Surgical approach
- Not an operation: no surgical approach.
- Context where strategies are commonly required
- Major abdominal/thoracic surgery (reduced FRC, atelectasis, one-lung ventilation).
- ICU respiratory failure (ARDS, pneumonia, sepsis, trauma).
- Neurosurgery (PaCO2 targets, ICP considerations).
Anaesthetic management
- Type of anaesthesia
- Usually GA when invasive ventilation required; regional/awake techniques may avoid intubation in selected cases.
- Airway device
- ETT for controlled ventilation, high pressures/PEEP, aspiration risk, long cases, laparoscopy, prone, thoracic surgery.
- SGA may be acceptable for short, low-risk cases with modest pressures; avoid if high airway pressures/PEEP required.
- Duration
- Highly variable: minutes (short cases) to days/weeks (ICU).
- Analgesia / “How painful?”
- Ventilation strategy itself is not painful; discomfort relates to ETT, underlying disease, and surgical insult.
- Ensure adequate analgesia and sedation; consider neuromuscular blockade for severe ventilator dyssynchrony/ARDS early phase.
- Immediate ventilator starting point (adult, normal lungs)
- Mode: volume-controlled or pressure-controlled with targets.
- VT 6–8 mL/kg predicted body weight; RR to maintain pH; PEEP 5 cmH2O; FiO2 to SpO2 92–96% (or 88–92% in CO2 retainers).
- Plateau pressure aim < 30 cmH2O; driving pressure (Pplat − PEEP) as low as feasible (often < 15).
1) Core physiology and definitions
- Goals of mechanical ventilation
- Maintain oxygenation and ventilation (CO2/pH).
- Reduce work of breathing; treat/avoid fatigue.
- Prevent ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI): volutrauma, barotrauma, atelectrauma, biotrauma.
- Facilitate surgery/anaesthesia and airway protection.
- Key pressures/volumes
- Peak inspiratory pressure (PIP): includes resistive + elastic components; rises with bronchospasm/secretions/kinked tube.
- Plateau pressure (Pplat): alveolar pressure at end-inspiration during inspiratory hold; reflects compliance; target < 30 cmH2O in ARDS.
- PEEP: prevents end-expiratory alveolar collapse; improves FRC and V/Q matching but may impair venous return and increase PVR.
- Driving pressure: Pplat − PEEP; surrogate of cyclic lung stress; lower is better (often < 15).
- Compliance (C) = ΔV/ΔP; Resistance (R) = ΔP/flow.
- Predicted body weight (PBW) for VT
- Male: PBW(kg) = 50 + 0.91 × (height(cm) − 152.4).
- Female: PBW(kg) = 45.5 + 0.91 × (height(cm) − 152.4).
2) Modes of ventilation (what changes, what you set, pros/cons)
- Controlled vs assisted
- Controlled: ventilator delivers breaths regardless of patient effort (often with sedation/NMB).
- Assisted: patient triggers some/all breaths; ventilator supports with set parameters.
- Volume-controlled ventilation (VCV)
- Set: VT, RR, inspiratory flow pattern, PEEP, FiO2.
- Pressure varies with compliance/resistance; guarantees minute ventilation (if no major leak).
- Risks: high pressures if compliance worsens; monitor Pplat and driving pressure.
- Pressure-controlled ventilation (PCV)
- Set: inspiratory pressure (Pinsp above PEEP), RR, I:E (Tinsp), PEEP, FiO2.
- VT varies with compliance/resistance; decelerating flow may improve distribution and reduce PIP.
- Useful with leaks (e.g., SGA), laparoscopy, and to limit peak pressures; must watch delivered VT/minute ventilation.
- Pressure support ventilation (PSV)
- Patient-triggered, pressure-targeted; set PS level, PEEP, FiO2; patient controls RR and Tinsp.
- Used for weaning and spontaneous breathing; avoid in apnoea unless backup mode present.
- SIMV / PSV + backup
- Mandatory breaths at set rate plus spontaneous breaths with/without pressure support; less commonly used now than PSV/assist-control strategies.
