2nd Edition

Non-Invasive Ventilation and Weaning Principles and Practice, Second Edition

Edited By Mark Elliott, Stefano Nava, Bernd Schönhofer Copyright 2018
    748 Pages 175 Color Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Now in full-colour, this eagerly-anticipated second edition continues to be the most comprehensive resource available on non-invasive ventilation (NIV), both in the hospital and at home. Reflecting a global perspective with expert contributors from more than 15 countries, the book:

    • provides clinical examples of NIV in practice with insightful vignettes

    • covers home- and intensive care-based ventilation

    • details NIV use in acute and chronic respiratory failure, plus paediatric and other specialty applications.

    Disease-specific sections provide best practice in the science, diagnostics and management of conditions such as COPD, cardiac failure, neuromuscular disease and obesity, while features such as ‘Common Clinical Questions & Answers’, abundant tables and illustrations, chapter summaries and new clinical vignettes showcase the realities of NIV in practice. This is essential reading for pulmonologists, critical care physicians and intensive care medicine specialists.         

    Contributors

    1. Non-invasive ventilation: From the past to the present

    Dominique Robert and Barry Make

    PART 1: THE EQUIPMENT

    2. Positive pressure ventilators

    Dean R. Hess

    3. Continuous positive airway pressure

    Annie Lecavalier and Peter Goldberg

    4. Emerging modes for non-invasive ventilation

    Paolo Navalesi, Federico Longhini, Rosanna Vaschetto and Antonio Messina

    5. Extracorporeal CO2 removal

    Lara Pisani and V. Marco Ranieri

    6. Interfaces

    Cesare Gregoretti, Vincenzo Russotto and Davide Chiumello

    7. Quality control of non-invasive ventilation: Performance, service, maintenance and infection control of ventilators

    Jordi Rigau and Ramon Farré

    8. Humidifiers and drug delivery during non-invasive ventilation

    Antonio M. Esquinas Rodriguez and Maria Vargas

    9. How to start a patient on non-invasive ventilation

    Raffaele Scala and Martin Latham

    PART 2: THE PRACTICE – ACUTE NIV

    10. How to set up an acute non-invasive ventilation service

    Paul K. Plant and Gregory A. Schmidt

    11. Education programmes/assessment of staff competencies

    Alanna Hare

    12. Monitoring during acute non-invasive ventilation

    Eumorfia Kondili, Nektaria Xirouchaki and Dimitris Georgopoulos

    13. Troubleshooting non-invasive ventilation

    Nicholas S. Hill, Mayanka Tickoo and Najia Indress

    14. Sedation and delirium

    Lara Pisani, Maria Laura Vega and Cesare Gregoretti

    15. Timing of non-invasive ventilation

    Stefano Nava and Paolo Navalesi

    16. Why non-invasive ventilation works in acute respiratory failure?

    Miguel Ferrer and Antoni Torres

    17. Predicting outcome in patients with acute hypercapnic respiratory failure

    Tom Hartley and Stephen C. Bourke

    18. Use of NIV in the real world

    Mihaela Stefan, Peter Lindenauer, Najia Indress, Faisal Tamimi and Nicholas S. Hill

