Weaning, Discontinuation & Module Exam
Objectives — Change the patient-ventilator circuit following AARC guidelines; transport mechanically ventilated patients safely; initiate procedures for discontinuing mechanical ventilation including SBT and extubation criteria.
Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia (VAP)
Definition
Pneumonia occurring more than 48–72 hours after intubation and mechanical ventilation.
VAP Prevention Protocols
| Intervention | Rationale |
|---|---|
| Appropriate hand hygiene | Reduces nosocomial transmission |
| Gentle suctioning | Reduces mucosal trauma and bacterial inoculation |
| Semi-recumbent position (30–45°) | Reduces aspiration of gastric contents |
| Do not routinely change ventilator circuits | Extended intervals are safe and cost-effective |
| Drain circuit condensate away from patient | Contaminated condensate must not drain toward the airway |
| Heated wire circuits / HME | Reduces condensate accumulation |
| MDI over HHN (if HHN, change after every tx) | MDIs are associated with lower VAP rates |
| Ultrasonic nebs are as effective as MDIs | Alternative when MDIs unavailable |
| Sedation holidays during SBT | Allows assessment of neurologic function and reduces duration |
| Use NIV whenever possible | Avoids intubation entirely |
| Regular oral hygiene (every 4 hours) | Reduces oropharyngeal bacterial burden |
Circuit Change — AARC Guidelines
Recommendation #1
Do not change ventilator circuits routinely for infection control. Evidence shows no patient harm and considerable cost savings with extended circuit change intervals. Maximum safe duration is unknown — change when visibly soiled or mechanically malfunctioning.
Recommendation #2
Avoid excessive condensate accumulation. Take care not to drain condensate toward the patient's airway, and avoid contaminating caregivers during disconnection.
Recommendation #3
Passive humidification (HME) versus active humidification — while some evidence favors HME for VAP rates, other issues (resistance, dead space, airway occlusion risk) preclude a blanket recommendation for HMEs.
Recommendation #4
HMEs do not need to be changed daily. They can be used safely for at least 48 hours; some devices up to 1 week with certain patient populations.
Recommendation #5
Closed suction catheters do not need to be changed daily for infection control. Maximum safe duration is unknown.
Recommendation #6
Clinicians should be aware of VAP risk factors: nebulizer therapy, manual ventilation, and patient transport.
Circuit Change Procedure
Equipment needed: BVM, new circuit, large-bore corrugated tubing, proximal flow transducer, inspiratory and expiratory filters, humidifier or HME, sterile distilled water, closed suction catheter, aerosol treatment devices, water traps.
Steps:
- Set up and confirm proper function of manual resuscitator
- Bypass ventilator circuit from humidifier
- Remove and replace sterile humidifier
- Fill humidifier with sterile distilled water
- Deactivate / silence ventilator alarms; reassure patient
- Remove old circuit and replace with new circuit during exhalation
- Check system for leaks
- Confirm all parameters of ventilation
- Assess patient — physical assessment, vital signs, airway
- Reset and verify all alarm functions/settings
- Reassure patient
- Dispose of old circuit
- Document circuit change
Definitions
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Weaning | Gradual process of decreasing ventilator support (O₂, PEEP, mandatory rate), allowing the patient to assume more WOB |
| Ventilator discontinuation / Liberation | Removing the patient from the ventilator entirely |
It is occasionally important to distinguish: a patient may need to be liberated from the ventilator but still need a protected airway (e.g., upper airway edema, secretion management).
Weaning Timelines
| Category | Timeline |
|---|---|
| Most patients (post-op, overdose) | Wean within 72 hours |
| 25–20% need systematic approach | Days |
| 5% require weeks | Chronic pulmonary disease (COPD), ARDS |
| 1% — ventilator dependent / unweanable | Neuromuscular disease, spinal cord injury |
Weaning Factors
Success depends on four factors:
- Ventilatory workload vs. capacity — Is the disease load decreasing? Are the muscles recovering?
- Oxygenation status — Is gas exchange adequate at reduced support?
- Cardiovascular function — Is the patient hemodynamically stable?
