Mechanical Ventilation
Guide for GCC Nurses

Comprehensive clinical reference for ICU nurses managing mechanically ventilated patients — modes, settings, monitoring, complications, weaning, and GCC-specific considerations.

ICU / Critical Care Evidence-Based Interactive Tools 15-Question Quiz Updated 2025
Ventilator Basics

Indications for Mechanical Ventilation

Type 1 — Hypoxaemic Respiratory Failure

  • PaO2 <60 mmHg on room air (SpO2 <90%)
  • Causes: pneumonia, ARDS, pulmonary oedema, PE
  • Problem: failure of gas exchange (oxygenation)

Type 2 — Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure

  • PaCO2 >45 mmHg with respiratory acidosis
  • Causes: COPD exacerbation, neuromuscular disease, drug overdose
  • Problem: failure of ventilation (pump failure)

Other Indications

  • Airway protection: GCS ≤8, loss of gag reflex, trauma
  • Haemodynamic instability with respiratory compromise
  • Apnoea or impending respiratory arrest
  • Post-operative support (cardiac surgery, major abdominal)
  • Severe bronchospasm unresponsive to treatment

Goals of Mechanical Ventilation

Oxygenation Goal

SpO2 94–98% (88–92% in COPD/hypercapnic risk)
PaO2 60–100 mmHg — avoid hyperoxia

Ventilation Goal

PaCO2 35–45 mmHg (permissive hypercapnia acceptable in ARDS)
pH >7.20 minimum; target 7.35–7.45

Work of Breathing (WOB)

Reduce patient effort to prevent respiratory muscle fatigue. Balance comfort vs. over-sedation.

Lung Protection

Avoid volutrauma, barotrauma, atelectrauma. Plateau pressure <30 cmH2O. Driving pressure <15 cmH2O.

Ventilator Components

The Ventilator Machine

  • Microprocessor-controlled pneumatic device
  • Controls gas delivery: volume, pressure, flow, timing
  • Common models: Drager Evita, Puritan Bennett 980, Maquet Servo-i (widely used in GCC)
  • Displays: waveforms, pressures, volumes, alarms

The Circuit

  • Disposable corrugated tubing (inspiratory + expiratory limbs)
  • Humidifier (heated wire circuit) or HME (heat-moisture exchanger)
  • Water trap — empty when visible, prevent aspiration into circuit
  • Inline suction catheter system
  • Change circuit every 7 days or per policy

Airway Interface

  • Endotracheal Tube (ETT): short-term (<2–3 weeks)
  • Tracheostomy tube: long-term (>2–3 weeks)
  • Both have inflatable cuffs to seal the airway
  • Subglottic suctioning ports (Hi-Lo Evac) — VAP prevention

Endotracheal Tube (ETT) Management

ETT Sizing

PatientETT Size (ID)Depth at Lips
Adult Male8.0–9.0 mm23–25 cm
Adult Female7.0–8.0 mm21–23 cm
PaediatricAge/4 + 4Age/2 + 12

ETT Confirmation

  • Bilateral equal chest rise on ventilation
  • Bilateral breath sounds — absent/reduced on left = right main bronchus intubation
  • Waveform capnography: gold standard (CO2 waveform)
  • Chest X-ray: tip 3–5 cm above carina (at level of clavicular heads)
  • Absence of gastric sounds on auscultation
  • SpO2 maintained after intubation

Cuff Management

Target Cuff Pressure: 20–30 cmH2O

  • Check with manometer every 8–12 hours
  • <20 cmH2O: aspiration risk (microaspiration)
  • >30 cmH2O: tracheal ischaemia / stenosis risk

High-Volume Low-Pressure Cuffs

  • Standard modern ETT design
  • Conform to tracheal wall at lower pressure
  • Subglottic suction port (Hi-Lo Evac) above cuff — aspirates pooled secretions
  • Connect to continuous or intermittent suction (–20 mmHg)

ETT Securing

  • Bite block prevents biting — protects tube patency
  • Thomas holder or adhesive tape fixation
  • Document ETT cm marking at lips/teeth each shift
  • Reposition tube side-to-side q24–48h (pressure injury prevention)

Tracheostomy vs ETT: Comparison

FeatureETTTracheostomy
Indication durationShort-term (<2–3 weeks)Long-term (>2–3 weeks)
Patient comfortUncomfortable, requires sedationBetter tolerated, less sedation needed
CommunicationNot possiblePossible with speaking valve (Passy-Muir)
Oral care / feedingDifficult — mouth care via suctioningEasier — oral route potentially usable
Accidental displacementHigh risk — dislodgement dangerousEstablished tract — re-insertion easier
WeaningExtubation requiredCapping / cuff deflation trials possible
ComplicationsDental/laryngeal injury, VAPSurgical risks, granuloma, tracheomalacia
Dead spaceHigherLower — improved WOB

Timing of Tracheostomy in GCC ICUs

Early tracheostomy (7–10 days) increasingly practised at Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi, KFSH, and Hamad Medical Corporation for patients with expected prolonged ventilation, improving patient comfort, ICU throughput, and rehabilitation potential.

Modes & Settings

Interactive Ventilator Modes Guide

Select a ventilation mode to view description, parameters, and nursing considerations.

Volume Control
VC / ACV
Pressure Control
PC / PCV
SIMV
SIMV + PS
Pressure Support
PSV
CPAP
CPAP
APRV
BiLevel / APRV

Volume Control Assist-Control (VC/ACV)

The ventilator delivers a set tidal volume (TV) with every breath — both mandatory and patient-triggered. Pressure varies depending on lung compliance and resistance.

