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You are here: Home JFICM Home Resources Critical Care and Resuscitation 1999 June Non-Invasive Ventilation for Adult Acute Respiratory Failure. Part I

Non-Invasive Ventilation for Adult Acute Respiratory Failure. Part I

ABSTRACT

Objective

To detail the history, modes, physiological effects, and circuit geometry of non-invasive ventilation.

Data sources

A review of articles published in peer-reviewed journals from 1966 to 1998 and identified through a MEDLINE search on non-invasive ventilation.

Summary of review

Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) has been used for many years as an adjunct to standard therapy in patients with acute and chronic respiratory disorders. The newer modes of NIV which include continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), pressure support ventilation (PSV), BiPAP (bi-level positive airway pressure) and controlled and assisted modes of intermittent non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV) have additional advantages and are often used routinely in many respiratory diseases. These modes of ventilatory support have been found to improve arterial oxygenation, ventilation, work of breathing, and cardiac function, in patients with respiratory failure, although in normal subjects, respiration is often impaired..

Conclusions

Non-invasive ventilation using the modes of CPAP, PSV, BiPAP and NIPPV should be considered in patients with respiratory failure who are unresponsive to conventional therapy, before considering invasive mechanical ventilation. (Critical Care and Resuscitation 1999; 1: 187-198)

Key Words

Non-invasive ventilation, work of breathing, minute ventilation, ventilation circuits

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