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What Are the Clinical Indications for Noninvasive Positive Pressure Ventilation?

The Hospitalist. 2011 December;2011(12):

KEY Points

  • NPPV is a modality that assists ventilation by delivering positive expiratory and/or inspiratory pressures without the use of an endotracheal tube. NPPV use avoids the morbidity and mortality associated with endotracheal intubation.
  • Good candidates for NPPV include patients with respiratory distress (including tachypnea or dyspnea), hypercarbia, or hypoxia who are able to protect the airway, tolerate the mask, manage secretions, and are hemodynamically stable.
  • NPPV has been shown to be beneficial in moderate to severe COPD with hypercarbia and respiratory acidosis, cardiogenic pulmonary edema, pulmonary infections in immunosuppressed patients, and can be used as a bridge after extubation in COPD patients.
  • Efficacy data is limited and heterogeneous for patients with asthma exacerbation or pneumonia, for post-surgical patients, in those undergoing bronchoscopy, and in those with ALI/ARDS.
  • There is no evidence for NPPV in extubation failure, though it may facilitate early extubation and prevention of extubation failure in COPD patients.

Additional Reading

  • Liesching T, Kwok H, Hill N. Acute applications of noninvasive positive pressure ventilation. Chest. 2003; 124:699-713.
  • Keenan S, Sinuff T, Burns K, et al. Clinical practice guidelines for the use of noninvasive positive pressure ventilation and noninvasive continuous positive airway pressure in the acute care setting. CMAJ. 2001;183:E195-E214
  • American Thoracic Society. International Consensus Confer-ences in Intensive Care Medicine: Noninvasive Positive Pressure Ventilation in Acute Respiratory Failure. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2001;163:283-291.

References

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  3. Liesching T, Kwok H, Hill N. Acute applications of noninvasive positive pressure ventilation. Chest. 2003;124:699-713.
  4. Keenan S, Sinuff T, Burns K, et al. Clinical practice guidelines for the use of noninvasive positive pressure ventilation and noninvasive continuous positive airway pressure in the acute care setting. CMAJ. 2001;183:E195-E214.
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