Set Parameters

  • Tidal Volume (TV): 6–8 mL/kg IBW
  • Respiratory Rate (RR): 12–16/min
  • FiO2: 21–100%
  • PEEP: start 5 cmH2O
  • Flow rate / I:E ratio

Variable (Monitored)

  • Peak Inspiratory Pressure (PIP)
  • Plateau Pressure (Pplat)
  • Mean Airway Pressure
  • Exhaled tidal volume

Nursing Considerations

  • Monitor peak pressure — rising Ppeak = obstruction/bronchospasm
  • Rising Ppeak with unchanged Pplat = airway secretions — suction
  • Rising Pplat = worsening compliance — reduce TV, consider ARDS
  • Watch for auto-PEEP in COPD/asthma — increase expiratory time
  • Ensure patient-ventilator synchrony — may need sedation adjustment

Pressure Control Ventilation (PCV)

The ventilator delivers breaths to a set inspiratory pressure. Tidal volume varies with changes in lung compliance and resistance. Provides a decelerating flow waveform for improved gas distribution.

Set Parameters

  • Inspiratory Pressure (above PEEP)
  • Respiratory Rate: 12–16/min
  • FiO2
  • PEEP
  • Inspiratory Time (Ti)

Variable (Monitored)

  • Tidal Volume — varies with compliance
  • Minute Ventilation
  • Peak Airway Pressure (= set pressure + PEEP)

Nursing Considerations

  • Monitor TV closely — decreased TV = worsening compliance
  • If compliance improves (e.g., after diuresis) TV may become excessive — reduce pressure
  • Useful in ARDS with low compliance to limit pressures
  • Good for patients with air leaks (ETT cuff leak, bronchopleural fistula)
  • Alarm low exhaled TV to detect compliance changes

Synchronized Intermittent Mandatory Ventilation (SIMV)

Delivers a set number of mandatory breaths synchronised with patient effort. Spontaneous breaths between mandatory breaths are supported by Pressure Support (PS). Used for gradual weaning.

Set Parameters

  • Mandatory rate (e.g., 10/min)
  • TV or Pressure (depends on VC or PC base)
  • Pressure Support level for spontaneous breaths
  • FiO2, PEEP

Variable (Monitored)

  • Total RR (mandatory + spontaneous)
  • Spontaneous TV
  • Minute ventilation

Nursing Considerations

  • Weaning: gradually reduce mandatory rate — patient takes over more breaths
  • Monitor spontaneous TV — ensure adequate (>5 mL/kg)
  • Watch for fatigue if PS level too low for spontaneous breaths
  • Falling mandatory rate + stable spontaneous breathing = readiness for PSV trial

Pressure Support Ventilation (PSV)

Every patient-triggered breath is augmented by a set pressure support level. There are no mandatory breaths — patient controls rate and timing. Commonly used for weaning. Requires spontaneous respiratory drive.

Set Parameters

  • Pressure Support level (cmH2O)
  • FiO2
  • PEEP
  • Apnoea backup rate (safety)

Variable (Monitored)

  • RR (patient-determined)
  • TV (patient + PS)
  • Minute ventilation

Nursing Considerations

  • Reduce PS gradually (e.g., 2 cmH2O/step) as tolerance improves
  • PS 5–8 cmH2O = minimal support (overcomes ETT resistance) → SBT
  • Monitor for fatigue: RR >30, SpO2 drop, diaphoresis, accessory muscle use
  • Apnoea alarm essential — no mandatory rate backup in pure PSV
  • Most comfortable mode for awake, cooperative patients

Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)

Delivers a constant baseline pressure throughout the respiratory cycle. No inspiratory pressure support added. Patient breathes spontaneously against the CPAP baseline. Used for SBT and post-extubation support via mask.

Set Parameters

  • CPAP level (typically 5 cmH2O for SBT)
  • FiO2
  • Apnoea alarm / backup

Variable (Monitored)

  • RR, TV, SpO2
  • Patient work of breathing
  • Haemodynamics during trial

Nursing Considerations

  • Used as 30–120 min SBT — observe closely for failure criteria
  • Also used as post-extubation NIV via face mask
  • Pure CPAP: no ventilatory support — patient must have adequate drive + effort
  • Document trial start/end time, tolerance, and vital signs

Airway Pressure Release Ventilation (APRV)

Maintains lungs at a high continuous pressure (P-high) for most of the cycle, with brief releases to a low pressure (P-low) to allow CO2 clearance. Allows spontaneous breathing at any point. Primarily used in ARDS for alveolar recruitment.

Set Parameters

  • P-high (e.g., 25–35 cmH2O)
  • T-high (e.g., 4–6 seconds)
  • P-low (usually 0 cmH2O)
  • T-low (e.g., 0.4–0.8 seconds)
  • FiO2

Variable (Monitored)

  • TV during release phase
  • Spontaneous breathing effort
  • CO2 clearance (PaCO2)
  • Mean airway pressure (high)

Nursing Considerations

  • Complex mode — ICU experience required; clarify all parameters with intensivist
  • Patient must have spontaneous respiratory drive
  • Haemodynamic monitoring essential — high mean Paw can reduce preload
  • Prone positioning often used concurrently in severe ARDS
  • Weaning: gradually increase T-low and decrease P-high transitions to PSV/CPAP

Initial Ventilator Settings Guidelines

ParameterStandard SettingARDS / Lung-ProtectiveCOPD / Asthma
Tidal Volume (TV)6–8 mL/kg IBW6 mL/kg IBW (4–6 mL/kg)6–8 mL/kg IBW
Respiratory Rate12–16 /min16–35 /min (to maintain pH)10–14 /min (allow expiratory time)
FiO2Start 100%, titrate ↓Titrate to SpO2 88–95%Titrate to SpO2 88–92%
PEEP5 cmH2O8–16 cmH2O (ARDSNet table)5 cmH2O (auto-PEEP risk)
I:E Ratio1:21:1 to 1:21:3 to 1:4 (prolong expiration)
Plateau Pressure Target<30 cmH2O<30 cmH2O (strict)<30 cmH2O
Peak Pressure Alarm10 cmH2O above PIP35–40 cmH2O max40–45 cmH2O (high resistance)

ARDSNet Lung-Protective Protocol

TV 6 mL/kg IBW → measure Pplat → if >30 cmH2O reduce TV by 1 mL/kg steps to minimum 4 mL/kg IBW. Permissive hypercapnia (pH >7.20) acceptable. This reduces VILI and mortality in ARDS (ARDSNet trial, 2000).

