2. Objectives
1. To understand humidification.
2. To describe how airway heat and moisture exchange
normally occurs.
3. State the effect dry gases have on the respiratory
tract.
4. Describe how various types of humidifiers work.
5. Identify the indications, contraindications, and
hazards that pertain to humidification during
mechanical ventilation
6. State how to select the appropriate therapy to
condition a patient’s inspired gas.
3. Introduction
• Humidification is a method to artificially
condition the gas used in respiration of a
patient as a therapeutically modality.
• Active method is by adding heat or water or
both to the device or passive which is
recycling heat and humidity which is exhaled
by the patient.
4. Indications of Humidification
• Primary:
• Overcoming humidity deficit created when
upper airway is bypassed
• To humidify dry medical gases
• Secondary:
• To manage hypothermia
• To treat bronchospasm caused by cold air
5. Clinical signs and symptoms of
inadequate humidification
• Dry and non-productive cough
• Atelectasis
• Increased airway resistance
• Increased work of breathing
• Increased incidence of infection
• Thick and dehydrated secretions
• Complaints of substernal pain and
airway dryness
6. Physiology
• Heat and moisture exchange is a primary function
of the upper respiratory tract, mainly the nose.
• The nasal mucosal lining is kept moist by
secretions from mucous glands, goblet cells,
transudation of fluid through cell walls, and
condensation of exhaled humidity.
• As the inspired air enters the nose, it warms
(convection) and picks up water vapor from the
moist mucosal lining (evaporation), cooling the
mucosal surface.
7. Physiology cont
• Condensation occurs on the mucosal surfaces
during exhalation, and water is reabsorbed by
the mucus (rehydration).
• The mouth is less effective at heat and
moisture exchange than the nose because of
the low ratio of gas volume to moist and warm
surface area and the less vascular squamous
epithelium lining the oropharynx and
hypopharynx.
8.
9. Principles of humidifier function
• Temperature – As the temperature of a gas increases,
its ability to hold water vapour (capacity) increases and
vice versa.
• Surface area – There is more opportunity for
evaporation to occur with greater surface area of
contact between water and gas.
• Time of contact – There is greater opportunity for
evaporation to occur, the longer a gas remains in
contact with water.
• Thermal mass – The higher the mass of water or core
element of a humidifier, the higher its capacity to
transfer or hold heat.
24. Heat and moisture exchange (HME)
Known as ‘Swedish nose’
Light weight disposal device
Used with mechanical ventilator or breathing
spontaneously
Similar to nasopharynx
It function without the additon of a water source or
electricity.
It collects and conserves the patient’s expired moisture
and heat.
With a filter for bacteria and viruses it become Heat and
Moisture Exchanging Filter (HMEF)
Types of HMEs: simple condenser humidifiers,
hydrophobic and hygroscopic
25. simple condenser humidifiers
high thermal conductivity -
metallic gauze, corrugated
metal or parallel metal tubes
Works: breath in air cools
condenser breath out
the condenser will warm and
humidified
Trap approximately 50%
exhale moisture
26. Hydrophobic HMEs
Hydrophobic membrane with small pores
– increased surface area
Works: open pores for water mist except
large water molecule
Efficient in filter bacterial and viral
Expiration condenser temperature to
25˚C
Inspiration condenser temperature to
10 ˚C
The efficiency almost same as the
hygroscopic(70%)
27. Hygroscopic HMEs
Material – low thermal conductivity
paper, wool or even wool
Paper coated with lithium chloride or calcium – to recollect
the moisture
Works: exhaled: some vapor will condense and the rest will
absorbed by hygroscopic salt
Inspiration: the low water pressure in the inspired air cause
released the water molecule direct from hygroscopic salt
high efficiency compare to hydrophobic HMEs
approximately 70% efficiency that is 40 mg/l on exhaled, 27
mg/L on return
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33. According to International Organization for
Standardization (ISO) ideal HME should operate at 70%
efficiency or better providing at least 30 mg/L water
vapor.
Advantage:
inexpensive
easy to use
Small and lightweight
silent in operations
do not required water, temperature monitor, alarms
No burns, no danger of over hydrations and electric
shock.
34. Disadvantages:
less effective than active humidifiers
can deliver only limited humidity
increased in death space (Boots et al 2006)
Increased tidal volume and work of breathing
Need change the HME every 24(Boots et al 1993)
or 48(Djedaini et al 1995)
40. Systemic hydration
Increase the amount of fluid intake orally or
intravenous
To keep our body from dehydrated
To avoid air way secretion become more
tenacious
41. Bubble through humidifiers (BTH)
Works: inspired air – bubbled through – in cold
water that in container - gets humidified
Form or mashed diffusers - produce small
bubbles - total surface area to contact with
water
It have pressure relived valve – open when
pressure is more than 2 psi - creates visible and
audible alarm
used with facemask or canula that supplied O²
Settings: gas temperature 10˚C, relative
humidity 100% and absolute humidity 9.4 mg/l
(St.Louis 1994, mosby)
No objective benefit(BTH + nasal canule)
according to (camplebell et al 1988) but
subjective report shows benefit
prevent water condense in tube that block the
oxygen transfer
43. Passover humidifiers
Works: blow gas over heated sterile
water - gas absorbs the water
vapour - inhaled by patient
Temperature 32˚C-36˚C, water
content 33-43g/m³(Hinds & Watson)
3 type of passover humidifiers:
simple reservoir type
wick type
membrane type
44. Simple reservoir
Works: blows gas over the surface of the heated
water
Heated water - used in the mechanical
ventilations
Room temperature fluid - used in non-invasive
ventilator support
Total surface of contact area between the gas
and water is very less
Humidifier placed below the patient airway
level to prevent overflow of the airway by the
condenser water.
