Abstract
In this work a shared pressure-controlled ventilation device for two patients is considered. By the use of different valves incorporated to the circuit, the device enables the restriction of possible cross contamination and the individualization of tidal volumes, driving pressures, and positive end expiratory pressure PEEP. Possible interactions in the expiratory dynamics of different pairs of patients are evaluated in terms of the characteristic exhalatory times. These characteristic times can not be easily established using simple linear lumped element models. For this purpose, a 1D model using the Hydraulic and Mechanical libraries in Matlab Simulink was developed. In this sense, experiments accompany this study to validate the model and characterize the different valves of the circuit. Our results show that connecting two patients in parallel to a ventilator always resulted in delays of time during the exhalation. The size of this effect depends on different parameters associated with the patients, the circuit and the ventilator. The dynamics of the exhalation of both patients is determined by the ratios between patients exhalatory resistances, compliances, driving pressures and PEEPs. Adverse effects on exhalations became less noticeable when respiratory parameters of both patients were similar, flow resistances of valves added to the circuit were negligible, and when the ventilator exhalatory valve resistance was also negligible. The asymmetries of driving pressures, compliances or resistances exacerbated the possibility of auto-PEEP and the increase in relaxation times became greater in one patient than in the other. In contrast, exhalatory dynamics were less sensitive to the ratio of PEEP imposed to the patients.
Highlights
Different critical situations can locally generate a collapse in the health care system
This paper considers a dual ventilation device named ‘a specific shared ventilation device (ACRA)’ that works by setting the ventilator on the pressure controlled mode and provides individualized inspiratory pressures and PEEP control for two patients
We analyse for the first time the consequences in exhalatory dynamics when two patients are connected to a dual ventilation system
Summary
Different critical situations can locally generate a collapse in the health care system In such circumstances, there may be a time window where hospitals could need to provide ventilatory support to a number of patients greater than the existing number of ventilators. Systems based on the possibility to share one ventilator between two patients (shared ventilation or dual ventilation), have been proposed since 2000 [1] and revisited later by different authors (see, for instance, [2, 3]). This strategy may produce a buffer in the capacity of hospitals to treat patients with respiratory diseases and allow for a more flexible policy on ventilators stockpiles
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