Ideal Body Weight (IBW) & Tidal Volume Calculator

Enter patient height and gender to calculate IBW and recommended tidal volume range for lung-protective ventilation.

IBW (kg)
TV @ 6 mL/kg (ARDS)
TV @ 8 mL/kg (standard)

Lung-Protective Ventilation: ARDS Protocol

Step 1: Set Initial TV

Calculate IBW. Set TV = 6 mL/kg IBW. Use VC mode initially for precise TV delivery.

Step 2: Check Plateau Pressure

Perform inspiratory hold manoeuvre. Pplat target <30 cmH2O. If >30: reduce TV to 5 then 4 mL/kg IBW.

Step 3: Titrate PEEP

Use ARDSNet PEEP/FiO2 table. Higher PEEP for severe ARDS. Monitor haemodynamics — PEEP ↑ may ↓ BP.

Step 4: Permissive Hypercapnia

Accept PaCO2 up to 60 mmHg if pH >7.20. Do not increase TV to normalize CO2 — lung protection trumps CO2.

Step 5: Prone Positioning

P/F ratio <150 → consider prone 16–18 hr/day. Requires team of 5–6, ETT security, IV line management.

Driving Pressure

Driving pressure = Pplat − PEEP. Target <15 cmH2O. Strong predictor of mortality in ARDS independent of TV.

Monitoring & Assessment

Ventilator Alarms: Causes & Nursing Response

AlarmCommon CausesImmediate Nursing Actions
HIGH PRESSURESecretions/mucus plug, bronchospasm, biting ETT, coughing, pneumothorax, water in circuit, right main bronchus intubation1. Assess patient — manual bag ventilation if unstable. 2. Suction ETT. 3. Listen for bilateral breath sounds. 4. Check circuit for kinks/water. 5. Call physician if unresolved.
LOW PRESSURE / DISCONNECTCircuit disconnection, ETT cuff leak, trach dislodgement, circuit leak1. Check all circuit connections — re-connect. 2. Check cuff pressure with manometer. 3. Listen for air leak around tube. 4. If ETT displaced — bag-valve-mask + call for reintubation. 5. Continuous SpO2 monitoring.
APNOEAOversedation, neurological event, loss of respiratory drive, PS mode without patient triggering1. Stimulate patient — call name, sternal rub if no response. 2. Switch to mandatory mode (VC/AC). 3. Reduce sedation / reverse opioids (naloxone) if appropriate. 4. Assess neurological status. 5. Call physician.
LOW MINUTE VOLUMEHypoventilation, circuit leak, low TV, too low RR1. Check exhaled TV on display. 2. Check for circuit leak. 3. Assess patient breathing effort. 4. Review settings with physician.
HIGH RRPain, agitation, fever, metabolic acidosis, patient-ventilator dyssynchrony, insufficient PS level1. Assess pain (CPOT scale) and treat. 2. Check temperature. 3. Check ABG for metabolic acidosis. 4. Consider increasing PS or adjusting mode. 5. Titrate analgesia/sedation.
LOW FiO2Oxygen supply disconnected, blender failure1. Check O2 supply source (wall/cylinder). 2. Check blender and connections. 3. Manual ventilation with 100% O2 until resolved.

DOPE Mnemonic — Sudden Deterioration in Ventilated Patient

Displacement (ETT displaced) | Obstruction (mucus plug, kink) | Pneumothorax | Equipment failure — systematically assess in this order.

Ventilator Waveform Analysis

Pressure-Time Waveform

  • Peak Inspiratory Pressure (PIP): total resistance + compliance
  • Plateau Pressure: compliance only (no flow = no resistance component)
  • Upward slope: inspiratory phase
  • Notch at end of inspiration: flow-cycling in PSV
  • Elevated baseline = auto-PEEP or PEEP setting

Flow-Time Waveform

  • Normal: expiratory flow returns to zero before next breath
  • Auto-PEEP (air trapping): expiratory flow does NOT return to zero — next breath starts before full exhalation
  • Manage auto-PEEP: increase expiratory time, decrease RR, bronchodilators, consider intrinsic PEEP measurement (expiratory hold)
  • Sawtooth pattern: secretions in airway — suction

Volume-Time Waveform

  • Volume should return to baseline — if not: circuit leak
  • Exhaled TV displayed: monitor for compliance changes in PC mode
  • Asymmetric waveform: patient-ventilator dyssynchrony

Patient-Ventilator Dyssynchrony

  • Flow dyssynchrony: patient demand exceeds set flow — increase flow rate or switch to PC
  • Double triggering: patient effort triggers extra breath — adjust sensitivity or Ti
  • Reverse triggering: ventilator breath triggers patient effort — address with sedation or mode change
  • Auto-PEEP triggering: patient cannot trigger — apply extrinsic PEEP up to 80% of auto-PEEP

Peak vs Plateau Pressure — Key Distinction

Peak >30 + Plateau normal: airway resistance problem (secretions, bronchospasm, kinked tube) — treat airway.
Peak >30 + Plateau >30: lung compliance problem (ARDS, pulmonary oedema, pneumothorax) — reduce TV, optimize PEEP, urgent physician review.

ABG Interpreter — Ventilator Adjustment Guide

Enter arterial blood gas values to receive acid-base interpretation and suggested ventilator adjustments.