- Psychological factors — Fear, anxiety, depression, ICU psychosis
ICU Psychosis: Acute brain failure from dehydration, hypoxia, heart failure, infection, or drugs. Manifests as anxiety, paranoia, disorientation, and agitation.
Evaluating a Patient for Weaning
Before initiating weaning, confirm:
- Evidence of improvement or reversal of the underlying cause of respiratory failure
- Oxygenation status is adequate
- Patient is hemodynamically stable
- Patient can breathe spontaneously
Preparing the Patient
- Minimize disease-imposed ventilatory load (treat bronchospasm, secretions, infections)
- Ensure patient is rested
- Address psychological and communication needs (ICU psychosis, sedation, communication tools)
- Lift sedatives and narcotics before assessment
Weaning / Discontinuation Parameters
Caution: Over-reliance on weaning parameters may result in unnecessarily prolonged ventilator dependency. Use parameters as a guide, not as a checklist that must all be met.
Oxygenation Parameters
| Parameter | Weaning-Ready Threshold |
|---|---|
| FiO₂ | < 40–50% |
| PEEP | < 5–8 cmH₂O |
| PaO₂ | > 60 mmHg |
| SaO₂ | > 90% |
| SvO₂ | > 60% |
| P/F ratio | > 150–200 |
| P(A-a)O₂ | < 350 mmHg |
| PaO₂/PAO₂ | > 0.35 |
Ventilation Parameters
| Parameter | Weaning-Ready Threshold |
|---|---|
| PaCO₂ | < 50 mmHg |
| pH | > 7.35 |
Ventilatory Mechanics
| Parameter | Weaning-Ready Threshold |
|---|---|
| Respiratory rate | 12–30 breaths/min |
| Tidal volume | > 5 mL/kg |
| Vital capacity | > 15 mL/kg |
| Static compliance | > 25 mL/cmH₂O |
| RSBI | < 105 |
| Qs/Qt | < 15–20% |
Respiratory Muscle Strength
| Parameter | Threshold | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| MIP (NIF) | < −20 cmH₂O | Effort-dependent; −19 is worse than −21 |
Ventilatory Drive / Demand
| Parameter | Threshold | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Minute volume | < 10 L | |
| VD/Vt | < 0.55–0.60 | |
| P0.1 | < 6 cmH₂O | Effort-independent — measures ventilatory drive |
P0.1: Inspiratory pressure measured 100 milliseconds after airway occlusion. Effort-independent and predicts weaning difficulty better than effort-dependent parameters. P0.1 > 6 cmH₂O suggests difficult weaning.
RSBI — Rapid Shallow Breathing Index
Also called Tobin's Index.
RSBI = RR / Vt (in liters)
How to measure:
- Place patient on spontaneous mode (CPAP)
- Set PEEP = 0 cmH₂O and PS = 0 cmH₂O
- Collect data after one minute
- Calculate: RSBI = RR ÷ Vt (convert Vt to liters)
Interpretation:
| RSBI | Prediction |
|---|---|
| < 105 | Good predictor of weaning success |
| ≥ 105 | Likely to fail weaning |
Examples (all with 6 L/min minute volume):
| RR | Vt (L) | RSBI | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12 | 0.500 | 24 | Strong success predictor |
| 24 | 0.250 | 96 | Borderline — still < 105 |
| 30 | 0.200 | 150 | Fail — despite normal minute volume |
Note: A normal minute volume does not guarantee weaning success — RSBI captures the rapid shallow breathing pattern that minute volume alone misses.
Weaning Methods
1. SIMV Weaning
- Gradually reduce mandatory rate until 4–6 breaths/min
- Assess tolerance with ABG, vital signs, patient appearance
- If tolerated → perform SBT and consider extubation
- Slowest and least aggressive method
2. Pressure Support Ventilation (PSV) Weaning
| Phase | PS Level |
|---|---|
| Initial high PS | 6–10 mL/kg IBW equivalent |
| Gradual reduction | Decrease PS until only overcoming ETT resistance (5–8 cmH₂O) |
Advantages over T-piece SBT:
- Apnea backup is maintained
- Full alarms active
- Monitored ventilator data available
- Circuit never broken
3. Spontaneous Breathing Trial (SBT)
One of several methods to assess a patient's ability to breathe with minimal or no ventilator support.