Sealed the traps water to prevent
contamination
Used for patient with spontaneous breathing
Or with ventilator circuit such - CPAP & non-invasive
ventilation
45. Wick humidifier
have an absorbent material -
increase the total surface area of
dry air to interference with
heated water
wick is placed upright position in
the water
Works: dry gas move in chamber
- flows around the wick - absorb
the heat and moisture - gas
saturated with water vapour
leave the chamber
No bubbling - no aerosol
46. Membrane type humidifiers
separate the fluid from the gas
stream – use hydrophobic
membrane
So only water vapour can pass
through the membrane not water
No bubbling - no aerosol
Advantage of Passover humidifiers
compare to bubble humidifiers
it can maintain saturation at
high flows rate
they add little or no resistance
to spontaneous breathing
circuits
minimal risk for spreading
infections.
47.
48.
49.
50. Nebulizer
Produces and disperses liquid particles in a gas stream or
aerosol mist
Used - produce humidification & deliver drug
Drugs such as bronchodilator, mucolytic agent and
decongestant
Size of the water droplet is between 0.5 to 5μm
Particles more than 5μm unable to reach the peripheral
airways
Particles less 0.5μm is very light, and will come back with
expired gases without being deposited in airways
2 types of nebulizer
Large Volume Jet Nebulizers
Ultrasonic nebulizers.
51. Large Volume Jet Nebulizers
Works: by forced a jet of
high-pressure gas into a
liquid - inducing shearing
forces - breaking the water
up into fine water particles
produces particles of size 5
to 30 μm
only 30 to 40% of particles
produced are in optimal
range
Most of the particles get
deposited in wall of main
airways
52. Ultrasonic nebulizer
used piezoeeletric crystal - contract
and expend and produce radio
wave – due to electric current.
Works:
Crystal transducer converts: radio
waves into high-frequency
mechanical vibrations
vibration is transmitted to the
water surface
The high mechanical energy
creates cavitation in the fluid
it formed a standing wave which
will disperses liquid particles
When inhaled it will enter
respiratory tract
Frequency of oscillation
determines the size of the water
particles
53. Aerosol size of 1 to 10 μm a
95% of particles produced are in optimal
range
Particles deposited directly in airway
Very effective for deliver bronchodilator
Hazards from nebulizer:
cause over hydrations
Hypothermia
transition of infect
wheezing or bronchospasm
bronchoconstriction when artificial
airway is used
edema of the airway wall
Contraindications: bronchoconstriction's
and history of hyperresponsiveness
54. Advantages and disadvantages of
nebulizer
Advantages
• It can carry air that fully saturated with water vapour
without heated.
• We can increase the amount of the water vapour in the
inhaled air.
Disadvantage
• It is very expensive.
• The pneumatic nebulizer needs high air flow to operate.
• The ultrasonic nebulizer need electric supply to operate
thus it may cause electric shock
55. Indications, contraindications, complications of
aerosal therapy
According to AARC clinical practice guideline, 1992
Indications:
• Presence of upper airway edema—cool, bland aerosol
• Postoperative management of the upper airway
• Need for sputum specimens or mobilization of secretions
Contraindications:
• Bronchoconstriction
• History of airway hyperresponsiveness
Complications:
• Wheezing or bronchospasm
• Bronchoconstriction when artificial airway is used
• Infection
• Overhydration
• Patient discomfort
56. Hazards of humidification during
mechanical ventilation according to
AARC Clinical practice Guideline
• Hazards and complications associated with the use of
heated humidifier (HH) and HME devices during
mechanical ventilation include the following:
• High flow rates during disconnect may aerosolize
contaminated condensate (HH)
• Underhydration and mucous impaction (HME or HH)
• Increased work of breathing (HME or HH)
• Hypoventilation caused by increased dead space (HME)
• Elevated airway pressures caused by condensation (HH)
57. • Ineffective low-pressure alarm during
disconnection (HME)
• Patient-ventilator dyssynchrony and improper
ventilator function caused by condensation in the
circuit (HH)
• Hypoventilation or gas trapping caused by
mucous plugging (HME or HH)
• Hypothermia (HME or HH)
• Potential for burns to caregivers from hot metal
(HH)
58. Hazards cont
• Potential electrical shock (HH)
• Airway burns or tubing meltdown if heated wire
circuits are covered or incompatible with
humidifier (HH)
• Possible increased resistive work of breathing
caused by mucous plugging (HME or HH)
• Inadvertent overfilling resulting in unintended
tracheal lavage (HH)
• Inadvertent tracheal lavage from pooled
condensate in circuit (HH)
59. Assessment of need
• Either an HME or an HH can be used to
condition inspired gases:
• HMEs are better suited for short-term use
(≤96 hours) and during transport.
• HHs should be used for patients requiring
long-term mechanical ventilation (>96 hours)
or for patients for whom HME use is
contraindicated.
60. Assessment of Outcome
• Humidification is assumed to be appropriate
if, on regular, careful inspection, the patient
exhibits none of the listed hazards or
complications.
61. Common problems of humidification
• Cross contamination
• Condensation
• Proper conditioning of inspired gas
• Enviromental safety
• Overhydration
• Bronchospasm
• Noise
62.
63. Conclusion
• Humidification is a means using a device to
condition the air delivered to the respiratory
airways. This therapy is particularly useful for
patients who are mechanically ventilated or have
impaired respiratory tracts. Humidification can
assist clearance of secretions when clearance
mechanism is not effective or when upper
airways bypassed by endotracheal tube.
• The main goal of humidification therapy is to
maintain normal physiologic conditions in lower
airways.
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