Chest
Volume 97, Issue 3, March 1990, Pages 679-683
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Clinical Investigations in Critical Care
Tracheostomy Ventilation: A Study of Efficacy with Deflated Cuffs and Cuffless Tubes

https://doi.org/10.1378/chest.97.3.679Get rights and content

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of long-term tracheostomy intermittent positive pressure ventilation (TIPPV) with deflated cuffs or cuffless tracheostomy tubes for patients with neuromuscular ventilatory failure. One hundred four unweanable ventilator-dependent patients with neuromuscular ventilatory insufficiency were referred for pulmonary rehabilitation. Ninety-one of the 104 patients converted from TIPPV with an inflated cuff to either a deflated cuff (28 patients) or no cuff (63 patients). Arterial blood gas (ABG) and routine daytime monitoring of end-tidal PCO2 were performed on all patients during this transition. In addition, periodic daytime and continuous overnight oximetry were performed on 21 of these patients receiving TIPPV with deflated cuffs or cuffless tubes. Thirteen of the 21 patients also had continuous overnight end-tidal PCO2 monitoring. Despite a mean vital capacity of 17 ± 12.3 percent and the fact that 16 of the 21 patients could tolerate only 60 minutes or less of autonomous respiration (free time), ABG, daytime SaO2 and end-tidal PCO2 were within normal limits for all 21 patients and mean overnight SaO2 was 94 percent or greater for all except one patient who used a cuffless tracheostomy tube. Six patients experienced very transient desaturations below 90 percent but no one had a maximum end-tidal PCO2 greater than 47 mm Hg. Patients with adequate pulmonary compliance and sufficient oropharyngeal muscle strength for functional swallowing and articulation are candidates for conversion to TIPPV with deflated cuffs or cuffless tracheostomy tubes despite little or no autonomous respiration.

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PATIENTS

One hundred four long-term ventilator-dependent patients with neuromuscular respiratory insufficiency were referred for pulmonary rehabilitation. Seventy-eight of these patients were dependent on TIPPV with inflated cuffs at referral. The other 26 patients were converted to TIPPV after varying periods of time receiving noninvasive methods of assisted ventilation. The 104 patients presented with the following diagnoses: traumatic high level quadriplegia in 38 patients, postpolio in 22 patients,

METHODS

All of the vital capacities (VCs) of the patients were measured in both sitting and supine positions. Any patients for whom food aspiration was suspected had methylene blue tests. Two patients with positive methylene blue tests had high positioned tracheostomies and were converted to noninvasive alternatives of ventilatory support without long-term cuff deflation. Two other patients had tracheoesophageal fistulas that were repaired before further attention could be paid to their tracheostomy

RESULTS

Ninety-one of the 104 patients converted from TIPPV with an inflated cuff to either a deflated cuff (28 patients) or no cuff (63 patients). These patients remained dependent on TIPPV in this manner for an average of 4.2 years (range, one week to 29 years), including 23 patients for nine years or more. Ten of the remaining patients converted from TIPPV with inflated cuffs directly to noninvasive alternatives of ventilatory support and three patients continue to use TIPPV with their cuffs

DISCUSSION

Most standard hospital volume respirators are designed to deliver and assess ventilation in a closed system, including tracheostomy or intubation tube cuff inflation. Only portable ventilators are currently adequate for TIPPV with cuffs deflated or removed. Further, most if not all current nursing and respiratory therapy school curricula emphasize the need for closed systems and do not present how to support ventilation with cuffless tubes, body ventilators, or by other noninvasive methods. As

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This work was supported by the Department of Education Cirants and Contracts Service RRD: Innovation Cirant G008720331, and the Easter Seals Research Foundation Grant N8704.

This work was performed on patients referred to University Hospital, Newark, NJ, and Goldwater Memorial Hospital, Roosevelt Island, NY.

Manuscript received August 28; revision accepted October 26.

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