Fill volume, humidification and heat effects on aerosol delivery and fugitive emissions during noninvasive ventilation
Research Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine the-effect of fill-volume, heat-and-humidification on aerosoldelivery
and fugitive-aerosol-emissions from nebulizers placed proximal to the patient in single-limbnon-invasive-ventilation
(NIV) adult-model.
We compared a vibrating-mesh-nebulizer (VMN) and jet-nebulizer (JN) placed proximal to breathingsimulator
with adult-settings (I:E 1:3, 15 breaths.min
1
, tidal-volume 500 mL). Ventilator was set to
(20 cm.H
2
O peak-inspiratory-pressure, peak-expiratory-pressure 5cmH
O) in spontaneous-mode.
Each nebulizer was used to compare total-inhaled-dose (TID) collected in inhalation-filter of 3
2
different fill-volumes (5000
mg salbutamol diluted to 1, 2 and 4 mL using normal-saline) and 3 heat-andhumidification-conditions
(no-heat and no-humidification, humidification with no-heat and heat-withhumidification)
using 1 mL respirable-solution containing 5000
mg salbutamol diluted to 2 mL using
normal-saline.
TID with 1, 2 and 4 mL fill-volumes were similar with VMN but increased upto twofold with JN
(p < 0.01). No significant effect of humidification or heat on TID was found for both VMN and JN. Upto
50% of emitted-aerosol escaped through the fixed-orifice-leak.
Efficiency of JN varied with fill-volume. In contrast, the lower-residual-volume of VMN produced
similar efficiency across fill-volumes with higher TID than JN. No need to switch-off the humidifier for
aerosol-delivery in NIV, since variations of heat-and-humidity did not impact TID with both nebulizer.
However, fugitive-aerosol-emissions represent a potential-risk to both healthcare-providers and acutecare-environment.
Research Keywords
Keywords: Nebulizer Non-invasive ventilation Fill volume Humidification Heat Fugitive aerosol