Sedation & Agitation Assessment

Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS)

ScoreLabelDescription
+4CombativeOvertly combative, violent, immediate danger to staff
+3Very AgitatedPulls/removes tubes, aggressive
+2AgitatedFrequent non-purposeful movement, fights ventilator
+1RestlessAnxious, not aggressive movements
0Alert & CalmTARGET for most patients
-1DrowsyNot fully alert, sustained eye opening >10 sec to voice
-2Light SedationBrief eye opening to voice (<10 sec) — TARGET for mechanically ventilated
-3Moderate SedationMovement to voice, no eye contact
-4Deep SedationNo response to voice, movement to physical stimulus
-5UnarousableNo response to voice or physical stimulus

Sedation Principles in Ventilated Patients

Analgesia-First Approach (A1C)

Treat pain before sedation. Use CPOT (Critical Care Pain Observation Tool) for non-verbal patients. Opioid analgesia reduces sedation requirements.

Daily Sedation Vacation (DSV)

  • Hold sedation infusions once daily (morning)
  • Allow patient to wake — assess neuro status
  • Document RASS, follow commands, pupil response
  • Assess SBT readiness during wakefulness
  • Resume at 50% dose if RASS >+1 or distress
  • Proven to reduce ventilator duration and ICU LOS

CAM-ICU — Delirium Screening

  • Assess: acute onset + inattention + altered LOC or disorganised thinking
  • Hypoactive delirium: common, often missed — flat affect, unresponsive
  • Hyperactive: agitation, pulling tubes — more visible
  • Non-pharmacological management first: reorientation, family presence, day/night cycling

Systematic Nursing Assessment — Ventilated Patient

Airway Assessment (q1–2h)

  • ETT cm marking at lips — document and compare previous
  • ETT midline at teeth / no lip injury
  • Cuff pressure 20–30 cmH2O
  • Bilateral breath sounds — equal air entry
  • Suction as needed — document colour, consistency, amount
  • Inline suction technique — maintain closed circuit

Ventilator Assessment (q1h in ICU)

  • Mode, TV/pressure settings match physician orders
  • FiO2, PEEP, RR
  • Exhaled TV, minute ventilation displayed
  • Peak pressure, plateau pressure (if applicable)
  • Waveforms — identify dyssynchrony or auto-PEEP
  • Circuit integrity — connections, water traps emptied
  • Humidifier water level and temperature

Patient Assessment (q1–2h)

  • SpO2 continuous — document hourly
  • RR — total including spontaneous
  • Work of breathing: accessory muscle use, paradoxical breathing
  • RASS score — document and titrate sedation
  • CPOT (pain score for non-verbal)
  • ABG — at least q6–8h or after changes
  • Chest X-ray — daily in ICU (review ETT position, infiltrates)

Documentation Requirements

  • Vent settings (complete) every hour in ICU charting
  • Peak pressure, exhaled TV, SpO2, ETCO2
  • RASS score and target
  • Sedation drug names, doses, infusion rates
  • Analgesic doses and CPOT scores
  • Suction frequency and secretion characteristics
  • Oral care with chlorhexidine (VAP bundle — document time)
  • HOB angle (must be 30–45° — document)
Ventilation Complications

Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia (VAP)

Definition

Pneumonia occurring >48 hours after endotracheal intubation. Most common ICU-acquired infection. Attributable mortality 13–25%. Preventable with consistent bundle compliance.

VAP Prevention Bundle — All Elements Daily

1. Head of Bed Elevation

30–45 degrees at all times unless contraindicated (spinal precautions, haemodynamic instability). Document angle every 4 hours. Prevents microaspiration of gastric contents.

2. Oral Decontamination

Chlorhexidine 0.12% oral rinse every 6–12 hours. Suction oral cavity before and after. Tooth brushing twice daily. Reduces oropharyngeal colonisation.

3. Subglottic Suctioning

Continuous or q4h aspiration of subglottic secretions via Hi-Lo Evac ETT. Document colour and amount. Reduces VAP incidence by 50% in RCTs.

4. Daily SBT + Sedation Vacation

Assess readiness for extubation daily. Reduce ventilation duration = reduce VAP risk. Each day of ventilation adds 1–3% VAP risk.

5. Peptic Ulcer Prophylaxis

PPI or H2 blocker for all intubated patients. Prevents stress ulcers → aspiration of gastric contents.

6. DVT Prophylaxis

LMWH or compression stockings for all ventilated patients unless contraindicated. Immobility + critical illness = high VTE risk.

7. Circuit Management

Do not routinely change circuits — change only when visibly soiled or malfunctioning. Change HME every 24–72 hours per policy. Empty water traps away from patient.

8. Hand Hygiene

Before and after any circuit/airway contact. VAP pathogens transmitted on healthcare worker hands. Single most important prevention measure.

VAP Diagnosis CriteriaFinding
New or worsening infiltrate on CXRAfter 48+ hours of ventilation
Two of: fever >38°C, WBC >12 or <4, purulent secretionsClinical signs of infection
Positive cultureBAL (>10⁴ CFU/mL) or tracheal aspirate (>10⁶ CFU/mL)

Ventilator-Induced Lung Injury (VILI)

Barotrauma — Pressure Injury

  • Caused by excessive peak/plateau pressures
  • Pneumothorax: sudden ↑ in peak pressure, ↓ SpO2, absent unilateral breath sounds, tracheal deviation
  • Pneumomediastinum, surgical emphysema
  • Management: chest drain for tension pneumothorax (emergency) — needle decompression 2nd ICS MCL
  • Prevention: keep Pplat <30 cmH2O

Volutrauma — Volume Injury

  • Over-distension of alveoli from excessive TV
  • Common cause of ARDS worsening in ICU (secondary VILI)
  • Prevention: TV 6 mL/kg IBW, monitor plateau pressure
  • Even "normal" TV of 10–12 mL/kg causes volutrauma in small functional lung areas (baby lung concept in ARDS)

Atelectrauma — Shear Stress Injury

  • Repeated collapse and re-opening of small airways with each breath
  • Generates shear forces → inflammation, epithelial injury
  • Prevention: adequate PEEP keeps alveoli open at end-expiration
  • PEEP titration: maintain above lower inflection point on P-V curve

