Pressure Muscle Index and Threshold of Over-assistance During Pressure Support Ventilation

NCT06494085 · Status: RECRUITING · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 20

Last updated 2025-05-20

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Pressure support ventilation (PSV) is used to assist the breathing of the intubated patient with some pressure from the ventilator. This support aims at avoiding excessive inspiratory effort, while ensuring a certain degree of training of the patient's inspiratory muscle. Avoiding both minimal and excessive assistance is thus important for the optimal care of the intubated patient ensuring a lung and diaphragm protective ventilation with the goal to liberate the patient from the ventilator as soon as possible.

Recently pressure-muscle-index (PMI), an index of inspiratory effort easy to be measured on the ventilator screen, has been proposed to avoid excessive assistance in PSV. This will be the first prospective study testing the effects of setting pressure support based on PMI to avoid excessive assistance on patients recovering from acute lung injury (acute hypoxemic respiratory failure).

Conditions

  • Acute Hypoxemic Respiratory Failure

Interventions

OTHER

Measuring Respiratory Mechanics

First, for each patient enrolled we will perform inspiratory and expiratory occlusions - routinely performed diagnostic maneuvers to measure patient's breathing effort - at the clinically set level of breathing assistance by the mechanical ventilator. Importantly, we will measure pressure-muscle-index (PMI). Second, we will set the level of assistance (i.e. pressure support, PS) in order to make PMI=0. The PS level at which PMI=0 (PS PMI=0) will be used as reference for the study protocol. After 5 minutes at PS PMI=0 we will perform inspiratory and expiratory occlusions.

OTHER

Randomized Pressure Support

3 steps of PS above (+2, +4, +6 cmH2O) and 3 below (-2, -4, -6 cmH2O) PSPMI=0 done in a randomized order (sequence in envelopes opened blindly by the investigators). Each step will last ≤5 minutes if poorly tolerated (see tolerance rule in description). At the end of each step we will perform 1 inspiratory occlusion and 3 expiratory occlusions. Each of the expiratory occlusion will be separated by 30 seconds in order to restore the patient's breathing pattern. We will resume a 3-minutes clinical PS in between each step to minimize changes in PaCO2. If not yet comprised by the study steps each patient will undergo an adjunctive 5 minutes step at PS 0 (zero) cmH2O.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Unity Health Toronto

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Laurent Brochard · Unity Health Toronto - St. Michael's Hospital

Eligibility

Min Age
18 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2024-10-04
Primary Completion
2026-02-28
Completion
2026-02-28

Countries

  • Canada

Study Locations

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Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT06494085 on ClinicalTrials.gov