Ventilator Asynchronies
1️⃣ Introduction
Ventilator asynchrony refers to a mismatch between the patient’s neural respiratory drive and the ventilator’s delivered breath (trigger, flow, cycling, or mode).
It leads to:
- ↑ Work of breathing (WOB)
- Patient discomfort
- Sedation escalation
- Delirium
- Prolonged mechanical ventilation
- Increased ICU stay
- Possibly increased mortality
Asynchrony is present in up to 20–40% of ventilated ICU patients, and severe asynchrony index (>10%) is associated with worse outcomes.
2️⃣ Classification of Ventilator Asynchronies
Ventilator asynchronies are classified according to the phase of the breath cycle:
|
Phase |
Type of Asynchrony |
|
Trigger phase |
Trigger delay, ineffective trigger, auto-triggering |
|
Flow phase |
Flow starvation (flow mismatch) |
|
Cycling phase |
Premature cycling, delayed cycling |
|
Breath delivery |
Double triggering, breath stacking |
|
Mode-related |
Reverse triggering |
3️⃣ Trigger Asynchrony
Occurs when ventilator fails to properly sense patient effort.
A. Ineffective Triggering (Missed Effort)
Definition:
Patient makes inspiratory effort but ventilator does NOT deliver a breath.
Causes:
- Auto-PEEP (most common)
- Weak respiratory muscles
- Over-sedation
- Low trigger sensitivity
- Neuromuscular disease
Waveform:
- Small negative deflection in pressure waveform
- No corresponding ventilator breath
Management:
- Reduce auto-PEEP
- Increase trigger sensitivity
- Reduce sedation
- Adjust inspiratory time
- Switch to pressure support mode
Most common cause = Auto-PEEP in COPD
B. Auto-Triggering
Definition:
Ventilator delivers breath WITHOUT patient effort.
Causes:
- Circuit leak
- Water in tubing
- Too sensitive trigger
- Cardiac oscillations
Waveform:
- Breath delivered without pressure deflection
Management:
- Reduce sensitivity
- Drain water
- Fix leaks
4️⃣ Flow Asynchrony (Flow Starvation)
Definition:
Delivered inspiratory flow does not match patient demand.
Seen in:
- Volume-controlled ventilation
- High respiratory drive
- ARDS
Waveform:
- Scooped pressure-time waveform
- Patient “pulling” against ventilator
Management:
- Increase inspiratory flow
- Switch to pressure control
- Increase pressure support
- Reduce sedation mismatch
5️⃣ Cycling Asynchrony
Occurs when ventilator ends inspiration too early or too late.
A. Premature Cycling (Short Inspiration)
Definition:
Ventilator ends inspiration before patient neural inspiration ends.
Causes:
- Low inspiratory time
- Low cycling threshold (PSV)
Waveform:
- Double triggering may follow
Management:
- Increase inspiratory time
- Decrease cycling percentage in PSV
B. Delayed Cycling (Prolonged Inspiration)
Definition:
Ventilator continues inspiration after patient wants to exhale.
Seen in:
- COPD
- High inspiratory time
- Low cycling threshold
Waveform:
- Pressure spike at end inspiration
Management:
- Shorten inspiratory time
- Increase cycling threshold
Classic in COPD patients.
6️⃣ Double Triggering & Breath Stacking
Definition:
Two consecutive breaths with minimal expiration between them.
Seen in:
- ARDS
- Low tidal volume ventilation
- High respiratory drive
Consequence:
- Large tidal volume
- Volutrauma risk
Management:
- Increase tidal volume slightly
- Increase sedation
- Switch to pressure control
- Neuromuscular blockade (if severe ARDS)
7️⃣ Reverse Triggering
Definition:
Ventilator-initiated breath triggers diaphragm contraction.
Seen in:
- Deeply sedated patients
- ARDS
Mechanism:
Entrainment phenomenon
Complication:
- Breath stacking
- Self-inflicted lung injury (P-SILI)
Management:
- Reduce sedation
- Adjust ventilator mode
- Neuromuscular blockade (short term)
📌 Increasingly recognized in modern ICU.
8️⃣ Asynchrony Index (AI)
AI=Total breathsAsynchronous breaths ×100
- AI > 10% → clinically significant
- Associated with prolonged ventilation
9️⃣ Mode-wise Asynchrony
|
Mode |
Common Asynchrony |
|
Volume Control |
Flow starvation |
|
Pressure Support |
Premature cycling |
|
Assist-Control |
Double triggering |
|
Deep sedation |
Reverse triggering |
|
COPD |
Ineffective triggering |
🔟 Practical Bedside Approach (ICU Algorithm)
Step 1: Look at patient
- Accessory muscle use?
- Tachypnea?
- Agitation?
Step 2: Check waveform
- Pressure
- Flow
- Volume
Step 3: Identify phase problem
Trigger? Flow? Cycling?
Step 4: Fix ventilator before increasing sedation
Important: Do NOT blindly increase sedation before correcting ventilator settings.