Biotrauma — Inflammatory Injury

  • Mechanical deformation → cytokine release (TNF-α, IL-6, IL-8)
  • Local lung → systemic inflammatory response → MODS
  • Lung-protective ventilation reduces biotrauma and systemic complications
  • Target: driving pressure <15 cmH2O as independent predictor

Oxygen Toxicity & Haemodynamic Effects

Oxygen Toxicity

Risk: FiO2 >60% for >24–48 hours

  • Free radical damage to alveolar epithelium
  • Absorption atelectasis (high FiO2 washes out nitrogen)
  • Worsens inflammatory lung injury
  • Management: titrate FiO2 to minimum to maintain SpO2 94–98%
  • In ARDS: SpO2 88–95% acceptable to allow FiO2 reduction
  • Never leave on FiO2 100% without regular review

Haemodynamic Effects of PPV

Positive Pressure → Reduced Venous Return

  • PPV increases intrathoracic pressure
  • ↑ Intrathoracic pressure → ↓ venous return → ↓ RV preload → ↓ CO → hypotension
  • PEEP ↑ amplifies this effect — watch BP when ↑ PEEP
  • Hypovolaemic patients most at risk
  • Management: fluid bolus, vasopressors, optimise PEEP
  • Right heart failure risk: ↑ RV afterload from high Paw

Pressure Injuries & Accidental Extubation

Medical Device-Related Pressure Injuries (MDRPI)

  • ETT at corners of mouth / teeth — reposition side-to-side q24–48h
  • Thomas holder / tape strapping — check skin integrity daily
  • Nasogastric tube: nares, nasal septum — use foam padding
  • Oxygen tubing / nasal prongs: ears, cheeks — use barrier dressing
  • SpO2 probe: rotate site q4–6h
  • Temperature probe: lips, mouth corners
  • Document daily skin assessment of all device contact points

Accidental Extubation — Prevention & Management

Prevention

  • Secure ETT — verify holder position each shift
  • Document ETT cm marking — alert team to changes ≥2 cm
  • Adequate sedation/analgesia — RASS target –2 to 0
  • Soft wrist restraints if patient attempting to pull ETT (document justification)
  • Two-nurse handling during position changes

Management of Accidental Extubation

  • Call for help immediately + activate emergency
  • Apply bag-valve-mask ventilation — 15L O2
  • Position: sniffing position, head tilt-chin lift
  • Prepare for reintubation — get intubation trolley
  • Maintain SpO2 >90% while awaiting physician
  • Document incident — time, events, interventions
Weaning & Extubation

Weaning Readiness Criteria

Haemodynamic Stability

No or minimal vasopressors (dopamine ≤5 mcg/kg/min). HR 60–120/min. SBP >90 mmHg without active fluid resuscitation.

Oxygenation

FiO2 ≤0.40 with SpO2 ≥90%. PEEP ≤8 cmH2O. PaO2/FiO2 >150–200 mmHg.

Neurological

RASS 0 to –1 (alert to lightly sedated). Able to follow simple commands (open eyes, squeeze hand). Gag and cough reflexes present.

Resolving Primary Cause

Condition that caused respiratory failure is improving. No planned procedures requiring sedation. Secretions manageable (not excessive).

Respiratory Parameters

Spontaneous RR <30/min. Spontaneous TV >5 mL/kg. RSBI (RR/TV in L) <105 — Rapid Shallow Breathing Index.

Airway Protection

Cough strong enough to clear secretions. Able to open mouth on command. No excessive oropharyngeal secretions requiring continuous suctioning.

SBT Readiness Checklist — Interactive Assessment

Check all criteria that apply to your patient to determine SBT readiness.

Spontaneous Breathing Trial (SBT)

SBT Method

  • T-piece trial: disconnect from ventilator, breathe humidified O2 via T-piece — tests fully unassisted breathing, higher WOB
  • CPAP 5 cmH2O: minimal positive pressure, patient breathes spontaneously
  • PSV 5–8 cmH2O: compensates for ETT resistance — most common, well tolerated
  • Duration: 30–120 minutes
  • Observe patient continuously throughout trial
  • If passed → physician decision for extubation
  • If failed → return to previous vent settings, identify cause, rest patient 24h

SBT Failure Criteria — Stop Trial If Any:

  • RR >35 breaths/min for >5 minutes
  • SpO2 <90% on FiO2 ≤0.50
  • HR >140/min or >20% change from baseline
  • SBP >180 or <90 mmHg
  • Accessory muscle use, paradoxical abdominal movement
  • Diaphoresis, agitation, panic, distress
  • Worsening SpO2 or pH <7.32
  • Decreased consciousness / unable to follow commands

Extubation Process & Post-Extubation Care

Pre-Extubation Preparation

  • Explain procedure to patient (if conscious)
  • Position: semi-recumbent 30–45°
  • Suction ETT, oropharynx, and subglottic (final)
  • Chest physiotherapy — loosen secretions
  • Cuff leak test: deflate cuff, listen for air leak around tube during ventilation (leak = adequate subglottic space = lower stridor risk)
  • Prepare post-extubation oxygen (HFNO or standard O2 mask)
  • Reintubation equipment at bedside — suction on, bag-valve-mask ready
  • Analgesia and bronchodilators pre-administered

Extubation Procedure

  • Ask patient to take deep breath
  • At peak inspiration: deflate cuff fully, remove ETT in one smooth motion
  • Apply O2 immediately (HFNO or mask)
  • Encourage patient to cough and breathe deeply
  • Suction oral cavity if secretions present

Post-Extubation Monitoring (First 2 hours critical)

  • SpO2 continuous — target ≥94%
  • RR and WOB — accessory muscle use = early failure sign
  • Listen for stridor (inspiratory noise = laryngeal oedema)
  • Voice quality assessment
  • Swallow assessment before oral intake
  • ABG at 1 hour post-extubation in high-risk patients