    PART 3: THE PRACTICE – CHRONIC NIV

    19. Chronic ventilator service

    Maxime Patout, Antoine Cuvelier, Jean-François Muir and Peter Wijkstra

    20. Diagnostic tests in the assessment of patients for home mechanical ventilation

    Michael Polkey, Patrick B. Murphy and Nicholas Hart

    21. Ultrasound

    Daniel A. Lichtenstein

    22. Patient and caregiver education

    Ole Norregaard

    23. Discharging the patient on home ventilation

    Joan Escarrabill and Ole Norregaard

    24. Monitoring during sleep during chronic non-invasive ventilation

    Jean-Paul Janssens, Jean-Christian Borel, Dan Adler and Jean-Louis Pépin

    25. Continuity of care and telemonitoring

    Michele Vitacca

    PART 4: THE DISEASES

    26. Pathophysiology of respiratory failure

    Paul P. Walker and Peter M. Calverley

    PART 5. :COPD

    27. Non-invasive ventilation for exacerbation of COPD

    Martin Dres, Alexandre Demoule and Laurent Brochard

    28. NIV in chronic COPD

    Enrico M. Clini, Nicolino Ambrosino, Ernesto Crisafulli and Guido Vagheggini

    29. Non-invasive ventilation in COPD: The importance of comorbidities and phenotypes

    Jean-Louis Pépin, Jean-Paul Janssens, Renaud Tamisier, Damien Viglino, Dan Adler and Jean-Christian Borel

    30. High-intensity non-invasive positive pressure ventilation

    Sarah Bettina Schwarz, Friederike Sophie Magnet and Wolfram Windisch

    PART 6: HYPOXAEMIC RESPIRATORY FAILURE

    31. Home oxygen therapy in chronic respiratory failure

    Jadwiga A. Wedzicha and Mark W. Elliott

    32. Acute oxygen therapy

    Mark W. Elliott

    33. High-flow oxygen therapy: Physiological effects and clinical evidence

    Nuttapol Rittayamai, Arnaud W. Thille and Laurent Brochard

    34. Equipment for oxygen therapy

    Jane Slough

    35. Non-invasive ventilation for hypoxaemic respiratory failure

    Massimo Antonelli and Giuseppe Bello

    PART 7: CARDIAC FAILURE

    36. Acute heart failure syndrome

    Ross S. Archibald and Alasdair J. Gray

    37. Ventilation in chronic congestive cardiac failure

    Matthew T. Naughton

    PART 8: NEUROMUSCULAR DISEASE

    38. Muscle disorders and ventilatory failure

    David Hilton-Jones

    39. Pathophysiology of respiratory failure in neuromuscular diseases

    Franco Laghi, Hameeda Shaikh and Dejan Radovanovic

    40. Slowly progressive neuromuscular diseases

    Vikram A. Padmanabhan and Joshua O. Benditt

    41. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

    Stephen C. Bourke and John Steer

    42. Duchenne muscular dystrophy

    Anita K. Simonds

    43. Central sleep apnoea

    Shahrokh Javaheri and Mark W. Elliott

    44. Mouthpiece ventilation for daytime ventilatory support

    Miguel R. Gonçalves and Tiago Pinto

    PART 9: CHEST WALL DEFORMITY

    45. Scoliosis

    William J. M. Kinnear

    PART 10: OBESITY

    46. Pathophysiology of respiratory failure in obesity

    Francesco Fanfulla

    47. Acute non-invasive ventilation in obesity-related respiratory failure

    Patrick B. Murphy and Nicholas Hart

    48. Non-invasive ventilation in acute and chronic respiratory failure due to obesity

    Juan Fernando Masa, Isabel Utrabo and Francisco Javier Gómez de Terreros

    PART 11: OTHER CONDITIONS

    49. Bronchiectasis and adult cystic fibrosis

    Sean Duffy, Frederic Jaffe and Gerard J. Criner

    50. Non-invasive ventilation in highly infectious conditions: Lessons from severe acute respiratory syndrome

    David S. C. Hui

    51. NIV in cancer patients

    Raffaele Scala, Uberto Maccari, Giuseppina Ciarleglio, Valentina Granese and Chiara Madioni

