Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse

The New Coffee Room

  1. TNCR
  2. General Discussion
  3. Are ventilators causing more harm than good?

Are ventilators causing more harm than good?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
28 Posts 11 Posters 402 Views
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • MikM Mik

    OK, now that I went out and educated myself on FiO2, what is the range there normally? Significantly higher than .21?

    George KG Offline
    George KG Offline
    George K
    wrote on last edited by George K
    #6

    @Mik said in Are ventilators causing more harm than good?:

    OK, now that I went out and educated myself on FiO2, what is the range there normally? Significantly higher than .21?

    A ventilator can deliver anywhere from 21% to 100% FiO2.

    However, anything about 50% carries risk, oxygen being a toxic substance (yeah, believe it or not).

    So, the thinking is that if you can deliver adequate oxygenation with less than 50%, it's a good thing.

    "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

    The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

    1 Reply Last reply
    • MikM Offline
      MikM Offline
      Mik
      wrote on last edited by
      #7

      Yep. Too much oxygen and you may suffocate yourself internally with CO2.

      “I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.” ~Winston S. Churchill

      1 Reply Last reply
      • George KG Offline
        George KG Offline
        George K
        wrote on last edited by
        #8

        Primarily for Jolly and Bach...

        A podcast from earlier this week discussing ventilator management, and how unlike typical ARDS this process is.

        Bottom line, they're saying we're intubating and ventilating these people way to early. These people come in with serious lack of oxygenation, but they're not necessarily in distress. One of the docs talks about a guy who walked in with a sat of 50% (that's ridiculously low) who was in no distress, albeit he was tachycardic and tachypneic. She put him on high-flow oxygen and he improved to the 80s. Her point was that this is a patient she would absolutely have intubated 3 months ago.

        https://www.aaem.org/resources/publications/podcasts/critical-care-in-emergency-medicine/episode-19

        Fascinating stuff.

        One of my surgeon friends forwarded a tweet to me about how our thinking might change with this disease, directing me to a tweet by a ICU doc.

        I responded:

        "However, my sense is that we’re not really sure that COVID-19 lung injury is really ARDS. ARDS is a non-specific lung response to some kind of injury, sepsis, shock, whatever. It has a distinctive x-ray appearance, and as the Italian guys say, associated changes in lung compliance.

        COVID-19 gives the same x-ray, but x-rays aren’t physiology - they’re pictures and you infer the diagnosis from that. Decades of thinking that anything that looks like ARDS must be ARDS led the guy in New York to think a different way.

        Now, he may be right, and we will not know for a long time, if ever, whether he is. Nevertheless I find his comment “they don’t need pressure, they need oxygen” to be simplistic. How, exactly, are you going to provide oxygen? When intubated, and people start to desaturate, what’s the course of action you’re going to take. Presumably increase the FiO2. How high will you go? 40%? 80%? 100%. Anything above 50% has its own inherent toxicity to pneumocytes, and perhaps you’re doing ancillary damage that way."

        "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

        The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

        JollyJ 1 Reply Last reply
        • George KG George K

          Primarily for Jolly and Bach...

          A podcast from earlier this week discussing ventilator management, and how unlike typical ARDS this process is.

          Bottom line, they're saying we're intubating and ventilating these people way to early. These people come in with serious lack of oxygenation, but they're not necessarily in distress. One of the docs talks about a guy who walked in with a sat of 50% (that's ridiculously low) who was in no distress, albeit he was tachycardic and tachypneic. She put him on high-flow oxygen and he improved to the 80s. Her point was that this is a patient she would absolutely have intubated 3 months ago.

          https://www.aaem.org/resources/publications/podcasts/critical-care-in-emergency-medicine/episode-19

          Fascinating stuff.

          One of my surgeon friends forwarded a tweet to me about how our thinking might change with this disease, directing me to a tweet by a ICU doc.

          I responded:

          "However, my sense is that we’re not really sure that COVID-19 lung injury is really ARDS. ARDS is a non-specific lung response to some kind of injury, sepsis, shock, whatever. It has a distinctive x-ray appearance, and as the Italian guys say, associated changes in lung compliance.

          COVID-19 gives the same x-ray, but x-rays aren’t physiology - they’re pictures and you infer the diagnosis from that. Decades of thinking that anything that looks like ARDS must be ARDS led the guy in New York to think a different way.

          Now, he may be right, and we will not know for a long time, if ever, whether he is. Nevertheless I find his comment “they don’t need pressure, they need oxygen” to be simplistic. How, exactly, are you going to provide oxygen? When intubated, and people start to desaturate, what’s the course of action you’re going to take. Presumably increase the FiO2. How high will you go? 40%? 80%? 100%. Anything above 50% has its own inherent toxicity to pneumocytes, and perhaps you’re doing ancillary damage that way."