Post-Extubation Stridor Management

  • Nebulised adrenaline (epinephrine) 1 mg in 5 mL saline
  • IV dexamethasone (reduces laryngeal oedema)
  • Heliox (helium/oxygen mixture) reduces turbulent flow
  • NIV (BiPAP) — if respiratory support needed without reintubation
  • Prepare for reintubation if not improving within 30–60 min

High-Flow Nasal Oxygen (HFNO) Post-Extubation

  • Flow 30–60 L/min, FiO2 up to 100%
  • Reduces reintubation rate in high-risk post-extubation patients
  • High risk: chronic lung disease, cardiac failure, obese, prolonged ventilation
  • Start at 30–40 L/min — titrate to SpO2 and comfort
  • Physioflo/Airvo devices used in GCC hospitals

Failed Extubation

  • Reintubation within 48–72 hours = failed extubation
  • Associated with significantly worse outcomes and mortality
  • Causes: aspiration, secretion retention, laryngeal oedema, weakness, hypoxia
  • Risk factors: prolonged ventilation, COPD, neurological impairment, obesity
  • Reintubation must not be delayed — early decision if deteriorating

Prolonged Mechanical Ventilation (>21 days)

  • Consider tracheostomy (if not already performed)
  • Transfer to weaning centre or step-down unit
  • Diaphragm pacing studies if neuromuscular cause
  • ICU-acquired weakness (ICUAW) — early physiotherapy essential
  • Nutritional assessment — adequate protein for respiratory muscle recovery
  • Psychological support for patient and family
Knowledge Quiz

15 questions on mechanical ventilation for GCC nurses. Click an option to answer — immediate feedback provided.

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GCC-Specific Context

Mechanical Ventilation in GCC ICUs

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High-Acuity ICUs in GCC Private Hospitals

Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi, King Faisal Specialist Hospital (KFSH) Riyadh, and Hamad Medical Corporation (Qatar) operate Level 3 ICUs with ECMO capability, advanced ventilator modes (APRV, HFOV, neurally adjusted ventilatory assist — NAVA), and dedicated respiratory therapists. GCC nurses in these settings require advanced ventilator competency and are assessed through simulation-based programmes.

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Ventilator Skills Premium in GCC Market

ICU nurses with advanced ventilator management skills, ACLS certification, and CCRN/CPN credentials command salary premiums of 15–30% compared to general ward nurses in GCC hospitals. Facilities including SEHA (Abu Dhabi), MOH Saudi Arabia, and Sidra Medicine (Qatar) specifically recruit for ventilator-competent ICU nurses. Skills in APRV, prone positioning, and ECMO circuit management are increasingly valued.

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ARDS Management During Hajj Season

Makkah region hospitals (King Abdullah Medical Complex, Ajyad Emergency Hospital) experience surge admissions during Hajj (2–3 million pilgrims). Hajj-associated pneumonia from overcrowded conditions and heat stroke-associated ARDS are significant ventilation challenges. Ventilated pilgrims often have language barriers, complex comorbidities, and no accompanying family for consent decisions. ARDSNet lung-protective protocols are standard.

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MERS-CoV: GCC-Specific ARDS Preparation

Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) continues to circulate in the Arabian Peninsula with periodic outbreaks. MERS-CoV causes severe ARDS with mortality rates exceeding 35% in ventilated patients. GCC ICU nurses must maintain N95 competency, PPE donning/doffing proficiency, and lung-protective ventilation skills for MERS management. Saudi Arabia has highest MERS burden globally — hospital-associated transmission risk requires strict airborne precautions in ICU.

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Prone Positioning in GCC ICUs

Prone positioning for severe ARDS (PaO2/FiO2 <150 mmHg) is standard practice in GCC tertiary ICUs, supported by PROSEVA trial evidence (mortality reduction 16% to 32.8% vs 41%). The procedure requires 5–6 trained ICU nurses, physiotherapy, and physician coordination. GCC patient populations include higher rates of obesity (Saudi Arabia and Qatar have among world's highest obesity rates), making prone positioning technically challenging — dedicated prone teams with standardised checklists are used at leading centres.

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Language Barrier in Sedation Assessment

GCC ICUs care for patients from 100+ nationalities including Arabic, Urdu, Bengali, Tagalog, Hindi, and Amharic speakers. RASS and CPOT assessments are complicated when patients cannot understand nurse instructions. Solutions include: pictorial RASS charts, interpreter apps (phone/tablet), professional interpreter services (mandatory for significant decisions), bilingual nursing staff allocation where possible, and family-assisted communication. Sedation goals should be clearly communicated in patient's language during daily sedation vacations.

Quick Reference
6 mL/kg IBW
Tidal Volume — ARDS / Lung-Protective
<30 cmH2O
Plateau Pressure Maximum
20–30 cmH2O
ETT Cuff Pressure Target
30–45°
Head of Bed — VAP Prevention
–2 to 0
RASS Target — Ventilated Patients
FiO2 ≤0.4
SBT Readiness — FiO2 Criterion
PEEP ≤8
SBT Readiness — PEEP Criterion (cmH2O)
RR >35
SBT Failure — Stop Trial Threshold
94–98%
SpO2 Target — General Ventilated Patients
88–92%
SpO2 Target — COPD / Hypercapnic Risk
35–45 mmHg
PaCO2 Target (normal ventilation)
DOPE
Sudden Deterioration: Displacement, Obstruction, Pneumothorax, Equipment
Ventilation in Special Populations

COPD Exacerbation

Key Ventilation Principles

  • Try NIV (BiPAP) first — reduces intubation rate 40%
  • If intubated: I:E 1:3 to 1:4 — prolonged expiration prevents air trapping
  • Low RR (10–12/min) — more expiratory time
  • Monitor for auto-PEEP — expiratory hold manoeuvre
  • Permissive hypercapnia acceptable (baseline CO2 elevated in COPD)
  • SpO2 target 88–92% — avoid hypoxic drive suppression
  • Early weaning — COPD patients difficult to wean; tracheostomy sometimes needed

