4.2 Article

Nebulized Albuterol Delivery in a Model of Spontaneously Breathing Children With Tracheostomy

Journal

RESPIRATORY CARE
Volume 58, Issue 12, Pages 2076-2086

Publisher

DAEDALUS ENTERPRISES INC
DOI: 10.4187/respcare.02419

Keywords

tracheostomy; nebulizer; delivery device; children; albuterol

Funding

  1. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences College of Medicine Children's University Medical Group Fund Grant Program
  2. George Endowment for Asthma

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BACKGROUND: Nebulized therapy is commonly used in spontaneously breathing tracheostomized patients, despite a lack of recommended devices and techniques. I compared albuterol dose delivered to a model of spontaneously breathing children with tracheostomy, using different nebulizers, tracheostomy tube sizes, inhalation techniques, and breathing patterns. METHODS: A tracheostomy model was connected in series to a breathing simulator, with a filter interposed. I simulated the breathing patterns of a 16-month-old child and 12-year-old child, and tested tracheostomy tubes with internal diameters of 3.5 mm and 5.5 mm. Albuterol nebulizer solution (2.5 mg/3 mL) was used. A breath-enhanced nebulizer (Pad LC Plus), a breath-actuated nebulizer (AeroEclipse), and a nebulizer that continuously delivers aerosol (Up-Draft II Opti-Neb) were operated for 5 min at 6 L/min with wall air. The Up-Draft II was tested with T-piece and mask interfaces, with an extension tube, and with and without assisted breathing (every breath and every other breath). The amount of albuterol delivered was analyzed via spectrophotometry. Particle size distribution was measured with a cascade impactor. RESULTS: The Pad LC Plus was more efficient than the Up-Draft II or AeroEclipse. Assisted breathing with the Up-Draft II with extension increased albuterol delivery with every other breath (second best device/configuration), being superior to every breath technique. Adding an extension tube increased delivered albuterol. T-piece was more efficient than mask. Breathing patterns with larger tidal volume increased albuterol delivery. Tracheostomy size had less impact on drug delivery. Mass median aerodynamic diameter decreased by 48-74% when passing through the tracheostomy tubes, and 0.8% of the nominal dose was deposited in the tracheostomy tube. CONCLUSIONS: Albuterol delivery in a model of spontaneously breathing children with tracheostomy is influenced by type of device and configuration, use of assisted breathing, breathing pattern, and tracheostomy tube size. Mass median aerodynamic diameter significantly decreases during passage through a tracheostomy tube. (C) 2013 Daedalus Enterprises

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