Noise is unwanted sound. In rooms where patients are treated or observed, the World Health Organization advises that average sound levels should not exceed 35 dB during the day and 30 dB at night.1 During the past 50 years, with more sound-producing devices coming into widespread use, daytime sound levels in hospitals have been annually increasing by 0.38 dB/year, and nighttime levels have increased by 0.42 dB/year.2 Major sources of ICU sound include conversation, equipment alarms and monitoring sounds, caregiving activities, phones and pagers, audio sources and television, and door impacts and falling objects. Rather than quieting the ICU, technological advance has brought more noise. For example, a ventilator alarm is as loud as a vacuum cleaner, raising the ICU peak sound level to 85 dB or more, and this may occur on average >16 times/h.3 In ICUs, where >30% of patients are already susceptible to confusion or delirium, noise contributes greatly to disrupted, fragmented, and insufficient sleep, which could trigger delirium. Improving sleep quality through noise reduction is a priority issue.
Compared with alarms, conversations between the ICU staff, and other occasional sounds, the everyday background noise of building or life-support equipment may receive less attention. We know, however, that severe and prolonged noise exposure causes permanent hearing loss in preterm neonates.4 Noise intensities in the oral cavity during nasal CPAP have been reaching 88.6 dB,4 higher than the acceptable level of 45 dB in neonatal ICUs.5 In adults, Cavaliere et al6 assessed noise intensity during noninvasive ventilation (NIV) with different types of interface: in helmets, noise levels near the right ear always exceeded 100 dB but were within 70 dB during NIV with nasal or face masks. Surely, this contributes to the high rate (37%) of delirium that we observed in NIV patients.
Associated with lower morbidity and mortality than NIV, high-flow nasal cannula (HFNC) oxygen therapy is increasingly used as an alternative means of noninvasive respiratory support.7,8 In this issue of Respiratory Care, Kubo et al9 report the results of digitally measuring noise levels of 3 different types of HFNC devices at different levels of total flow (30, 40, 50, and 60 L/min) and FIO2 (0.4, 0.5, and 0.9). The merit of this study is that, despite current concerns for safety and comfort, it is the first to investigate noise production during HFNC in adults rather than neonates.10 Its results suggest that HFNC delivered by Venturi effect was the noisiest and HFNC delivered by turbine was the quietest at FIO2 < 0.6. With Venturi delivery, noise levels were reduced when an air filter was used, but filtering had no such effect with HFNC delivered by an air-oxygen blender. The authors propose 2 ways to decrease noise exposure during HFNC: choose less noisy modalities and, where effective, use an air filter as a silencer.
Although this study has added to the body of evidence on noise generated during HFNC, uncertainties remain due to the experimental design of the bench study. Noise levels were lower than those found in a neonatal model,10 which recorded up to 90 dB measured in the oral cavity of the manikin of a newborn; this was probably because the nasal prong, the major noise source, was distant from the sound meter. More accurate simulation of clinical practice using manikins, model lungs, and different-sized nasal prongs may provide more trustworthy results. Moreover, during HFNC, bone conducts sound to the inner ear, and this conduction causes discrepancies between measured and perceived noise levels. Human studies including subjective evaluation of noise intensity may reveal the extent to which HFNC increases patient discomfort and how the use of different HFNC devices and interfaces, as well as silencers and earplugs, affects noise.
Whereas noise generated in HFNC systems may well be lower than during NIV, it is clear that noise during HFNC far exceeds recommended levels. Technological advance should result in greater comfort for recovering patients. Meanwhile, during respiratory care, providers should endeavor to minimize the exposure of patients to noise, both by avoiding unnecessary use of HFNC and, generally, by finding beneficial ways to reduce noise levels and patient discomfort. No matter how promising a particular treatment may be, the local efficacy of ventilation may be counteracted by the overall human response.
Footnotes
- Correspondence: Taiga Itagaki MD PhD, Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Tokushima University, 3-18-15 Kuramoto, Tokushima, 770-8503 Japan. E-mail: taiga{at}tokushima-u.ac.jp.
The authors have disclosed no conflicts of interest.
See the Original Study on Page 267
- Copyright © 2018 by Daedalus Enterprises
References
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