          JollyJ Offline
          JollyJ Offline
          Jolly
          wrote on last edited by
          #9

          @George-K said in Are ventilators causing more harm than good?:

          Primarily for Jolly and Bach...

          A podcast from earlier this week discussing ventilator management, and how unlike typical ARDS this process is.

          Bottom line, they're saying we're intubating and ventilating these people way to early. These people come in with serious lack of oxygenation, but they're not necessarily in distress. One of the docs talks about a guy who walked in with a sat of 50% (that's ridiculously low) who was in no distress, albeit he was tachycardic and tachypneic. She put him on high-flow oxygen and he improved to the 80s. Her point was that this is a patient she would absolutely have intubated 3 months ago.

          https://www.aaem.org/resources/publications/podcasts/critical-care-in-emergency-medicine/episode-19

          Fascinating stuff.

          One of my surgeon friends forwarded a tweet to me about how our thinking might change with this disease, directing me to a tweet by a ICU doc.

          I responded:

          "However, my sense is that we’re not really sure that COVID-19 lung injury is really ARDS. ARDS is a non-specific lung response to some kind of injury, sepsis, shock, whatever. It has a distinctive x-ray appearance, and as the Italian guys say, associated changes in lung compliance.

          COVID-19 gives the same x-ray, but x-rays aren’t physiology - they’re pictures and you infer the diagnosis from that. Decades of thinking that anything that looks like ARDS must be ARDS led the guy in New York to think a different way.

          Now, he may be right, and we will not know for a long time, if ever, whether he is. Nevertheless I find his comment “they don’t need pressure, they need oxygen” to be simplistic. How, exactly, are you going to provide oxygen? When intubated, and people start to desaturate, what’s the course of action you’re going to take. Presumably increase the FiO2. How high will you go? 40%? 80%? 100%. Anything above 50% has its own inherent toxicity to pneumocytes, and perhaps you’re doing ancillary damage that way."

          Standard at The Lady of The Lake is after they hit 5L, anything past goes to the vent. I don't know what the SaO2 has to be at that point.

          Is that a universal standard or disease specific?

          “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

          Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

          George KG 1 Reply Last reply
          • JollyJ Jolly

            @George-K said in Are ventilators causing more harm than good?:

            Primarily for Jolly and Bach...

            A podcast from earlier this week discussing ventilator management, and how unlike typical ARDS this process is.

            Bottom line, they're saying we're intubating and ventilating these people way to early. These people come in with serious lack of oxygenation, but they're not necessarily in distress. One of the docs talks about a guy who walked in with a sat of 50% (that's ridiculously low) who was in no distress, albeit he was tachycardic and tachypneic. She put him on high-flow oxygen and he improved to the 80s. Her point was that this is a patient she would absolutely have intubated 3 months ago.

            https://www.aaem.org/resources/publications/podcasts/critical-care-in-emergency-medicine/episode-19

            Fascinating stuff.

            One of my surgeon friends forwarded a tweet to me about how our thinking might change with this disease, directing me to a tweet by a ICU doc.

            I responded:

            "However, my sense is that we’re not really sure that COVID-19 lung injury is really ARDS. ARDS is a non-specific lung response to some kind of injury, sepsis, shock, whatever. It has a distinctive x-ray appearance, and as the Italian guys say, associated changes in lung compliance.

            COVID-19 gives the same x-ray, but x-rays aren’t physiology - they’re pictures and you infer the diagnosis from that. Decades of thinking that anything that looks like ARDS must be ARDS led the guy in New York to think a different way.

            Now, he may be right, and we will not know for a long time, if ever, whether he is. Nevertheless I find his comment “they don’t need pressure, they need oxygen” to be simplistic. How, exactly, are you going to provide oxygen? When intubated, and people start to desaturate, what’s the course of action you’re going to take. Presumably increase the FiO2. How high will you go? 40%? 80%? 100%. Anything above 50% has its own inherent toxicity to pneumocytes, and perhaps you’re doing ancillary damage that way."

            Standard at The Lady of The Lake is after they hit 5L, anything past goes to the vent. I don't know what the SaO2 has to be at that point.

            Is that a universal standard or disease specific?

            George KG Offline
            George KG Offline
            George K
            wrote on last edited by
            #10

            @Jolly said

            Standard at The Lady of The Lake is after they hit 5L, anything past goes to the vent. I don't know what the SaO2 has to be at that point.

            Is that a universal standard or disease specific?

