Sedation and Analgesia During Noninvasive Ventilation (NIV)




© Springer International Publishing AG 2018
Davide Chiumello (ed.)Practical Trends in Anesthesia and Intensive Care 2017https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61325-3_9


9. Sedation and Analgesia During Noninvasive Ventilation (NIV)



Lara Pisani1, Giuliano Lo Bianco2, Marinella Pugliesi2, Jacopo Tramarin2 and Cesare Gregoretti 


(1)
Department of Specialistic, Diagnostic and Experimental Medicine (DIMES), Respiratory and Critical Care, Sant’Orsola Malpighi Hospital, Alma Mater Studiorum, University of Bologna, Via Massarenti 9, Bologna, 40126, Italy

(2)
Department of Biopathology and Medical Biotechnology (DIBIMED), Section of Anesthesia Analgesia Intensive Care and Emergency, Policlinico Paolo Giaccone, University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy

 



 

Cesare Gregoretti




9.1 Introduction


In the last decades, NIV has expanded greatly in several populations of patients with acute respiratory failure (ARF). As a result of emerging evidence, NIV has been shown to reduce the necessity of invasive ventilation and associated complications [1]. NIV is now considered the first-choice ventilator treatment for a large number of patients with ARF such as exacerbations of COPD along with a success percentage of 80–85% [25], acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema, pulmonary infiltrates in immunocompromised patients, and weaning from mechanical ventilation in COPD patients [1]. NIV success is strongly dependent on the patient’s degree of tolerance and collaboration during ventilation [3]. One of the most frequent causes of premature interruption of the NIV is mask intolerance due to pain, discomfort, or claustrophobia [6]. Relative contraindications to NIV are delirium and agitation [2]. Judicious sedation may play a crucial role in improving patient’s tolerance in selected cases at risk of endotracheal intubation due to NIV failure. Although the use of sedative drugs can reduce the risk of NIV failure, the possibility and suitability of sedating a patient during NIV remain a debated issue [710]. This chapter will focus on a practical overview of sedation and analgesia during NIV.


9.2 Sedation and NIV in Clinical Practice


A survey published in 2007 [11] showed that in clinical practice, the use of sedatives varies according to the geographical location or by the type of hospital where the NIV is applied and by the specialist who prescribes it. This survey found that benzodiazepines were the most used drugs in North America, while opioids (morphine and fentanyl), although preferred in Europe, were only used in 29% of cases. In addition, sedation was usually administered as an intermittent intravenous bolus according to clinical experience rather than using standardized protocols.

Recently [12] a retrospective study evaluated the efficacy and safety of sedation in agitated patients treated with NIV after an episode of acute respiratory failure. Of 3506 patients 120 [81 patients with non-intubation code (DNI) and 39 non-DNI] were given sedatives to control agitation during NIV. Sedation was performed only intermittently in 72 (60%) patients, switched to continuously in 37 (31%), and provided only continuously in 11 (9%). The reasons for poor NIV tolerance were mask discomfort, pressure discomfort, or the combination of the two. Risperidone and haloperidol were the drugs of choice for the intermittent use; dexmedetomidine, midazolam, or propofol were chosen for continuous infusion. The Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS) was used as an index of sedation level. Results suggest that sedation during NIV can be used to allow continuation of NIV in agitated patients with either a DNI or non-DNI status. Nevertheless 48% of patients in the study had diseases such as ARDS, severe pneumonia, and acute exacerbation of interstitial lung disease which have weak NIV recommendations.

Despite intolerance is commonly perceived as a reason for NIV failure that should respond to sedation and analgesia, recent studies suggest that they are not used very often for that indication. Muriel et al. found [13] that sedation and analgesia were used in only about 20% of patients using NIV, and they did not bring any benefit in terms of reduction of NIV failure. The level of evidence in favor of an extensive application of sedation during NIV is still limited, and further larger controlled trials are needed to clarify the indications of sedation during NIV.


9.3 Use of Sedation and Analgesia During NIV


Sedation and analgesia are commonly used in the ICU to improve quality of life in intubated and critically ill patients. Analgo-sedation increases tolerance to the endotracheal tube, reduces anxiety and reactions to painful stimuli, allows a better adaptation of the patient to the hospital environment, modulates patient respiratory effort and drive, and makes invasive procedures tolerable [14].

Additional goals of sedation include preserving day/night cycles, hemodynamic stability, conservation of diaphragmatic function, preservation of metabolic homeostasis, and attenuation of the stress/immune response.