Severe Asthma (Status Asthmaticus)

High-Risk Intubation — Avoid if Possible

  • Aggressive medical therapy first (Mg, heliox, ketamine)
  • If intubated: I:E 1:4 or longer — extreme air trapping risk
  • RR 8–10/min — minimise dynamic hyperinflation
  • Accept high CO2 (permissive hypercapnia) if pH >7.20
  • Monitor peak pressure closely — may be extremely high
  • Bronchodilators via nebuliser in-line continuously
  • Risk of haemodynamic collapse on intubation — have vasopressors ready

Neurological Patients (TBI / Stroke)

ICP and Ventilation

  • Maintain PaCO2 35–40 mmHg (normal range) — hypo/hyperventilation both harmful
  • Brief hyperventilation (PaCO2 30–35) only for acute ICP herniation — short-term bridge
  • Maintain SpO2 >95% — hypoxia worsens secondary brain injury
  • Avoid coughing/bucking — increases ICP — adequate sedation + ETT suction technique
  • HOB 30° for ICP reduction (note: conflicts with VAP prevention at 30°— balance)
  • Avoid hypotension — CPP = MAP − ICP; maintain MAP >80 in TBI
  • Hyperglycaemia worsens outcomes — glucose 6–10 mmol/L target

Obese Patients

Obesity-Specific Considerations

  • Always calculate TV on IBW — obese patients have smaller functional lung units
  • Higher PEEP requirements (10–14 cmH2O) due to increased chest wall weight
  • Semi-recumbent or reverse Trendelenburg improves FRC and oxygenation
  • Prone positioning: technically challenging — requires extra personnel and specialised mattress
  • Extubation failure risk high — consider HFNO post-extubation routinely
  • OSA common — higher reintubation rate if inadequate post-extubation support
  • Recruitment manoeuvres may be needed to overcome atelectasis

Non-Invasive Ventilation (NIV / BiPAP) — When to Use Before Intubation

Indications for NIV

  • COPD exacerbation with hypercapnia (pH 7.25–7.35)
  • Cardiogenic pulmonary oedema (CPAP highly effective)
  • Hypoxaemic respiratory failure in immunocompromised patients
  • Post-extubation respiratory failure in selected patients
  • Do-Not-Intubate (DNI) patients requiring respiratory support
  • Obstructive sleep apnoea with acute decompensation

NIV Contraindications

  • Apnoea or respiratory arrest
  • Inability to protect airway (GCS <8)
  • Excessive secretions requiring frequent suctioning
  • Facial trauma, recent surgery
  • Uncooperative patient or severe agitation
  • Haemodynamic instability

NIV Settings (BiPAP)

  • IPAP: Start 10–12 cmH2O, titrate to 16–20 cmH2O for CO2 clearance
  • EPAP: Start 4–6 cmH2O (= PEEP for oxygenation)
  • FiO2: Titrate to SpO2 88–95% (COPD) or 94–98% (other)
  • Backup rate: Set 10–12/min in case of apnoea

NIV Nursing Care

  • Mask fitting — oronasal or full-face mask in acute setting
  • Check for air leaks — adjust straps (not too tight — pressure injury risk)
  • Skin protection under mask — hydrocolloid dressing on nasal bridge
  • Patient education — reassure and coach breathing pattern
  • Monitor response at 1–2 hours: pH, PaCO2, RR, SpO2
  • No improvement at 1–2 hours = consider intubation
  • Gastric tube for high-risk aspiration patients on NIV
Nursing Care Plans & Clinical Protocols

Priority Nursing Diagnoses — Mechanically Ventilated Patient

1. Impaired Spontaneous Ventilation

Related to: respiratory muscle fatigue, decreased lung compliance, neuromuscular disease.
Goals: Maintain SpO2 94–98%, RR 12–20/min, synchrony with ventilator.
Interventions: Monitor vent settings and alarms, suction PRN, position HOB 30–45°, titrate sedation to RASS target, assess for dyssynchrony.

2. Risk for Aspiration

Related to: ETT cuff, impaired swallowing, altered LOC, enteral feeds.
Goals: No aspiration events, gastric residuals within acceptable limits.
Interventions: Maintain cuff pressure 20–30 cmH2O, HOB 30–45°, subglottic suctioning, oral chlorhexidine, check gastric residuals per policy, hold feeds if repositioning.

3. Impaired Verbal Communication

Related to: presence of ETT, sedation, neuromuscular blockade.
Goals: Patient able to communicate basic needs, reduced anxiety.
Interventions: Communication boards, eye-gaze boards, lip reading, letter boards, establish yes/no system, explain all procedures, include family as communication facilitators.

4. Risk for Infection (VAP)

Related to: invasive airway, impaired cough, immunocompromise.
Goals: No VAP development, temperature afebrile, secretions clear or clearing.
Interventions: Complete VAP bundle (HOB, oral chlorhexidine, subglottic suction, daily SBT assessment, circuit management), hand hygiene, aseptic suctioning technique.

5. Anxiety / Fear

Related to: inability to speak, dyspnoea, ICU environment, uncertainty of prognosis.
Goals: Patient appears calm, RASS 0 to –1, HR and RR within normal limits.
Interventions: Explain procedures, maintain calm environment, family visitation, music therapy if appropriate, adequate analgesia first (A1C approach), anxiolytics at lowest effective dose.

6. Risk for Pressure Injury (MDRPI)

Related to: ETT, NG tube, monitoring leads, immobility.
Goals: No device-related pressure injuries, skin intact at all device contact points.
Interventions: Rotate ETT position q24–48h, foam dressings under devices, reposition patient q2h, daily skin assessment documentation, Braden scale assessment on admission.

Prone Positioning Protocol — Nursing Procedure

Indication: P/F Ratio <150 mmHg on FiO2 ≥0.6, PEEP ≥5 cmH2O (Moderate-Severe ARDS)

Evidence: PROSEVA trial — prone 16–18 hr/day reduced 28-day mortality from 32.8% to 16% in severe ARDS. Recommended by surviving sepsis campaign and most ICU guidelines.