    52. Non-invasive ventilation in the elderly

    Erwan L’Her and Corinne Troadec-L’Her

    53. Post-surgery non-invasive ventilation

    Maria Laura Vega and Stefano Nava

    54. Trauma

    Umberto Lucangelo, Massimo Ferluga and Matteo Segat

    55. Spinal cord injuries

    Sven Hirschfeld

    PART 12: PAEDIATRIC VENTILATORY FAILURE

    56. Equipment and interfaces in children

    Alessandro Amaddeo, Annick Frapin and Brigitte Fauroux

    57. Chronic non-invasive ventilation for children

    Alessandro Amaddeo, Annick Frapin and Brigitte Fauroux

    58. Non-invasive positive pressure ventilation in children with acute respiratory failure

    Giorgio Conti, Marco Piastra and Silvia Pulitanò

    PART 13: SPECIAL SITUATIONS

    59. Bronchoscopy during non-invasive ventilation

    Massimo Antonelli and Giuseppe Bello

    60. Non-invasive positive pressure ventilation in the obstetric population

    Bushra Mina, Daniel Zapata and David Wisa

    61. Diaphragm pacing (by phrenic nerve stimulation)

    Jésus Gonzalez-Bermejo

    62. Tracheostomy

    Piero Ceriana, Paolo Pelosi and Maria Vargas

    63. Swallowing and phonation during ventilation

    Hélène Prigent and Nicolas Terzi

    PART 14: PROLONGED WEANING

    64. End-of-life care and non-invasive ventilation

    Christina Faull

    65. Pathophysiology of weaning failure

    Theodoros I. Vassilakopoulos

    66. Non-invasive ventilation for weaning and extubation failure

    Scott K. Epstein

    67. Weaning strategies and protocols

    Michele Vitacca and Luca Barbano

    68. Specialised weaning units

    Aditi Satti, James Brown, Gerard J. Criner and Bernd Schönhofer

    69. Psychological problems during weaning

    Amal Jubran

    PART 15: THE PHYSIOTHERAPIST AND ASSISTED VENTILATION

    70. Respiratory physiotherapy (including cough assistance techniques and glossopharyngeal breathing)

    Miguel R. Gonçalves and João Carlos Winck

    71. Rehabilitation

    Rik Gosselink, Bruno Clerckx, T. Troosters, J. Segers and D. Langer

    PART 16: OUTCOME MEASURES

    72. Health status and quality of life

    Wolfram Windisch

    PART 17: THE PATIENT EXPERIENCE OF NIV

    73. Psychological issues for the mechanically ventilated patient

    Linda L. Bieniek, Daniel F. Dilling and Bernd Schönhofer

    74. The patient’s journey

    Stefano Nava

    75. A patient’s journey: NIV

    Jeanette Erdmann and Andrea L. Klein

    76. A carer’s journey

    Gail Beacock and Patrick Beacock

    Index

    Biography

    Mark Elliott MD FRCP (UK) is a Consultant Respiratory Physician, Department of Respiratory Medicine, St James's University Hospital, Leeds, UK. He has been responsible for developing the home sleep and assisted ventilation service, for acute in hospital NIV and weaning of patients with prolonged ventilator dependence. His research interests are in acute and chronic noninvasive ventilation and sleep related abnormalities of breathing.

    Stefano Nava MD is Professor of Medicine and Chief of the Respiratory and Critical Care Unit, presso S. Orsola Malpghi Hospital in Bologna, Italy; it is one of Italy’s largest hospitals. Dr. Nava has served both the ATS in its Critical Care Assembly as well as the European Respiratory Society in several capacities. He also sits on a joint task force between the ATS and ERS on noninvasive ventilation which aims to keep literature on the subject up to date. Dr. Nava has written more than 100 papers on the noninvasive ventilation. Born in Crema, Italy, Dr. Nava earned his degree in medicine at Pavia University, where he subsequently specialized in pulmonary disease, intensive care medicine, and anesthesiology. Between 1985 and 1988, he took a research fellowship in pulmonary medicine at Royal Victoria Hospital and the Meakins-Christie Laboratories, at McGill University in Canada. It was there, under the tutelage of the venerable professors Joseph Milic-Emili, Francois Bellemare, and the late Peter T. Macklem, that Dr. Nava studied respiratory mechanics and physiology—mainly in invasively ventilated patients.

    Bernd Schönhofer MD, PhD, is Director, Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Klinikum Region Hannover, Oststadt - Heidehaus, Hannover, Germany