- CPAP
- Spontaneous breathing with continuous positive pressure; improves oxygenation by recruiting alveoli; no mandatory breaths.
- Advanced strategies (ICU)
- APRV/BiLevel: prolonged high pressure with brief releases; aims to improve recruitment while allowing spontaneous breathing; evidence mixed; requires expertise.
- PRVC/volume-targeted pressure modes: pressure-controlled breath adjusted to achieve target VT; combines features of PCV and VCV.
3) Lung-protective ventilation (perioperative and ICU)
- Principles
- Use low VT based on PBW; avoid high Pplat and high driving pressure.
- Use adequate PEEP to prevent atelectasis; avoid excessive FiO2 (absorption atelectasis, oxygen toxicity).
- Treat the cause (sepsis control, diuresis, bronchodilation, suction, recruitment where appropriate).
- Typical intraoperative “protective” settings (adult, non-ARDS)
- VT 6–8 mL/kg PBW; PEEP 5–8 cmH2O (higher in obesity/laparoscopy); avoid Pplat > 30.
- FiO2 titrated to SpO2; consider periodic recruitment manoeuvres selectively (after disconnections, desaturation, induction) rather than routine aggressive manoeuvres.
- Recruitment manoeuvres (RM)
- Aim: open collapsed alveoli; must be followed by sufficient PEEP to maintain recruitment.
- Risks: hypotension (reduced venous return), barotrauma, overdistension; avoid/modify in haemodynamic instability, bullous disease, raised ICP (relative).
4) ARDS ventilation strategy (adult)
- Diagnosis (Berlin definition summary)
- Timing: within 1 week of known insult/new or worsening symptoms.
- Imaging: bilateral opacities not fully explained by effusions/collapse/nodules.
- Origin: respiratory failure not fully explained by cardiac failure/fluid overload.
- Oxygenation severity by PaO2/FiO2 with PEEP/CPAP ≥ 5 cmH2O: mild 200–300, moderate 100–200, severe < 100 (mmHg).
- Ventilation targets (ARDSNet-style)
- VT ~ 6 mL/kg PBW (consider 4–6 if severe) and permissive hypercapnia if needed.
- Pplat ≤ 30 cmH2O; driving pressure as low as possible.
- PEEP: use moderate/high PEEP strategies in moderate–severe ARDS; individualise using oxygenation, compliance, haemodynamics; consider transpulmonary pressure if oesophageal manometry available.
- Oxygenation: accept SpO2 ~88–95% / PaO2 ~7.3–10.7 kPa (55–80 mmHg) to reduce FiO2 and ventilator stress.
- Adjuncts in moderate–severe ARDS
- Prone positioning (often 12–16 h/day) improves oxygenation and mortality in severe ARDS when applied early with expertise.
- Neuromuscular blockade: short course may help severe dyssynchrony/high pressures early; balance against ICU weakness risk.
- Inhaled pulmonary vasodilators (e.g., iNO) as rescue for refractory hypoxaemia/right heart strain; no clear mortality benefit.
- ECMO referral when refractory hypoxaemia/hypercapnia despite optimal lung-protective ventilation and proning (centre criteria vary).
5) Obstructive lung disease (asthma/COPD): avoid dynamic hyperinflation
- Problem
- High airway resistance → prolonged expiration → air trapping → intrinsic PEEP (auto-PEEP) → hypotension, barotrauma, difficult triggering.
- Ventilation strategy
- Reduce minute ventilation demand where possible (treat fever, pain, agitation).
- Allow long expiratory time: low RR, high inspiratory flow, I:E 1:3–1:5 (or longer).
- Use modest VT (6–8 mL/kg PBW) and accept permissive hypercapnia if pH acceptable.
- Monitor for auto-PEEP: expiratory flow not returning to zero; rising end-expiratory volume; hypotension.
- External PEEP: may help triggering in COPD by offsetting auto-PEEP (typically set to ~70–85% of measured auto-PEEP); avoid excessive PEEP which worsens hyperinflation.
- Treat bronchospasm: inhaled β2-agonist, ipratropium, IV magnesium, steroids; consider ketamine/sevoflurane in theatre; suction secretions; check tube patency.
