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PODCAST: Demystifying Non-Invasive Ventilation & HiFlow


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  • High-Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC)

    Key Points
    •  NIV = Support without a tube: CPAP, BiPAP, and HFNC improve oxygenation and reduce the work of breathing.
    •  CPAP = Continuous pressure: Best for hypoxemic patients (e.g., pulmonary edema, OSA).
    •  BiPAP = Two pressures (IPAP/EPAP): Great for hypercapnic failure (e.g., COPD, obesity hypoventilation).
    •  HFNC = Heated, humidified high flow: Reduces effort, improves comfort, and enhances oxygen delivery.
    •  Supportive, not definitive: NIV stabilizes patients while the underlying cause is treated.
    • Introduction

      Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) refers to respiratory support provided without endotracheal intubation. The most common modalities include continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)bilevel positive airway pressure (BiPAP), and high-flow nasal cannula (HFNC). These therapies aim to improve oxygenation, reduce the work of breathing, and potentially prevent invasive mechanical ventilation.

      CPAP and BiPAP
      • CPAP delivers a single, continuous pressure during inspiration and expiration. This pressure (commonly 5–10 cm H₂O) helps recruit atelectatic alveoli, reduce shunt, and improve oxygenation. It is commonly used for conditions like pulmonary edema, obstructive sleep apnea, or mild hypoxemia without significant ventilatory failure.
      • BiPAP alternates between two pressures:
        • Inspiratory positive airway pressure (IPAP), augments tidal volume and unloads inspiratory muscles.
        • Expiratory positive airway pressure (EPAP), maintains alveolar recruitment and improves oxygenation.
        • The differential between IPAP and EPAP is critical for reducing hypercapnia in patients with COPD exacerbations or acute hypercapnic respiratory failure.
        • Indications
          • CPAP: hypoxemia without major ventilatory failure (e.g., cardiogenic pulmonary edema, atelectasis, OSA).
          • BiPAP: hypercapnia with increased work of breathing (e.g., COPD exacerbation, neuromuscular weakness, obesity hypoventilation).
          • A helpful way to conceptualize CPAP and BiPAP is through the hairdryer analogy. Imagine placing a hairdryer in your mouth:
          • Clinical Considerations
            • Masks can be uncomfortable, impair secretion clearance, and limit oral intake.
            • Some patients require sedation to tolerate NIV, but this carries risks in patients with unprotected airways.
            • NIV is thus a high-stakes intervention requiring close monitoring.
            • Common starting dose to understand titration, but start at the level appropriate for your patient:  IPAP 10 cm HO / EPAP 5 cm HO (“10/5”) and are titrated:
              • Increase IPAP to improve tidal volume and CO₂ clearance.
              • Increase EPAP to recruit alveoli and improve oxygenation.
              • Both may be raised simultaneously if the patient is both hypoxemic and hypercapnic.
              • High-Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC)
                • H: Heated & humidified – improves mucociliary clearance, prevents airway drying, and enhances tolerance. I: Inspiratory flow – high flow meets or exceeds patient demand, reducing respiratory rate and effort.
                • F: Functional residual capacity – modest generation of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP), promoting alveolar recruitment.
                • L: Lighter – generally more comfortable and less restrictive than mask-based NIV.
                • O: Oxygen dilution – minimizes entrainment of room air, delivering higher and more predictable FiO₂.
                • W: Washout – flushes anatomical dead space, reducing CO₂ rebreathing.
                • HFNC delivers heated, humidified oxygen at high flow rates (30–60 L/min) through wide-bore nasal prongs. A mnemonic, H-I-F-L-O-W, helps summarize its mechanisms:
                • Indications: Traditionally used for acute hypoxemic respiratory failure (e.g., pneumonia), HFNC is increasingly studied for hypercapnic failure as well, with trials suggesting non-inferiority to BiPAP in select populations.
                • The post PODCAST: Demystifying Non-Invasive Ventilation & HiFlow first appeared on האיגוד הישראלי לרפואה דחופה.

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