Title: Use of ambu with ALS-patients
1Use of ambu with ALS-patients
- Kristiina Jokinen
- Physiotherapist
- The FNDA
2Hand ventilation with ambu means
- Assisting in labored breathing with ambu
3A bag valve mask - BMV, ambu
- Especially for patients with symptoms of
bulbarparesis - Air stacking-method keeps inhaled air in between
the compressions - Beware of over-inflating the lungs
- - pneumothorax
4When to use hand ventilation?
- In failure of a mechanical ventilator
- TLC is under 2 l
- Accessory muscles of respiration are in strong
use - Scoliosis/kyphosis decreased lung capacity
- Respiratory frequency more than 20 breaths/minute
5When to use hand ventilation?
- To remove secretions from the lungs
- To assist coughing
- After using suction
6The aims of hand ventilation
- Improved ventilation
- Preventing and removing of atelectasis
- Relaxation of respiratory muscles
- Cough assistance
7Contraindications for hand ventilation
- -Absolute pneumothorax
- -Relative bullae (big fluid-filled bulges on the
pleura), serious emphysema , hypovolemia (state
of decreased blood volume), ignorance"
(inability to time the procedure right in order
to support the inhaling) - Arno Vuori MD, Department of Anesthesiology,
Turku University Central Hospital TYKS
8Notice
- The reservoir should not be used without
additional oxygen - A patient cant breath through ambu without
ventilation - Ambu contains a one-way valve
- The mask cannot be tied onto face
- Neck support should be used in order to relax
neck and throat muscles
9Notice
- Avoid ventilation straight after meals and before
bedtime - Avoid hyperventilation by having breaks
- Make sure the mask is tight
- The patient must feel the chest stretching
- The patient gives the rhythm !
10When using ambu, consider
- Hygiene
- if several persons use the same ambu, its best
to use bacterial/viral filters - Patients condition
- additional diseases or conditions require
consultation with patients doctor - Independence and need of assistance
11Assisted ventilation
- Assistance in hand ventilation is needed, if
upper limbs are weak - Assistant can also clean the ambu
- The assistant needs to be trained for the right
use of ambu/hand ventilation - The methods and means have to be agreed and
written down by both parties
12Exercises with ambu
- Exercises with different methods
- Inhale (hold breath) exhale with a little pause
- series of 5-10 with pauses in between
- Cycles can be prolonged when patient learns to
take in the incoming air - air stacking
- inflating the lungs in stages
- targeted breathing when lying by side
13Air stacking
- Inflating the lungs in stages
- Holding the breath after inhaling
- 2-4 chest compressions when inhaling, the patient
takes in as much air as possible - When the lungs are full, hold (keep the bag
down) for a moment without exhaling - The patient should not experience any dizziness
or chest pain - Monitor the patient
14Decreased lung capacity silent chest- targeted
breathing
- Some positional habits can compromise breathing
- sleeping always on one side
- sitting lopsided
- immobile upper limbs, hands pressing on sides
- shoulders twisted forwars, collapsed chest
- Versatile use of different starting positions
- Targeting air into the silent parts of the lungs
15Ambu and physiotherapy
- Relaxing the patient after or during
laborius/tiresome physiotherapy session with hand
ventilation - Adding power to inhaling in breath deepening
exercises - Patients own ambu makes cleaning and
disinfecting easier
16Ambu and physiotherapy - cooperation
- Targeting air into the silent parts of the lungs
is easier with assistance - Deepening of breathing
- Removing secretions from the lungs is easier
- The assistant uses ambu while psysiotherapist
presses on the body
17Ambu and suction
- Removing secretions from the lungs can lead to
atellectasis - Hand ventilation is performed always after
suction - Listen breath sounds should be audible from
all parts of the lungs
18Cough assistance and ambu
- Weak abdominals and intercostals complicate
coughing - Inhaling is compromised
- Ambu helps ventilation with different methods
- Manual support on chest and/or abdomen strenghten
coughing
19Strenghtening coughing with ambu
- Assistants elbow is kept as straight as possible,
weight shifting is useful - The patient inhales holds breath while
exhaling the assistant compresses chest (along
sides/diaphragm/individually)
20Strenghtening coughing Increasing lung capacity
- Secretions in lungs reduce lung capacity
- Secretions in upper parts of the throat
complicate swallowing and spitting - A stetoscope can help detect if there are
secretions in the lungs and if the air reaches
the lower parts of the lungs - Additional air helps in coughing and increasing
volume - PCF-levels rise
21PCF-levels of an ALS-patientbefore and after
using ambu
22Independent use of ambu
- Independent use of ambu can be done through
tracheostomy tube and additional parts of ambu - using body muscles, pressing against chest
- using of sides, ambu between side and upper limb
- pressing against thigh
23Independent use of ambu
- While self-ventilating
- Hands are on the sides, keeping the air off
sides - Hands are elevated, guiding air into the upper
parts of the lungs - A long extension tube works less efficiently
- Assisted ventilation is more efficient, but if
that is not an option, self-ventilation is way
better that not ventilating at all!