- Emergency decompensation on ventilator (suspected severe air trapping)
- Disconnect circuit briefly to allow full exhalation; then re-ventilate with longer expiratory time and lower RR.
6) Restrictive physiology/poor compliance (obesity, laparoscopy, pulmonary oedema, fibrosis)
- Features
- Low compliance → higher pressures for given VT; atelectasis common; oxygenation improves with PEEP and recruitment.
- Strategy
- VT 6–8 mL/kg PBW; consider higher PEEP (8–12+) especially in obesity/laparoscopy; monitor haemodynamics.
- Consider PCV/volume-targeted pressure modes to control pressures; ensure adequate minute ventilation.
7) One-lung ventilation (OLV) essentials
- Goals
- Maintain oxygenation while minimising lung injury to ventilated lung and avoiding excessive pressures.
- Typical OLV settings
- VT 4–6 mL/kg PBW; PEEP 5 cmH2O to dependent lung (individualise); keep Pplat < 25–30.
- FiO2 initially high then titrate; avoid unnecessary hyperoxia if stable.
- Manage hypoxaemia: check tube position (FOB), optimise CO and Hb, recruitment/PEEP to dependent lung, CPAP to non-dependent lung if feasible, intermittent two-lung ventilation.
8) Permissive hypercapnia and controlled hypocapnia
- Permissive hypercapnia
- Used to avoid injurious ventilation (low VT/low pressures), especially ARDS/asthma.
- Contraindications/relative cautions: raised ICP, severe pulmonary hypertension/RV failure, severe metabolic acidosis, significant arrhythmias/ischaemia (individualise).
- Hypocapnia (e.g., neuroanaesthesia)
- Brief hyperventilation may reduce ICP via cerebral vasoconstriction; avoid prolonged profound hypocapnia (cerebral ischaemia risk).
9) Troubleshooting: high pressure, low volume, hypoxaemia, hypercapnia
- High PIP approach (differentiate resistance vs compliance)
- Check Pplat: if PIP↑ but Pplat normal → resistance problem (kink, secretions, bronchospasm, biting, small tube).
- If PIP↑ and Pplat↑ → compliance problem (atelectasis, pneumothorax, pulmonary oedema, ARDS, abdominal insufflation, chest wall rigidity).
- Hypoxaemia on ventilator (structured approach)
- Immediate: increase FiO2; check patient, circuit, oxygen supply; confirm ETT position and bilateral air entry; suction.
- Then: assess for atelectasis (recruit/PEEP), bronchospasm, pneumothorax, pulmonary oedema, embolism, low CO, shunt (OLV).
- Hypercapnia
- Check ventilation: minute ventilation, leaks, dead space, rebreathing (valves/absorber), increased CO2 production (sepsis, MH).
10) Weaning and liberation from ventilation (ICU principles)
- Readiness criteria (typical)
- Cause improving; adequate oxygenation (e.g., FiO2 ≤ 0.4–0.5, PEEP ≤ 5–8), haemodynamic stability, manageable secretions, adequate consciousness/airway protection.
- Spontaneous breathing trial (SBT)
- PSV low support or T-piece for 30–120 min; monitor RR, VT, SpO2, HR/BP, work of breathing, agitation.
- Extubation considerations
- Cuff leak if concern for laryngeal oedema; plan post-extubation support (HFNO/NIV) in high-risk patients.
Explain the differences between volume-controlled and pressure-controlled ventilation. What are the advantages and disadvantages of each?
Structure: what you set, what varies, clinical use, hazards, monitoring.
- Volume-controlled ventilation (VCV)
- Set VT, RR, flow, PEEP, FiO2; pressure varies with compliance/resistance.
- Pros: guaranteed VT/minute ventilation (if no leak); easy CO2 control.
- Cons: if compliance worsens → high PIP/Pplat; risk of baro/volutrauma if not monitored.
- Pressure-controlled ventilation (PCV)
- Set Pinsp, RR, Tinsp/I:E, PEEP, FiO2; VT varies with compliance/resistance.
- Pros: limits peak pressure; decelerating flow may improve distribution; useful with leaks (SGA).