            I'm quite far out of the ICU loop. The podcast talks about the ARDSNET protocol for intubation. The point is that this more like high-altitude sickness rather than ARDS.

            http://www.ardsnet.org/files/ventilator_protocol_2008-07.pdf

            For me one of the takeaways on this is that clinical judgment might prevail over protocols and flowcharts. How the patient looks might be just as important as the numbers he presents. Whenever I got called about a situation like this, one of my first questions was "How does the patient look?" These people's numbers are terrible, but they don't look that bad, at least in the early stages.

            "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

            The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

            markM 1 Reply Last reply
            • MikM Offline
              MikM Offline
              Mik
              wrote on last edited by
              #11

              We still really know so little here and are using other disease protocols.

              “I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.” ~Winston S. Churchill

              George KG 1 Reply Last reply
              • MikM Mik

                We still really know so little here and are using other disease protocols.

                George KG Offline
                George KG Offline
                George K
                wrote on last edited by
                #12

                @Mik exactly. That's the problem with protocols. We don't understand this disease, at all, and using 20 year old protocols for treating this might be causing more harm than good.

                "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

                The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

                Aqua LetiferA 1 Reply Last reply
                • George KG Offline
                  George KG Offline
                  George K
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #13

                  Covid-19 had us all fooled, but now we might have finally found its secret.

                  First, the ventilator emergency needs to be re-examined. If you’re putting a patient on a ventilator because they’re going into a coma and need mechanical breathing to stay alive, okay we get it. Give ’em time for their immune systems to pull through. But if they’re conscious, alert, compliant — keep them on O2. Max it if you have to. If you HAVE to inevitably ventilate, do it at low pressure but max O2. Don’t tear up their lungs with max PEEP, you’re doing more harm to the patient because you’re treating the wrong disease.

                  I'm still of mixed thoughts on HCQ, but here's what this guy says:

                  All that hilariously misguided and counterproductive criticism the media piled on chloroquine (purely for political reasons) as a viable treatment will now go down as the biggest Fake News blunder to rule them all. The media actively engaged their activism to fight ‘bad orange man’ at the cost of thousands of lives. Shame on them.
                  How does chloroquine work? Same way as it does for malaria. You see, malaria is this little parasite that enters the red blood cells and starts eating hemoglobin as its food source. The reason chloroquine works for malaria is the same reason it works for COVID-19 — while not fully understood, it is suspected to bind to DNA and interfere with the ability to work magic on hemoglobin. The same mechanism that stops malaria from getting its hands on hemoglobin and gobbling it up seems to do the same to COVID-19 (essentially little snippets of DNA in an envelope) from binding to it. On top of that, Hydroxychloroquine (an advanced descendant of regular old chloroquine) lowers the pH which can interfere with the replication of the virus. Again, while the full details are not known, the entire premise of this potentially ‘game changing’ treatment is to prevent hemoglobin from being interfered with, whether due to malaria or COVID-19.
                  No longer can the media and armchair pseudo-physicians sit in their little ivory towers, proclaiming “DUR so stoopid, malaria is bacteria, COVID-19 is virus, anti-bacteria drug no work on virus!”. They never got the memo that a drug doesn’t need to directly act on the pathogen to be effective. Sometimes it’s enough just to stop it from doing what it does to hemoglobin, regardless of the means it uses to do so.

                  Of note: that link above takes you to the Wayback Machine. I wonder if Medium took it down.

                  "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

                  The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  • George KG George K

                    @Mik exactly. That's the problem with protocols. We don't understand this disease, at all, and using 20 year old protocols for treating this might be causing more harm than good.

                    Aqua LetiferA Offline
                    Aqua LetiferA Offline
                    Aqua Letifer
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #14

                    @George-K So then it's not necessarily the ventilators per se, but either our implementation of them, or our choice to use them, is that correct?

                    Please love yourself.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • MikM Offline
                      MikM Offline
                      Mik
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #15

                      Exactly. We may be overusing them to the detriment of patients that might do better just on O2.

                      “I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.” ~Winston S. Churchill

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      • MikM Offline
                        MikM Offline
                        Mik
                        wrote on last edited by Mik
                        #16

                        Y'know, I have long thought for a layman I had pretty good medical knowledge, or at least enough to understand with a little research. This has really stretched the limits of my knowledge.

                        “I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.” ~Winston S. Churchill

                        L JollyJ 2 Replies Last reply
                        • MikM Mik

                          Y'know, I have long thought for a layman I had pretty good medical knowledge, or at least enough to understand with a little research. This has really stretched the limits of my knowledge.

                          L Offline
                          L Offline
                          Loki
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #17

                          This may explain why the current projection of ventilator needs is only 16,000

                          There are a couple of new theories about what CV really is but I will not post until they get more concurrence.

                          LuFins DadL 1 Reply Last reply
                          • MikM Mik

                            Y'know, I have long thought for a layman I had pretty good medical knowledge, or at least enough to understand with a little research. This has really stretched the limits of my knowledge.