PhaseNursing ActionsTeam Role
Pre-Prone (30 min before)Suction ETT and oropharynx. Check and reinforce all line securement. Ensure ETT position documented. Suspend enteral feeds 30–60 min. Prepare padding (chest rolls, head support). Gather team of 5–6 personnel. Check eye care — tape shut if needed.Nurse coordinator leads. Physician at head managing ETT. 2 nurses each side. 1 nurse legs. 1 managing lines.
Turning ProcedureMove patient to edge of bed (supine). Apply chest rolls (shoulder to pelvis level). On count of 3: roll patient 180° to prone. Immediately check ETT position, SpO2, HR, BP. Position face laterally on prone pillow. Arms in swimmer's position.ETT management by physician/senior nurse — never let go during turn. Coordinate on single verbal count.
Prone Management (16–18 hr)Reposition head and arms q2h to prevent pressure injuries. Check eyes q2h (corneal injury risk). Monitor for facial oedema. Check ETT cm marking hourly. Monitor haemodynamics — prone may initially drop BP. Regular oral care. Document tolerance.Bedside nurse. Call physician for any ETT concerns, significant haemodynamic change, or SpO2 decline.
Supine ReturnSuction ETT and oropharynx. Resume enteral feeds preparation. Reverse turn procedure. Reassess bilateral breath sounds, ETT position, CXR. Document P/F ratio improvement (goal >150 mmHg).Same team composition as pronation.

Contraindications to Prone Positioning

Unstable spinal fracture, open chest/abdomen, unstable pelvis fracture, facial fractures/recent surgery, raised ICP, extreme haemodynamic instability (relative). Pregnancy after first trimester (relative). Each contraindication must be weighed against severity of ARDS.

Endotracheal Suctioning — Evidence-Based Practice

Indications for ETT Suctioning

  • Visible secretions in ETT/circuit
  • Audible secretions on auscultation or at bedside
  • Sawtooth pattern on flow-time waveform
  • Increasing peak pressures without Pplat change
  • SpO2 deterioration with suspected secretion retention
  • Patient requests (if communicating)
  • Before and after positional changes
  • Before cuff deflation procedures

Do NOT Routinely Suction

Unnecessary suctioning causes: hypoxaemia, cardiac dysrhythmias, mucosal trauma, atelectasis, and increased ICP in neurological patients. Suction only when indicated.

Closed/Inline Suction Technique (Preferred)

  • Pre-oxygenate with FiO2 100% for 30–60 seconds (ventilator button)
  • Insert suction catheter without applying suction — until resistance felt, then withdraw 1 cm
  • Apply suction (–80 to –120 mmHg) during withdrawal only — rotate catheter
  • Duration: ≤15 seconds per pass
  • Maximum 2–3 passes per suctioning episode
  • Flush catheter with sterile water after each use
  • Allow recovery (SpO2 return to baseline) between passes
  • Document: frequency, colour (clear, white, yellow, green, blood-tinged), consistency, amount

Saline Instillation — Not Recommended

Routine saline lavage before suctioning is NOT evidence-based. It displaces biofilm deeper into airways, does not thin secretions, and increases infection risk. Use adequate humidification instead.

Nutritional Support in Mechanically Ventilated Patients

Early Enteral Nutrition

Start within 24–48 hours of intubation when haemodynamically stable. Enteral route preferred over parenteral. Reduces infections, preserves gut barrier, improves outcomes. Continuous infusion via NG or NJ tube.

Protein Requirements

1.2–2.0 g/kg/day in critically ill ventilated patients. Higher protein (1.5–2.0 g/kg) in ARDS, burns, trauma. Adequate protein essential for respiratory muscle recovery and weaning success.

Feeding During Mechanical Ventilation

  • Maintain HOB 30–45° during and 1h after feeds
  • Check gastric residuals per protocol (typically q4–6h)
  • Hold feeds for repositioning (prone) or transport
  • Prokinetics (metoclopramide) if high residuals
  • Post-pyloric feeding if high aspiration risk

Respiratory Quotient (RQ) and Ventilation

Overfeeding increases CO2 production (especially carbohydrate excess). Elevated CO2 burden increases minute ventilation requirement — may complicate weaning. Avoid overfeeding; use indirect calorimetry where available.

GCC Licensing Exam Tips — Mechanical Ventilation

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Prometric / HAAD / DHA / SCFHS Exam Focus Areas

GCC nursing licensing exams (Saudi SCFHS, UAE HAAD/DHA, Qatar QCHP, Kuwait MOH) frequently test: VAP prevention bundle elements, ETT cuff pressure targets, lung-protective ventilation TV (6 mL/kg IBW), RASS scale scores, SBT failure criteria, and alarm troubleshooting. The DOPE mnemonic for sudden deterioration is commonly tested.

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High-Yield Facts for Exams

Must memorise: TV 6 mL/kg IBW for ARDS | Plateau <30 cmH2O | ETT cuff 20–30 cmH2O | HOB 30–45° for VAP | RASS –2 to 0 target | SBT failure: RR >35, SpO2 <90%, HR >140 | FiO2 ≤0.4 + PEEP ≤8 for SBT | DOPE mnemonic | Men ETT 8–9mm, women 7–8mm | Men ETT depth 23–25cm, women 21–23cm at lips.

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Common Exam Traps

Trap 1: TV calculated on IDEAL body weight (not actual) — in obese patients, using actual weight leads to volutrauma.
Trap 2: Peak pressure rise with NORMAL plateau = airway resistance (not compliance) — answer is suction/bronchodilator, not reduce TV.
Trap 3: RASS –5 is NOT the target — it indicates over-sedation and impairs weaning assessment.
Trap 4: Saline instillation before suction is NOT recommended — this was old practice now discouraged by evidence.

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Related Guides on GCC Nurse Hub

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