Relationship Between Inspiratory Pressure and Tidal Volume in the Anesthetized Canine
Hounds undergoing prolonged or complicated surgical procedures are often underventilated, as indicated by blood gas and end-tidal CO2(CO2) values when using published ventilatory guidelines. We investigated the relationship between body weight, tidal volume, and inspiratory pressure delivered by the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Comparative medicine 1998-02, Vol.48 (1), p.62-66 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Hounds undergoing prolonged or complicated surgical procedures are often underventilated, as indicated by blood gas and end-tidal CO2(CO2) values when using published ventilatory guidelines. We investigated the relationship between body weight, tidal volume, and inspiratory
pressure delivered by the ventilator (lung inflation pressure) in 59 anesthetized hounds (19 to 33 kg). Animals were ventilated under positive pressure control and noninvasively instrumented to monitor blood pressure, ECG, oxygen saturation, CO2, and tidal volume. Weight, sex, and thorax measurements
were recorded. All dogs were monitored at lung inflation pressures of 10, 14, and 18 cm H2O, with measurements recorded once CO2 stabilized. Veterinary guidelines recommend tidal volumes of 10 to 15 ml/kg of body weight and lung inflation pressures of 15 to 25 cm H2O.
When inflation pressure was below guidelines (10), tidal volume was "normal" (10 to 15 ml/kg), but the animals were underventilated. When inflation pressure was "normal" (14 or 18 cm H2O), tidal volume was above guidelines. Physiologic variables were normal
only when inflation pressure was 14 cm H2O. Weight and thorax depth accounted for 32 and 6%, respectively, of tidal volume variability, and tidal volume varied by ±250 ml at any given body weight and inflation pressure. None of the measured physical variables accurately predicted
tidal volume. These data suggest that the inconsistency in tidal volume is due to a previously undescribed variability in respiratory compliance in the anesthetized hound and that the guidelines for ventilation during surgery need further investigation. |
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ISSN: | 1532-0820 |