Original Article

Pressure-Regulated Volume Control and Pressure-Control Ventilation Modes in Pediatric Acute Respiratory Failure

10.5152/TJAR.2021.1412

  • Hasan Serdar Kıhtır
  • Nihal Akçay
  • Esra Şevketoğlu

Received Date: 03.11.2020 Accepted Date: 08.03.2021 Turk J Anaesthesiol Reanim 2022;50(1):18-23

Objective:

The objective of this study is to present our experience using the pressure-regulated volume control and the pressure-control ventilation modes in children.

Methods:

Patients with acute respiratory failure ventilated with pressure-regulated volume control or pressure-control modes were retrospectively evaluated. The patient’s ventilation parameters (of the first 7 days of ventilation or of the whole ventilation period, if the patient had been ventilated less than 7 days), SpO2, blood gases, and demographic data were collected from the pediatric intensive care unit database.

Results:

Sixty-one patients (median age 12 [4.8-36.4] months) were enrolled in the study. The pressure-control ventilation mode was used on 40 patients (65.6%) and the pressure-regulated volume-control mode was used on 21 (34.4%) patients. Twenty-eight patients (45.9%) had hypoxemic respiratory failure and 44 (72.1%) had hypercapnic respiratory failure. The median positive end-expiratory pressure was higher in pressure-control ventilation mode (5.4 [4.2-6.3] cmH2O) than the pressure-regulated volume-control mode (4.05 [3.68-4.41] H2O, P < .001). Pressure-control mode was used more frequently in hypoxemic cases but both modes were used equally in hypercapnic cases. Hypoxic respiratory failure (yes/no), odds ratio: 3.9 (95% CI 1.2-12.3, P=.02), Ph (nadir), odds ratio: 0.004 (95% CI 0.000-0.275, P=.01), and base excess, odds ratio: 0.88 (95% CI 0.79-0.98, P=.02) were associated with intensive care mortality.

Conclusions:

Although the pressure-control ventilation mode was preferred more frequently in hypoxemic respiratory failure, there was no significant difference between the 2 respiratory modes in terms of length of pediatric intensive care unit stay, MV duration, and mortality. The pressure-regulated volume-control mode seems to be a safer option for physicians who do not have enough experience in using pressurecontrol ventilation mode.

Keywords: Artificial respiration, pediatric intensive care units, positive-pressure respiration, respiratory insufficiency