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3.5: 3.5 Pressure Control Ventilation

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    101817
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    Ventilation is considered pressure-controlled (pressure-limited), when the ventilator keeps the pressure waveform in a specific pattern. Volume and flow waveforms may change based on changes in lung mechanics. When pressure is the control variable, instead of setting the tidal volume and flow of air directly, remember that we set the pressure applied to the lungs over a specified time that causes the lungs to inflate to a certain volume. All the same rules apply as with IBW and tidal volume. You will still measure your patient’s height and calculate their IBW and their tidal volume range, but instead of setting the tidal volume directly, you will set a pressure to be applied and then watch what volume you see in your lungs after about three breaths:

    • Too high? Decrease the PC by 2\text{ cmH}_2\text{O}.
    • Too low? Increase the PC by 2\text{ cmH}_2\text{O} and assess.

    A safe pressure control to start at is 14\text{ cmH}_2\text{O}. Even with a slightly higher PEEP, it will ensure your peak pressures are still well below 35\text{ cmH}_2\text{O}.

    Pressure Control Ventilation showing how pressure should be a square waveform indicating pressure being controlled and limited.
    Figure 3.5.1: “Pressure Control Ventilation” by Freddy Vale, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

    Object Lesson

    Remember! When the time element is the same, if you blow into a balloon harder for the same amount of time, you will blow it up bigger. A higher pressure equals a higher volume (and vice versa).

    This change is very quick, and, within approximately a minute, you should be able to adjust the PC up or down to be approximately 74c7efffc3dcc1c4ffb3f811881d3467.png.

    Note: Being off by approximately 20\text{ mL} is not an issue. You will never be exactly the same. Try to stay under the 8\text{ mL} instead of over. If you increased the PC by 1\text{ cmH}_2\text{O} and your tidal volumes go from below 74c7efffc3dcc1c4ffb3f811881d3467.png to above, then undo that change and leave your volumes just below your maximum. Remember 74c7efffc3dcc1c4ffb3f811881d3467.png is the upper limit, and we do not want our volumes to be above that.

    The approach to setting your inspiratory time is very similar to the mentality with flow. A default Inspiratory time of 0.8\text{ - }1.0 seconds works for most adult patients. A good rule of thumb is to use an Inspiratory time of 1.0 second. If your \text{I:E} is \text{1:1}, you can decrease your Itime by 0.1 seconds to see if you can ensure your patient has enough time to exhale. Insufficient exhalation time should not be an issue unless your patient is triggering a lot of breaths above your set respiratory rate. The only time the \text{I:E} would end up at \text{1:1} or inverse is with high set RR (or patient triggering more breaths). Sedation could be considered in this case or a different ventilation strategy, when Itime of 0.8\text{ - }1.0 seconds is causing issues, alarms, or an \text{I:E} that is \text{1:1} or inverse.

    Default Itimes of 0.8\text{ - }1.0 seconds should be fine for all patients as long as the RR is less than 24\text{ bpm.} We will learn to make adjustments, such as increasing the RR, the I-time may start to be adjusted to ensure the \text{I:E} stays greater than \text{1:1}.

     

    Table 3.5.1: Initial Settings – Inspiratory Time

    Setting

    Patient Status

    Initial Setting

    Inspiratory Time (I-time) Adult patient with RR set less than 24\text{ bpm}.
    Consult an expert clinician if you think the Itime is not appropriate (0.8\text{ - }1.0 seconds).
    1.0 seconds

    “Pressure Control Specific Settings: The Pressure Control and Inspiratory Time” from Basic Principles of Mechanical Ventilation by Melody Bishop, © Sault College is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.


    3.5: 3.5 Pressure Control Ventilation is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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