- Performed multiple times per day, interspersed with periods of full support
- Can last minutes to hours, extended gradually based on response
- Faster than SIMV for discontinuing ventilatory support
- Successful SBT should prompt consideration for extubation
Types of SBT
T-Piece Trial (Oldest Method)
Patient is removed from the ventilator and placed on humidified supplemental oxygen via large volume nebulizer with a T-piece adaptor or trach collar.
Disadvantages:
- Requires extra equipment
- Breaks the circuit
- No apnea backup or alarms
CPAP SBT (Preferred Method)
Patient remains on the ventilator in CPAP mode:
- CPAP = 0 cmH₂O
- PS = 0 cmH₂O
- Flow triggering
Advantages:
- No extra equipment
- Circuit is not broken
- Full apnea backup and alarms
- Easy airway suctioning access
Criteria for FAILING an SBT
Stop the SBT if any of the following occur:
| Parameter | Failure Threshold |
|---|---|
| Respiratory rate | > 35 breaths/min sustained |
| SpO₂ | < 90% sustained |
| Heart rate — tachycardia | > 140 bpm or 20% increase from baseline |
| Heart rate — bradycardia | 20% decrease from baseline |
| Blood pressure — hypertension | Systolic > 180 mmHg |
| Blood pressure — hypotension | Systolic < 90 mmHg |
| Agitation / anxiety | Clinically significant |
| Diaphoresis | New onset |
| Change in mental status | Confusion, decreased responsiveness |
Causes of SBT Failure
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Mechanical | Poor respiratory mechanics, neuromuscular weakness, obesity |
| Cardiac | Untreated cardiac disease |
| Metabolic | Electrolyte imbalances, alkalosis |
| Infectious | Sepsis |
| Neurologic | Anxiety, inadequate nutrition |
| Pharmacologic | Excessive sedation, opiates |
| Airway | Secretions, aspiration |
After SBT Failure
- Promptly reestablish ventilatory support
- Identify and correct the reason for failure
- Allow the patient to rest on full support for several hours before the next SBT
- Ventilator weaning protocols (RT-driven) improve outcomes when systematically applied
Terminal Weaning
Discontinuing mechanical ventilation in the context of a catastrophic illness with no expectation of survival.
- Decision made by the family with MD consultation
- Patient comfort is the priority
- Pharmacologic support: morphine or fentanyl (pain), midazolam or lorazepam (anxiety)
- Terminal weaning should be performed in a humane, compassionate manner
Brain Death
Causes
- Prolonged cardiac arrest
- Massive stroke
- Brain infection or tumor
Clinical Evaluation (Neurologist / Critical Care MD)
Absence of all brainstem reflexes must be confirmed:
| Reflex | Test |
|---|---|
| Pupillary reflex | Eyes do not react to light (or react unequally) |
| Corneal reflex | No blink to corneal touch or NS drop |
| Gag reflex | No gag to pharyngeal stimulation |
| Oculovestibular reflex | No eye movement with iced water in external ear canal |
EEG may also be used to confirm absence of electrical brain activity.
Apnea Test
Performed if brainstem reflexes are absent. Confirms the absence of brainstem-driven respiratory effort.
Pre-test requirements:
- Compensated ABG:
- PaCO₂ 35–40 mmHg
- PaO₂ 200 mmHg
Procedure:
- Disconnect patient from the ventilator
- Deliver 100% O₂ via a catheter placed at the carina at 4–6 L/min (apneic oxygenation)
- Watch for spontaneous chest rise for 8–10 minutes
Interpreting Results:
| Finding | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| PaCO₂ rises to ≥ 60 mmHg OR ≥ 20 mmHg above baseline, AND patient remains apneic | Positive apnea test → consistent with brain death |
| Spontaneous breathing is observed | Negative apnea test → not brain death |
After the test, return patient to full ventilation and document findings.