Abstract
BackgroundPatients with acute respiratory failure, impaired consciousness, and impaired airway reflexes will require invasive mechanical ventilation. Monitoring of such patients is important. The use of ventilator scalars and loops help in monitoring, diagnosing the abnormality, and treating the patients effectively. We report a rare cause one should suspect in a case of persistent and fixed air leak in a patient requiring mechanical ventilation.Case presentationWe describe a 28-year-old young patient requiring ventilator support due to neuromuscular weakness. His neuromuscular weakness was rapidly progressing involving the respiratory muscles. The patient was intubated and put on mechanical ventilator support. He was transferred from another health care center to our hospital. On evaluation, the patient was intubated with ETT no 8. The patient had persistent air leak as observed on the ventilator graphics. We checked for ETT cuff malfunction, ventilator circuit, catheter mount, and HME for any disconnection causing the leak. The air leak which we observed in our patient was due to the malpositioned Ryle’s tube.ConclusionsVigilant monitoring of patients requiring mechanical ventilation is necessary. For the evaluation of the cause of air leak, algorithmic approach will help in correctly identifying the abnormality.
Highlights
Patients with acute respiratory failure, impaired consciousness, and impaired airway reflexes will require invasive mechanical ventilation
The use of Scalars helps in identifying abnormalities of resistance and compliance, presence of secretions, autopeep, and air leak
Similar changes will be observed in loops depending on the abnormality
Summary
Vigilant monitoring of patients requiring mechanical ventilation is necessary. For the evaluation of the cause of air leak, algorithmic approach will help in correctly identifying the abnormality.
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