INDICATIONS
- Rescue following failure of conventional ventilation (e.g. PPHN, MAS)
- To reduce barotrauma when conventional ventilator settings are high
- Airleak (pneumothorax, PIE)
TERMINOLOGY
Frequency |
High frequency ventilation rate (Hz, cycles/sec) |
MAP | Mean airway pressure (cm H2O) |
Amplitude | Delta P or power is the variation around the MAP |
MECHANISM
Oxygenation and CO2 elimination are independent
Oxygenation is dependent on MAP and FiO2 | MAP provides constant distending pressure equivalent to CPAP, inflating the lung to constant and optimal lung volume, maximising area for gas exchange and preventing alveolar collapse in the expiratory phase |
Ventilation (CO2 removal) dependent on amplitude | The wobble superimposed around the MAP achieves alveolar ventilation and CO2 removal |
MANAGEMENT
Preparation for HFOV
- If significant leakage around ETT, insert a larger one
- Optimise blood pressure and perfusion, complete any necessary volume replacement and start inotropes, if necessary, before starting HFOV
- Invasive blood pressure monitoring if possible
- Correct metabolic acidosis
- Ensure adequate sedation
- Muscle relaxants not necessary unless already in use
Initial settings on HFOV
MAP
Optimal (high) lung volume strategy (aim to maximise recruitment of alveoli) |
|
Low volume strategy (aim to minimise lung trauma) |
|
- Optimal (high) volume strategy preferred but consider low volume strategy when air leaks present
Amplitude (delta P on SLE ventilator)
- Gradually increase amplitude until chest seen to wobble well
- Obtain early blood gas (within 20 min) and adjust settings as appropriate
- Change frequency only after discussion with consultant
Making adjustments once HFOV established
Poor oxygenation | Over-oxygenation | Under-ventilation | Over-ventilation | |
Either | Adjust MAP (+/- 1–2 cm H2O)* |
Decrease MAP (1–2 cm H2O) when FiO2 <0.4 |
Increase amplitude | Decrease amplitude |
Or | Increase FiO2 | Decrease FiO2 |
* both over and under-inflation can result in hypoxia. If in doubt, perform chest X-ray
MONITORING
- Amplitude maximal when chest ‘wobbling’, minimal when movement imperceptible
- Frequent blood gas monitoring (every 30–60 min) in early stages of treatment as PaO2 and PaCO2 can change rapidly
- If available, transcutaneous TcPCO2
- CO2 diffusion coefficient (DCO2)
- indicator of CO2 elimination which correlates well with PaCO2 for an individual baby
- calculated as frequency x (tidal volume)2
Chest X-ray
- Within 1 hr to determine baseline lung volume on HFOV (aim for 8 ribs at midclavicular line)
- if condition changes acutely and/or daily to assess expansion/ETT position, repeat chest X-ray
TROUBLESHOOTING ON HFOV
Chest wall movement
- Suction indicated for diminished chest wall movement indicating airway or ETT obstruction
- Always use an in-line suction device to maintain PEEP
- increase FiO2 following suctioning procedure
- MAP can be temporarily increased by 2–3 cm H2O until oxygenation improves
Falling DCO2
- Suggests rising PaCO2
Low PaO2
- Suboptimal lung recruitment
- increase MAP
- consider chest X-ray
- Over-inflated lung
- reduce MAP: does oxygenation improve? Check blood pressure
- consider chest X-ray
- ETT patency
- check head position and exclude kinks in tube
- check for chest movement and breath sounds
- check there is no water in ETT/T-piece
- Air leak/pneumothorax
- transillumination (see Transillumination of the chest guideline)
- urgent chest X-ray
High PaCO2
- ETT patency and air leaks (as above)
- Increase amplitude, does chest wall movement increase?
- Increased airway resistance (MAS or BPD) or non-homogenous lung disease, is HFOV appropriate?
Persisting acidosis/hypotension
- Over-distension
- reduce MAP: does oxygenation improve?
- Exclude air leaks; consider chest X-ray
Spontaneous breathing
- Usually not a problem but can indicate suboptimal ventilation (e.g. kinking of ETT, build-up of secretions) or metabolic acidosis
WEANING
-
Reduce FiO2 to <0.4 before weaning MAP (except when over-inflation evident)
-
When chest X-ray shows evidence of over-inflation (>9 ribs), reduce MAP
-
Reduce MAP in 1–2 cm decrements to 8–9 cm 1–2 hrly or as tolerated
-
If oxygenation lost during weaning, increase MAP by 3–4 cm and begin weaning again more gradually. When MAP is very low, amplitude may need increasing
-
In air leak syndromes (using low volume strategy), reducing MAP takes priority over weaning the FiO2
-
Wean the amplitude in small increments (5–15%) depending upon PCO2
- When MAP <8 cm H2O, amplitude 20–25 and blood gases satisfactory, consider switching to conventional ventilation or extubation to CPAP