Abstract
INTRODUCTION: There is a paucity of studies comparing the physiological effects of nasal CPAP or non-synchronized noninvasive ventilation (ns-NIV) during the postextubation phase in preterm infants. Heart rate variability (HRV) can identify system instability before clinical or laboratory signs of deterioration. Thus, we sought to investigate any differences in HRV between those modes.
METHODS: 15 preterm infants with birthweight ≤1,250 g and undergoing their first extubation attempt were studied immediately after disconnection from mechanical ventilation. Electrocardiogram (ECG) recordings were obtained while on nasal CPAP and ns-NIV in a random order (30–60 min on each). Time and frequency domain analyses were used to calculate HRV from 5-min segments of ECG.
RESULTS: 12 of 15 infants were analyzed (3 were excluded for low ECG quality): 7 successes and 5 failures. HRV parameters were higher during ns-NIV when compared to nasal CPAP, but differences were not statistically different. However, absolute and relative differences in HRV values (all time domain parameters) were significantly higher in infants who failed extubation during ns-NIV.
CONCLUSIONS: Nasal CPAP or ns-NIV provided immediately postextubation did not affect HRV. Interestingly, in an exploratory analysis, changes in HRV did occur during ns-NIV in the subgroup of infants who failed extubation. Hence, changes in HRV as early as 2 h after extubation should be further explored in larger studies as a potential predictor of postextubation respiratory failure.
- extubation failure
- heart rate variability
- noninvasive ventilation
- preterm infants
- respiratory support
- neonatal intensive care
Footnotes
- Correspondence: Guilherme Sant'Anna MD PhD, Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Neonatal Division, McGill University Health Center, 1001 Boulevard Decarie, Room B05.2711, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H4A3J1. E-mail: guilherme.santanna{at}mcgill.ca.
Ms Latremouille presented a version of this paper at the American Thoracic Society International Conference, held May 13–18, 2016, in San Francisco, California.
The authors have disclosed no conflicts of interest.
Supplementary material related to this paper is available at http://www.rcjournal.com.
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