
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When the ventilator triggers a breath the patient didn't ask for, something has gone wrong. In this episode we dig into autotrigger: why it happens, how to spot it at the bedside, and the cascade of harm it can set off when it goes unrecognized.
Then we turn to one of the most underused numbers on the ventilator screen: the airway occlusion pressure (P0.1). This 100-millisecond window into the respiratory drive tells you things that tidal volume and respiratory rate simply can't — how hard the brainstem is working before flow has even begun. We break down the physiology behind it, walk through how to measure and interpret it, and explore how P0.1 can serve as both a trigger-sensitivity troubleshooting tool and a real-time gauge of patient effort and diaphragm load.
Along the way we tackle practical questions: what P0.1 thresholds should raise concern, how autotrigger and elevated drive interact with patient-ventilator asynchrony, and when you should let the number change your clinical decisions. Whether you're a fellow just getting comfortable with modes and waveforms or an experienced intensivist looking for a sharper framework, this episode gives you a cleaner mental model for one of ventilation's trickier corners.
By Pulm ToiletWhen the ventilator triggers a breath the patient didn't ask for, something has gone wrong. In this episode we dig into autotrigger: why it happens, how to spot it at the bedside, and the cascade of harm it can set off when it goes unrecognized.
Then we turn to one of the most underused numbers on the ventilator screen: the airway occlusion pressure (P0.1). This 100-millisecond window into the respiratory drive tells you things that tidal volume and respiratory rate simply can't — how hard the brainstem is working before flow has even begun. We break down the physiology behind it, walk through how to measure and interpret it, and explore how P0.1 can serve as both a trigger-sensitivity troubleshooting tool and a real-time gauge of patient effort and diaphragm load.
Along the way we tackle practical questions: what P0.1 thresholds should raise concern, how autotrigger and elevated drive interact with patient-ventilator asynchrony, and when you should let the number change your clinical decisions. Whether you're a fellow just getting comfortable with modes and waveforms or an experienced intensivist looking for a sharper framework, this episode gives you a cleaner mental model for one of ventilation's trickier corners.