                            JollyJ Offline
                            JollyJ Offline
                            Jolly
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #18

                            @Mik said in Are ventilators causing more harm than good?:

                            Y'know, I have long thought for a layman I had pretty good medical knowledge, or at least enough to understand with a little research. This has really stretched the limits of my knowledge.

                            I find blood gases and all the ins and outs of proper therapy to scramble my brains. Not that it was ever my job. Thank God all I had to do was maintain, control and run the ABG machines.

                            “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                            Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            • George KG George K

                              @Jolly said

                              Standard at The Lady of The Lake is after they hit 5L, anything past goes to the vent. I don't know what the SaO2 has to be at that point.

                              Is that a universal standard or disease specific?

                              I'm quite far out of the ICU loop. The podcast talks about the ARDSNET protocol for intubation. The point is that this more like high-altitude sickness rather than ARDS.

                              http://www.ardsnet.org/files/ventilator_protocol_2008-07.pdf

                              For me one of the takeaways on this is that clinical judgment might prevail over protocols and flowcharts. How the patient looks might be just as important as the numbers he presents. Whenever I got called about a situation like this, one of my first questions was "How does the patient look?" These people's numbers are terrible, but they don't look that bad, at least in the early stages.

                              markM Offline
                              markM Offline
                              mark
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #19

                              @George-K said in Are ventilators causing more harm than good?:

                              @Jolly said

                              Standard at The Lady of The Lake is after they hit 5L, anything past goes to the vent. I don't know what the SaO2 has to be at that point.

                              Is that a universal standard or disease specific?

                              I'm quite far out of the ICU loop. The podcast talks about the ARDSNET protocol for intubation. The point is that this more like high-altitude sickness rather than ARDS.

                              http://www.ardsnet.org/files/ventilator_protocol_2008-07.pdf

                              For me one of the takeaways on this is that clinical judgment might prevail over protocols and flowcharts. How the patient looks might be just as important as the numbers he presents. Whenever I got called about a situation like this, one of my first questions was "How does the patient look?" These people's numbers are terrible, but they don't look that bad, at least in the early stages.

                              This is quite interesting. I shared it on FB.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              • JollyJ Offline
                                JollyJ Offline
                                Jolly
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #20

                                And on that note, try running an ABG in the eye of a hurricane.

                                Ain't happening...

                                “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                                Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                • L Loki

                                  This may explain why the current projection of ventilator needs is only 16,000

                                  There are a couple of new theories about what CV really is but I will not post until they get more concurrence.

                                  LuFins DadL Offline
                                  LuFins DadL Offline
                                  LuFins Dad
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #21

                                  @Loki No, the reason the current projections seem so low is because the new projections are based on data vs early projections based on models of Italy, not the US.

                                  The Brad

                                  jon-nycJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                  • LuFins DadL LuFins Dad

                                    @Loki No, the reason the current projections seem so low is because the new projections are based on data vs early projections based on models of Italy, not the US.

                                    jon-nycJ Online
                                    jon-nycJ Online
                                    jon-nyc
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #22

                                    @LuFins-Dad

                                    Not even Italy. Wuhan.

                                    Only non-witches get due process.

                                    • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                                    LuFins DadL 1 Reply Last reply
                                    • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                                      @LuFins-Dad

                                      Not even Italy. Wuhan.

                                      LuFins DadL Offline
                                      LuFins DadL Offline
                                      LuFins Dad
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #23

                                      @jon-nyc even worse.

                                      The Brad

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      • ? Offline
                                        ? Offline
                                        A Former User
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #24
                                        This post is deleted!
                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        • kluursK Offline
                                          kluursK Offline
                                          kluurs
                                          wrote on last edited by kluurs
                                          #25

                                          A friend who is an ER doc in NYC shared this - story. There are better interventions available - proning and oxygen therapy appear to be more advantageous than immediately putting people on ventilators.

                                          "At Lincoln Hospital in the Bronx, Dr. Nicholas Caputo followed 50 patients who arrived with low oxygen levels between 69 and 85 percent (95 is normal). After five minutes of proning, they had improved to a mean of 94 percent. Over the next 24 hours, nearly three-quarters were able to avoid intubation; 13 needed ventilators. Proning does not seem to work as well in older patients, a number of doctors said."

                                          L 1 Reply Last reply
                                          Reply
                                          • Reply as topic
                                          Log in to reply
                                          • Oldest to Newest
                                          • Newest to Oldest
                                          • Most Votes


                                          • Login

                                          • Don't have an account? Register

                                          • Login or register to search.
                                          • First post
                                            Last post
                                          0
                                          • Categories
                                          • Recent
                                          • Tags
                                          • Popular
                                          • Users
                                          • Groups