Abstract

Introduction and objectivesHumidification and non-invasive ventilation are frequently used together, despite the lack of precise recommendations regarding this practice. We aimed to analyse the impact of active external and built-in humidifiers on the performance of home ventilators, focusing on their pressurization efficacy and their behaviour under different inspiratory efforts. MethodsWe designed a bench study of a lung simulator programmed to emulate mechanical conditions similar to those experienced by real respiratory patients and to simulate three different levels of inspiratory effort: five different commonly used home NIV devices and active humidifiers attached to the latter (internal or “built-in”) or to the circuit (external). To test ventilator pressurization under different humidification and effort settings, pressure-time products in the first 300ms and 500ms of the respiratory cycle were calculated in the 45 situations simulated. Inferential statistical analysis was performed. ResultsA significant reduction of PTP 300 and PTP 500 was observed with the external humidifier in three of the devices. The same pattern was noted for another device with an internal humidifier, and only one device showed no significant changes. This impact on pressurization was commonly higher under high inspiratory effort. ConclusionsThese results indicate the need to monitor pressure changes in the use of external humidification devices in some home NIV ventilators.

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