- Cons: VT can fall with worsening compliance/bronchospasm → hypercapnia; requires close monitoring of VT and minute ventilation.
- Monitoring common to both
- Pplat (in VCV via inspiratory hold; in PCV may be close to set pressure if no flow at end-inspiration), driving pressure, ETCO2/ABG, waveforms, haemodynamics.
A ventilated patient develops a sudden rise in peak airway pressure. How would you assess and manage this?
Aim: rapid safety actions + differentiate resistance vs compliance using plateau pressure and clinical assessment.
- Immediate actions
- Assess patient (SpO2, BP, chest movement), increase FiO2, call for help if unstable.
- Check circuit: kinks, water, filter obstruction, ventilator malfunction; consider switching to manual ventilation to feel compliance.
- Differentiate resistance vs compliance
- Measure Pplat (inspiratory hold) if VCV: PIP↑ with normal Pplat → increased resistance (bronchospasm, secretions, kink/biting, ETT obstruction).
- PIP↑ with Pplat↑ → reduced compliance (atelectasis, pneumothorax, pulmonary oedema/ARDS, abdominal insufflation, mainstem intubation).
- Targeted management examples
- Bronchospasm: deepen anaesthesia, β2-agonist, ipratropium, steroids, magnesium; check for anaphylaxis.
- Secretions/ETT obstruction: suction, pass catheter, consider tube change.
- Pneumothorax: suspect with hypotension/unilateral breath sounds; decompress if tension suspected.
- Atelectasis: recruitment manoeuvre + increase PEEP if appropriate; ensure adequate analgesia and positioning.
Describe lung-protective ventilation. What parameters would you target in ARDS?
Key marks: PBW-based VT, plateau and driving pressure, PEEP strategy, oxygenation targets, permissive hypercapnia, adjuncts.
- Ventilator targets
- VT ~6 mL/kg PBW (consider 4–6 in severe ARDS).
- Pplat ≤30 cmH2O; minimise driving pressure (Pplat−PEEP).
- PEEP: moderate–high, individualised; avoid derecruitment (avoid frequent disconnections).
- Oxygenation: accept lower PaO2/SpO2 to reduce FiO2 and ventilator stress (e.g., SpO2 88–95%).
- Permissive hypercapnia if needed (treat severe acidaemia; consider contraindications such as raised ICP).
- Adjuncts for moderate–severe ARDS
- Early prone positioning; consider short course NMB for dyssynchrony; ECMO referral if refractory.
How do you set tidal volume in an obese patient? Explain predicted body weight and why it matters.
Exam focus: VT relates to lung size (height/sex), not actual weight; obesity increases chest wall load not lung volume.
- Use PBW not actual body weight
- Male PBW = 50 + 0.91 × (height(cm) − 152.4). Female PBW = 45.5 + 0.91 × (height(cm) − 152.4).
- Set VT typically 6–8 mL/kg PBW (lower if lung injury).
- Why PBW matters
- Lung size correlates with height/sex; using actual weight in obesity risks excessive VT → volutrauma and high driving pressures.
- Obesity often needs higher PEEP and recruitment to counter atelectasis; monitor haemodynamics.
A ventilated COPD patient becomes hypotensive with rising airway pressures. Explain auto-PEEP and how you would manage it.
Core: dynamic hyperinflation → increased intrathoracic pressure → reduced venous return and barotrauma risk.
- Mechanism and recognition
- Expiratory time insufficient → incomplete exhalation → air trapping → intrinsic PEEP; expiratory flow does not return to zero.
- Consequences: hypotension, difficult triggering, hypercapnia, barotrauma.
- Immediate management
- Disconnect circuit briefly to allow exhalation if severe; treat hypotension with fluids/vasopressors as appropriate.
- Ventilator adjustments
- Reduce RR; increase inspiratory flow to shorten Tinsp; set I:E 1:3–1:5+; avoid excessive VT.
- Accept permissive hypercapnia if pH acceptable; reduce CO2 production (analgesia, sedation, treat sepsis/fever).
- Consider external PEEP to aid triggering in COPD (careful titration).
