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Research ArticleOriginal Research

A Novel, Versatile Valved Holding Chamber for Delivering Inhaled Medications to Neonates and Small Children: Laboratory Simulation of Delivery Options

Robert M DiBlasi, Dominic P Coppolo, Mark W Nagel, Cathy C Doyle, Valentina I Avvakoumova, Rubina S Ali and Jolyon P Mitchell
Respiratory Care April 2010, 55 (4) 419-426;
Robert M DiBlasi
Center for Developmental Therapeutics, Seattle Children's Research Institute
Department of Respiratory Care, Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, Washington.
RRT-NPS
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Dominic P Coppolo
Monaghan Medical, Syracuse, New York.
RRT MBA FAARC
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Mark W Nagel
Trudell Medical International, London, Ontario, Canada.
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Cathy C Doyle
Trudell Medical International, London, Ontario, Canada.
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Valentina I Avvakoumova
Trudell Medical International, London, Ontario, Canada.
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Rubina S Ali
Trudell Medical International, London, Ontario, Canada.
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Jolyon P Mitchell
Trudell Medical International, London, Ontario, Canada.
PhD CChem CSci
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  • For correspondence: [email protected]
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Delivery of bronchodilator to infants and small children from a pressurized metered-dose inhaler with valved holding chamber (pMDI-VHC) is limited by airway narrowness, short respiratory cycle time, and small tidal volume (VT). There is a need for a versatile, efficient VHC, given the variety of treatment modalities.

METHODS: We tested the AeroChamber Mini VHC (the internal geometry of which is optimized for aerosol delivery, and which accepts a pMDI canister that has a dose counter) in experiments to determine differences in the delivery of hydrofluoroalkane-propelled albuterol (90 μg/actuation) during: mechanical ventilation via endotracheal tube (ETT); manual resuscitation via ETT; and spontaneous breathing via face mask. We tested 5 units of the AeroChamber Mini VHC per test. We simulated the tidal breathing of a premature neonate (VT 6 mL), a term neonate (VT 20 mL), and a child approximately 2 years old (VT 60 mL). We collected the aerosol on an electret filter and quantitatively assayed for albuterol.

RESULTS: The total emitted mass of albuterol per actuation that exited the VHC was marginally greater during spontaneous breathing (12.1 ± 1.8 μg) than during manual resuscitation (10.0 ± 1.1 μg) (P = .046). Albuterol delivery via mechanical ventilation, though comparable with the premature-neonate model (3.3 ± 1.2 μg), the term-neonate model (3.8 ± 2.1 μg), and the 2-y-old-child model (4.2 ± 2.3 μg) (P = .63), was significantly lower than in the spontaneous-breathing and manual-resuscitation models (P < .001). In the neonatal models the total emitted mass was similar with the spontaneous-breathing model (6.0 ± 1.0 μg with the premature-neonate model, 10.5 ± 0.7 μg with the term-neonate model) and the manual-resuscitation model (5.5 ± 0.3 μg premature-neonate model, 10.7 ± 0.9 μg term-neonate model) (P ≥ .46 via one-way analysis of variance).

CONCLUSION: The reduced delivery of albuterol during mechanical ventilation (compared to during spontaneous breathing and manual resuscitation via ETT) was probably associated with the saturated atmosphere in the breathing circuit (37°C, relative humidity > 99%), compared to the ambient air (22 ± 1°C, 44 ± 7% relative humidity). The AeroChamber Mini VHC may provide a versatile alternative to VHCs that are designed exclusively for one aerosol treatment modality.

  • neonate
  • small child
  • inhaler
  • aerosol
  • mechanical ventilation
  • manual resuscitation
  • spontaneous breathing
  • simulation

Footnotes

  • Correspondence: Jolyon P Mitchell PhD CChem CSci, Trudell Medical International, 725 Third Street, London, Ontario, N5V 5G4, Canada. E-mail: jmitchell{at}trudellmed.com.
  • Mr DiBlasi has disclosed a relationship with Trudell Medical.

  • Copyright © 2010 by Daedalus Enterprises Inc.
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Respiratory Care: 55 (4)
Respiratory Care
Vol. 55, Issue 4
1 Apr 2010
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A Novel, Versatile Valved Holding Chamber for Delivering Inhaled Medications to Neonates and Small Children: Laboratory Simulation of Delivery Options
Robert M DiBlasi, Dominic P Coppolo, Mark W Nagel, Cathy C Doyle, Valentina I Avvakoumova, Rubina S Ali, Jolyon P Mitchell
Respiratory Care Apr 2010, 55 (4) 419-426;

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A Novel, Versatile Valved Holding Chamber for Delivering Inhaled Medications to Neonates and Small Children: Laboratory Simulation of Delivery Options
Robert M DiBlasi, Dominic P Coppolo, Mark W Nagel, Cathy C Doyle, Valentina I Avvakoumova, Rubina S Ali, Jolyon P Mitchell
Respiratory Care Apr 2010, 55 (4) 419-426;
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Keywords

  • neonate
  • small child
  • inhaler
  • aerosol
  • mechanical ventilation
  • manual resuscitation
  • spontaneous breathing
  • simulation

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