Nasal high flow clears anatomical dead space in upper airway models

Author:

Möller Winfried12,Celik Gülnaz12,Feng Sheng3,Bartenstein Peter4,Meyer Gabriele5,Eickelberg Oliver126,Schmid Otmar12,Tatkov Stanislav3

Affiliation:

1. Comprehensive Pneumology Center, Member of the German Center for Lung Research, Munich, Germany;

2. Institute of Lung Biology and Disease, Helmholtz Zentrum München, German Research Center for Environmental Health, Neuherberg, Germany;

3. Fisher and Paykel Healthcare, Auckland, New Zealand;

4. Department of Nuclear Medicine, LMU Medical Center Grosshadern, München, Germany;

5. Asklepios Fachkliniken München-Gauting, Department of Nuclear Medicine, Gauting, Germany; and

6. University Hospital, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Germany

Abstract

Recent studies showed that nasal high flow (NHF) with or without supplemental oxygen can assist ventilation of patients with chronic respiratory and sleep disorders. The hypothesis of this study was to test whether NHF can clear dead space in two different models of the upper nasal airways. The first was a simple tube model consisting of a nozzle to simulate the nasal valve area, connected to a cylindrical tube to simulate the nasal cavity. The second was a more complex anatomically representative upper airway model, constructed from segmented CT-scan images of a healthy volunteer. After filling the models with tracer gases, NHF was delivered at rates of 15, 30, and 45 l/min. The tracer gas clearance was determined using dynamic infrared CO2 spectroscopy and 81mKr-gas radioactive gamma camera imaging. There was a similar tracer-gas clearance characteristic in the tube model and the upper airway model: clearance half-times were below 1.0 s and decreased with increasing NHF rates. For both models, the anterior compartments demonstrated faster clearance levels (half-times < 0.5 s) and the posterior sections showed slower clearance (half-times < 1.0 s). Both imaging methods showed similar flow-dependent tracer-gas clearance in the models. For the anatomically based model, there was complete tracer-gas removal from the nasal cavities within 1.0 s. The level of clearance in the nasal cavities increased by 1.8 ml/s for every 1.0 l/min increase in the rate of NHF. The study has demonstrated the fast-occurring clearance of nasal cavities by NHF therapy, which is capable of reducing of dead space rebreathing.

Funder

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare, Auckland, New Zealand

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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