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Title: Non-invasive neurally adjusted ventilatory assist in preterm infants: a randomised phase II crossover trial. Author: Lee J, Kim HS, Jung YH, Shin SH, Choi CW, Kim EK, Kim BI, Choi JH. Journal: Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed; 2015 Nov; 100(6):F507-13. PubMed ID: 26178463. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To compare non-invasive ventilation neurally adjusted ventilatory assist (NIV-NAVA) and non-invasive pressure support (NIV-PS) in preterm infants on patient-ventilator synchrony. DESIGN: A randomised phase II crossover trial. SETTING: Neonatal intensive care units of two tertiary university hospitals in Korea. PATIENTS: Preterm infants born <32 weeks. INTERVENTION: NIV-NAVA and NIV-PS were applied in random order after ventilator weaning. Data were recorded for sequential 5 min periods after 10 min applications of each mode. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The electrical activity of the diaphragm (Edi), ventilator flow and pressure curves were compared to examine the trigger delay (primary outcome) and other parameters of patient-ventilator interaction (secondary outcomes) for each period. RESULTS: Fifteen infants completed the protocol. Trigger delay (35.2±8.3 vs 294.6±101.9 ms, p<0.001), ventilator inspiratory time (423.3±87.1 vs 534.0±165.5 ms, p=0.009) and inspiratory time in excess (32.3±8.3% vs 294.6±101.9%, p=0.001) were lower during NIV-NAVA compared with NIV-PS. Maximum Edi (12.6±6.3 vs 16.6±8.7 μV, p=0.003), swing Edi (8.8±4.8 vs 12.2±8.7 μV, p=0.012) and peak inspiratory pressure (12.3±1.5 vs 14.7±2.7 cm H2O, p=0.003) were also lower during NIV-NAVA. The main asynchrony events during NIV-PS were ineffective efforts and autotriggering. All types of asynchronies except double triggering were reduced with NIV-NAVA. Asynchrony index was significantly lower during NIV-NAVA compared with NIV-PS (p<0.001). No significant differences in leakage, expiratory tidal volume or minute ventilation were observed, but the respiratory rate was lower during NIV-PS than during NIV-NAVA. CONCLUSIONS: NAVA improved patient-ventilator synchrony and diaphragmatic unloading in preterm infants during non-invasive nasal ventilation even in the presence of large air leaks. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Registered with http://www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01877720).[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]