In patients undergoing NIV, sedation should be administered by experienced staff using the minimum doses required to ensure a good control of agitation and to improve the patient-ventilator interaction, without inducing any respiratory drive depression. NIV is usually applied only in patients with a minimum spontaneous breathing capacity and able to trigger the ventilator and to protect the airway. The ideal sedative drug during NIV should have a rapid onset, a predictable duration of action, a constant half-life time, a no impact on the hemodynamic and respiratory drive, an organ-independent metabolism, a minimal drug interaction, and, finally, a low cost. However, no single sedative agent currently available fulfills the criteria for an ideal agent.


9.4 Analgesic Agents


Morphine and synthetic molecules such as fentanyl and remifentanil are used in analgo-sedation procedures. Opioids are able to overcome the blood-brain barrier, interacting with a variety of central and peripheral receptors. In particular, they have an agonist action on opioid μ and κ receptors, producing analgesic action. Instead, the interaction with other receptors contributes to adverse events such as respiratory depression and hypotension. In particular, hypotension depends on different factor combinations that include sympathicolysis, bradycardia, and vagal stimulus for histamine release. Other side effects are depression level of consciousness and intestinal hypomobility. All these aspects should be considered when opioids are administered during NIV. Opioids are risky in patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSA) because they can cause pharyngeal collapse and inhibition of the rapid eye movement (REM) phase. Naloxone and naltrexone are able to displace the molecules of morphine and analogues from the receptors, thus interrupting their action. Naloxone has an extreme short onset of action; it is indeed the drug of choice for acute opioid intoxication.


9.4.1 Morphine


Morphine is a potent opioid analgesic characterized by hepatic metabolism and renal excretion with intermediate volume of distribution. Dose adjustment is recommended in patients with hepatic or renal impairment in order to avoid accumulation of morphine active metabolites which may cause prolonged effects. Morphine produces its major effects in the central nervous system (CNS), but action on peripheral receptors will also exert effects. CNS effects include analgesia, sedation, mood changes, respiratory depression, pruritus, nausea, and vomiting. Morphine has a rapid onset but requires continuous titration of dosage to avoid the risk of accumulation. Sleep apnea increases the risk of morphine-induced respiratory depression. The first study which analyzed analgo-sedation in patients undergoing NIV was published in 1999 [15]. In this pilot study morphine was used successfully in 9 of the 12 enrolled patients with ALI/ARDS who underwent a trial of NIV. Success rate defined as avoidance of intubation and no further assisted ventilation for 72 h was achieved on six of nine occasions (66%).


9.4.2 Remifentanil


Remifentanil is a short-acting opioid with μ receptor selectivity and a unique pharmacokinetic profile. This drug has an onset time of approximately 1 min and shows a rapid blood-brain equilibration time, and it has a reduced distribution volume [16].

Furthermore, no dose adjustment is necessary in patients with renal and hepatic impairment [17].

There are limited data regarding the use of remifentanil during noninvasive mechanical ventilation. In a prospective preliminary study, Constantin et al. [18] evaluated the efficacy and safety of the use of remifentanil in 13 patients (ten with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure and three with acute hypercapnic respiratory failure) at risk of failing noninvasive ventilatory treatment for discomfort and/or refusal to continue NIV.

Continuous infusion of remifentanil (mean remifentanil dose 0.1 ± 0.03 μg/kg/min) to obtain a conscious sedation (score 2–3 of the Ramsay scale) led to a decrease in respiratory rate and improvement of arterial blood gases after 1 h, avoiding intubation in 9 of 13 patients (69%).

Subsequently in a prospective uncontrolled trial [19], efficacy and safety of remifentanil was evaluated in 36 patients with persistent acute respiratory failure (PaO2/FiO2 < 200 after a first-line trial of NIV to avoid intubation) who refused to continue treatment because of intolerance to two different interfaces (helmet and total face mask). The initial dose of the drug was 0.025 μg/kg/min increased by 0.010 μg/kg/min every minute until score 2–3 of the Ramsay scale was reached; maximum dosage was set to 0.12 μg/kg/min. With this protocol 61% of patients continued NIV after the initiation of remifentanil infusion.

No patient showed hemodynamic changes or reduction in respiratory drive during the study period; 14 patients were intubated: 12 for the persisting discomfort and 2 for hemodynamic instability due to the presence of septic shock. In addition, analgo-sedation with remifentanil showed a decrease in respiratory rate and an improvement in blood gas values both in mask or helmet-ventilated patients.

Despite these promising results, the use of remifentanil-based sedation during NIV is still very limited. So far, there are no studies in literature which show a clear effect on the respiratory drive to the actual clinical practice drug dosage.

Apr 10, 2018 | Posted by in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Sedation and Analgesia During Noninvasive Ventilation (NIV)

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