- Treat cause of obstruction
- Bronchodilators, steroids, magnesium; suction; check ETT position/patency; exclude pneumothorax.
How would you manage refractory hypoxaemia during one-lung ventilation?
Prioritise: confirm tube position, optimise V/Q, recruit dependent lung, reduce shunt from non-dependent lung.
- Immediate checks
- Increase FiO2; confirm DLT/bronchial blocker position with fibreoptic bronchoscopy; suction both lumens.
- Optimise ventilated (dependent) lung
- Recruitment manoeuvre then appropriate PEEP (often 5 cmH2O; individualise to compliance/oxygenation).
- Use VT 4–6 mL/kg PBW; avoid high pressures; ensure adequate CO and Hb.
- Reduce shunt from non-dependent lung
- Apply CPAP (e.g., 2–5 cmH2O) with oxygen to non-dependent lung if surgical field allows.
- Intermittent two-lung ventilation if necessary; coordinate with surgeon.
Explain plateau pressure and driving pressure. How do you measure plateau pressure and why is it important?
This is a common viva: define, measure, interpret, and link to compliance and VILI.
- Definitions
- Plateau pressure (Pplat): alveolar pressure at end-inspiration when flow is zero; reflects elastic load (lung + chest wall).
- Driving pressure: Pplat − PEEP; reflects cyclic distending pressure and correlates with outcomes in ARDS.
- Measurement
- In VCV: perform an inspiratory hold (0.5–2 s) to stop flow; read Pplat. In PCV, end-inspiratory pressure approximates Pplat if no flow at end-inspiration.
- Clinical importance
- High Pplat suggests low compliance and risk of overdistension; target ≤30 cmH2O in ARDS.
- If PIP high but Pplat normal → resistance problem; if both high → compliance problem.
What are the haemodynamic effects of positive pressure ventilation and PEEP?
Link intrathoracic pressure to venous return, RV afterload, LV afterload, and clinical contexts.
- Venous return and cardiac output
- Increased intrathoracic pressure reduces venous return (↓ preload) → may reduce CO, especially if hypovolaemic.
- Right ventricle and pulmonary circulation
- High lung volumes/PEEP can increase PVR (alveolar vessel compression) → ↑ RV afterload; problematic in pulmonary hypertension/RV failure.
- Left ventricle
- May reduce LV afterload (reduced transmural pressure), sometimes improving CO in LV failure/pulmonary oedema.
- Clinical implications
- Titrate PEEP with haemodynamics; consider fluids/vasopressors; avoid excessive PEEP in RV failure unless clear oxygenation benefit.
Describe a strategy for ventilating a patient with severe metabolic acidosis (e.g., DKA) who requires intubation.
Key risk: loss of compensatory hyperventilation → rapid severe acidaemia. Ventilation strategy must match pre-intubation minute ventilation initially.
- Pre-intubation planning
- Recognise high minute ventilation requirement; preoxygenate; consider awake/intubation strategy if appropriate; minimise apnoea time.
- Post-intubation ventilation
- Set high minute ventilation initially (higher RR with appropriate VT) to approximate pre-intubation PaCO2; monitor ABG early and frequently.
- Avoid excessive VT/pressures; consider increasing RR rather than VT; ensure no added dead space.
- Treat the cause
- DKA: insulin, fluids, electrolytes; sepsis: antibiotics/source control; consider bicarbonate only in selected severe cases per local guidance.
How would you set ventilation during laparoscopic surgery and why?
Pneumoperitoneum reduces compliance and increases atelectasis and CO2 load.
- Expected changes
- ↓ compliance, ↑ airway pressures, cephalad diaphragm, ↑ V/Q mismatch; ↑ CO2 absorption → ↑ ETCO2.
- Ventilation strategy
- VT 6–8 mL/kg PBW; increase RR to maintain ETCO2/pH; consider PCV to limit peak pressures while ensuring adequate VT.
- Use PEEP (often 5–10; higher in obesity); consider recruitment after insufflation and before emergence.
- Monitor haemodynamics (PEEP + pneumoperitoneum can reduce venous return).
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