SIMV-Pressure Control

This weeks tutorial is on SIMV-Pressure Control. Although this is one of the lesser used modes of ventilation, I sometimes see my colleagues using it in the operating room. And for good reason. Anesthesia ventilators are not set up in the same way as ICU vents. In particular – if you choose “PC” Pressure Control – that is what you get – pressure control; NOT pressure assist control. Hence there is no real provision for patient ventilator interaction. If you choose “SIMV” as pressure control, volume control or volume guaranteed pressure control, then the patient can breath and interact with the ventilator and receive pressure supported breaths. Consequently, conventional SIMV modes, these days, are far more likely to be used in the operating room than in the ICU.

The second reason that I wanted to cover SIMV Pressure Control is to set the groundwork for a different mode “BiLevel Pressure Control” that is built on a similar platform, looks a bit like SIMV, and has significant benefits for those of you who might choose SIMV-PC in ICU.

Most modes of ventilation offer two ways of supporting the spontaneous breath – assist control and SIMV. In SIMV-PC the spontaneous breath can be unsupported, pressure supported or partially supported using Automatic Tube Compensation (ATC). This tutorial covers the type of patient to whom you might deliver SIMV-PC; how to set up the mode; what it looks like on a ventilator screen and the strengths and weaknesses of the mode. @ccmtutorials http://www.ccmtutorials.org