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Assist Control (AC) :: Synchronized Intermittent Mandatory Ventilation (SIMV)

This document discusses different modes of mechanical ventilation: 1) Assist control (AC) mode provides full ventilator support for every breath and is used when patients need high respiratory support after being resuscitated or having conditions like ARDS. However, it increases the risks of barotrauma and hyperventilation. 2) Synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation (SIMV) mode provides machine-assisted breaths periodically but allows some spontaneous breathing in between. This helps preserve muscle strength and decreases risks while facilitating weaning. 3) Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is used in AC or SIMV modes to increase oxygenation by preventing alveoli collapse. Higher PEEP levels
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
159 views2 pages

Assist Control (AC) :: Synchronized Intermittent Mandatory Ventilation (SIMV)

This document discusses different modes of mechanical ventilation: 1) Assist control (AC) mode provides full ventilator support for every breath and is used when patients need high respiratory support after being resuscitated or having conditions like ARDS. However, it increases the risks of barotrauma and hyperventilation. 2) Synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation (SIMV) mode provides machine-assisted breaths periodically but allows some spontaneous breathing in between. This helps preserve muscle strength and decreases risks while facilitating weaning. 3) Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is used in AC or SIMV modes to increase oxygenation by preventing alveoli collapse. Higher PEEP levels
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EDUARTE, STEPHANIE ANGELCA A.

Assist control (AC):

In this mode, the ventilator supports every breath,


whether it's initiated by the patient or the ventilator. 3 AC
is often used to allow the patient to rest, because the
ventilator does all the work. This high level of respiratory
support is frequently required in patients who have been
resuscitated, have acute respiratory distress syndrome
(ARDS), or are paralyzed or sedated.
Because AC mode results in the highest level of positive
pressure in the chest, it increases the risk of barotrauma
to the lungs. Anxious patients who frequently trigger the
ventilator can easily hyperventilate.

Synchronized intermittent
mandatory ventilation (SIMV):

In this mode, not all spontaneous breaths are assisted,


leaving the patient to draw some breaths on her own. For
example, if your patient's ventilator is set on SIMV mode
with a respiratory rate of 10 bpm, she will receive a
breath roughly once every six seconds. She can also
breathe on her own in between the machine-assisted
breaths.
There are several advantages to this mode for patients
who can tolerate it. SIMV helps preserve the strength of
the respiratory musculature, decreases the risk of
hyperventilation and barotrauma, and facilitates
weaning. Weaning can be done by gradually decreasing
the percentage of machine-assist ventilation.
Patients who need short-term ventilation benefit most
from SIMV, but the choice of mode should be an
individual decision based on the patient's condition and

tolerance.3 No one method is best for all patients.2

Positive end-expiratory pressure


(PEEP):

Continuous Positive Airway


Pressure (CPAP)

Continuous mandatory
ventilation

PEEP can be used to increase oxygenation in either AC or


SIMV mode. The effect of PEEP on the lungs is similar to
blowing up a balloon and not letting it completely deflate
before blowing it up again. Most patients are started on 5
cm H2O of PEEP.3 Some patients, such as those with
ARDS or other conditions that make lungs stiff, require
higher levels of PEEP to keep alveoli from collapsing and
to decrease intrapulmonary shunting. It's not unusual to
use 8 - 12 cm H2O in these patients. But PEEP should not
exceed 20 cm H2O; higher settings increase the risk of
severe lung damage, subcutaneous emphysema, and
pneumothorax.4
used to treat patients with a variety of medical
conditions 'non-invasively', i.e., without endotracheal
intubation. These conditions include some cases of
respiratory failure and pulmonary edema, COPD
exacerbation, and most patients with clinically significant
sleep apnea. Everyone who routinely cares for acutely ill
patients is at least passingly familiar with CPAP and
BiPAP. The same is true for those who manage patients
with sleep apnea, including sleep lab technicians and
sleep physicians
(CMV) is a mode of mechanical ventilation where
breaths are delivered based on set variables. In previous
nomenclature CMV referred to "controlled mechanical
ventilation", a mode of ventilation characterized by
a ventilator that makes no effort to sense patient effort.

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