1. Use of high-flow nasal canulae: effect on alveolar pressure and its limitation
- Author
-
K Mizutani, K Ueno, H Maejima, S Takaki, Yukie Yamaguchi, T Kariya, T Gotoh, H Hayami, and M Shioda
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pulmonary gas pressures ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,respiratory system ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Flow measurement ,Catheter ,Venturi effect ,Anesthesia ,Emergency medicine ,Poster Presentation ,medicine ,Cricothyrotomy ,Respiratory system ,High flow ,Airway ,business - Abstract
High-flow nasal canulae (HFNC) deliver high-flow humidified gas at up to 60 l/minute. There are two types of respiratory circuit to generate mix gas flow, Blender type (typeB) and Venturi type (typeV). The therapy is well established in the pediatric population and HFNC use has been described in the adult population. It has been reported that HFNC provide higher FIO2 compared with low-flow canulae, and also create mild positive pharyngeal airway pressure, but the effect on alveolar pressure is unknown. We aimed to investigate the effect of HFNC on alveolar pressure, by measuring intratracheal pressure in patients with a cricothyrotomy catheter (CTC). At the same time, we measured the actual gas flow rate (AGFR) by flowmeter and compared it with assumed flow.
- Published
- 2013