Fully automated postoperative ventilation in cardiac surgery patients: a randomised clinical trial

Ensuring that lung-protective ventilation is achieved at scale is challenging in perioperative practice. Fully automated ventilation may be more effective in delivering lung-protective ventilation. Here, we compared automated lung-protective ventilation with conventional ventilation after elective c...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of anaesthesia : BJA 2020-11, Vol.125 (5), p.739-749
Hauptverfasser: De Bie, Ashley J.R., Neto, Ary Serpa, van Meenen, David M., Bouwman, Arthur R., Roos, Arnout N., Lameijer, Joost R., Korsten, Erik H.M., Schultz, Marcus J., Bindels, Alexander J.G.H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ensuring that lung-protective ventilation is achieved at scale is challenging in perioperative practice. Fully automated ventilation may be more effective in delivering lung-protective ventilation. Here, we compared automated lung-protective ventilation with conventional ventilation after elective cardiac surgery in haemodynamically stable patients. In this single-centre investigator-led study, patients were randomly assigned at the end of cardiac surgery to receive either automated (adaptive support ventilation) or conventional ventilation. The primary endpoint was the proportion of postoperative ventilation time characterised by exposure to predefined optimal, acceptable, and critical (injurious) ventilatory parameters in the first three postoperative hours. Secondary outcomes included severe hypoxaemia (Spo2
ISSN:0007-0912
1471-6771
DOI:10.1016/j.bja.2020.06.037