation
- 15 Mechanical ventilation for transport
- 16 Special considerations in infants and children
- 17 Tracheostomy
- 18 Weaning, extubation and de-cannulation
- 19 Long-term ventilatory support
- 20 The history of mechanical ventilation
- Glossary
- Index
2 - Assessing the need for ventilatory support
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introductory Notes
- 1 Physiology of ventilation and gas exchange
- 2 Assessing the need for ventilatory support
- 3 Oxygen therapy, continuous positive airway pressure and non-invasive ventilation
- 4 Management of the artificial airway
- 5 Modes of mechanical ventilation
- 6 Oxygenation
- 7 Carbon dioxide balance
- 8 Sedation, paralysis and analgesia
- 9 Nutrition in the mechanically ventilated patient
- 10 Mechanical ventilation in asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- 11 Mechanical ventilation in patients with blast, burn and chest trauma injuries
- 12 Ventilatory support: extreme solutions
- 13 Heliox in airway obstruction and mechanical ventilation
- 14 Adverse effects and complications of mechanical ventilation
- 15 Mechanical ventilation for transport
- 16 Special considerations in infants and children
- 17 Tracheostomy
- 18 Weaning, extubation and de-cannulation
- 19 Long-term ventilatory support
- 20 The history of mechanical ventilation
- Glossary
- Index
Summary
Intensive care medicine has its origins in the successful use of positive pressure ventilation to treat acute respiratory failure associated with the poliomyelitis epidemic in Copenhagen in 1952, and mechanical ventilation remains a cornerstone in the provision of modern life support. This chapter will focus on assessing the need for ventilatory support in seriously ill patients in acute wards, emergency departments and critical care units; it will not consider ventilatory support during anaesthesia and surgery.
The need for ventilatory support is probably the commonest reason for patients requiring admission to critical care units, and the provision of mechanical ventilation has major resource implications. It also carries significant complications in the form of ventilator-associated pneumonia, ventilator-induced lung injury, barotrauma and adverse circulatory effects, all of which can contribute to both morbidity and mortality. Any associated requirement for sedative drugs has additional undesirable effects. Although a patient may appear to ‘need’ ventilatory support, it must also be considered whether, for that individual, it would be appropriate.
Besides those who work in intensive care, there are many others who encounter patients who appear to ‘need’ mechanical ventilation, such as ambulance crews or staff working in emergency departments, respiratory wards, or acute medical or surgical wards.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Core Topics in Mechanical Ventilation , pp. 21 - 31Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008