Litcius/Paper detail

High tidal volume ventilation is associated with ventilator-associated pneumonia in acute cervical spinal cord injury

Gabrielle E. Hatton, Patrick John Mollett, Reginald E. Du, Shuyan Wei, Radha Korupolu, Charles E. Wade, Sasha D. Adams, Lillian S. Kao

2020Journal of Spinal Cord Medicine16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

CONTEXT/OBJECTIVE: Pneumonia is the leading cause of death after acute spinal cord injury (SCI). High tidal volume ventilation (HVtV) is used in SCI rehabilitation centers to overcome hypoventilation while weaning patients from the ventilator. Our objective was to determine if HVtV in the acute post-injury period in SCI patients is associated with lower incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) when compared to patients receiving standard tidal volume ventilation. DESIGN: Cohort study. SETTING: Red Duke Trauma Institute, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, TX, USA. PARTICIPANTS: Adult Acute Cervical SCI Patients, 2011-2018. INTERVENTIONS: HVtV. OUTCOME MEASURES: VAP, ventilator dependence at discharge, in-hospital mortality. RESULTS: = 0.06). After adjustment, HVtV was associated with a 1.96 relative risk of VAP development (95% credible interval 1.55-2.17) on Bayesian analysis. These results correlate with a >99% posterior probability that HVtV is associated with increased VAP when compared to standard tidal volumes. HVtV was also associated with increased rates of ventilator dependence. CONCLUSIONS: While limited by sample size and selection bias, our data revealed an association between HVtV and increased VAP. Further investigation into optimal early ventilation settings is needed for SCI patients, who are at a high risk of VAP.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineVentilator-associated pneumoniaMechanical ventilationTidal volumeHypoventilationPneumoniaVentilation (architecture)Incidence (geometry)CohortAnesthesiaEmergency medicineInternal medicineRespiratory systemMechanical engineeringEngineeringPhysicsOpticsRespiratory Support and MechanismsNosocomial Infections in ICUSpinal Cord Injury Research