Continuous Mandatory Ventilation
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Continuous mandatory ventilation (CMV) is a
mode of mechanical ventilation Modes of mechanical ventilation are one of the most important aspects of the usage of mechanical ventilation. The mode refers to the method of inspiratory support. In general, mode selection is based on clinician familiarity and institutional pre ...
in which breaths are delivered based on set variables. Still used in the operating room, in previous nomenclature CMV referred to "controlled mechanical ventilation" ("control mode ventilation"), a mode of ventilation characterized by a ventilator that makes no effort to sense patient breathing effort. In continuous mandatory ventilation, the ventilator can be triggered either by the patient or mechanically by the ventilator. The ventilator is set to deliver a breath according to parameters selected by the operator. "Controlled mechanical ventilation" is an outdated expansion for "CMV"; "continuous mandatory ventilation" is now accepted standard
nomenclature of mechanical ventilation Many terms are used in mechanical ventilation, some are specific to brand, model, trademark and mode of mechanical ventilation. There is a standardized nomenclature of mechanical ventilation that is specific about nomenclature related to modes, bu ...
. CMV today can assist or control dynamically, depending on transient presence or absence of spontaneous breathing effort. Thus, today's CMV would have been called ACV (assist-control ventilation) in older nomenclature, and the original form of CMV is a thing of the past. But despite continual technological improvement over the past half century, CMV sometimes may still be uncomfortable for the patient.


Expected outcomes and considerations

Continuous mandatory ventilation is associated with profound diaphragm muscle dysfunction and atrophy. CMV is no longer the preferred mode of mechanical ventilation.


Volume-controlled CMV


Limit

Limits in VC-CMV may be set and pressure based. The ventilator will attempt to deliver the set tidal volume utilizing whatever pressure is required to reach its setting. A pressure limit may be added to limit damage to the lungs (
barotrauma Barotrauma is physical damage to body tissues caused by a difference in pressure between a gas space inside, or contact with, the body and the surrounding gas or liquid. The initial damage is usually due to over-stretching the tissues in tens ...
).


Cycle

Expiration cycling can be set by time or the pressure limit. Once the Ti (inspiratory time) is reached, or a pressure limit is reached the ventilator will cycle into expiratory mode and allow passive exhalation until another breath is triggered.


Pressure-controlled CMV

Pressure control (PC) is a pressure-controlled mode of ventilation. The ventilator delivers a flow to maintain the preset pressure at a preset
respiratory rate The respiratory rate is the rate at which breathing occurs; it is set and controlled by the respiratory center of the brain. A person's respiratory rate is usually measured in breaths per minute. Measurement The respiratory rate in humans is me ...
over a preset inspiratory time. The pressure is constant during the inspiratory time and the flow is decelerating. If for any reason pressure decreases during inspiration, the flow from the ventilator will immediately increase to maintain the set inspiratory pressure.MAQUET, "Modes of ventilation in SERVO-s, Invasive and Non-invasive", 2009 MAQUET Critical Care AB, Order No 66 61 131


Dual-control modes

Dual-control modes are
pressure control Pressure control (PC) is a mode of mechanical ventilation alone and a variable within other modes of mechanical ventilation. Pressure control is used to regulate pressures applied during mechanical ventilation. Air delivered into the patients lung ...
led modes with an exhaled
tidal volume Tidal volume (symbol VT or TV) is the volume of air moved into or out of the lungs during a normal breath. In a healthy, young human adult, tidal volume is approximately 500 ml per inspiration or 7 ml/kg of body mass. Mechanical vent ...
target. They work on a breath-by-breath basis and provide pressure-limited time-cycled breaths, increasing or decreasing the pressure of the next breath as necessary to achieve a user-selected desired tidal volume. They are known by various vendor-specific terms such as pressure-regulated volume control ( Siemens), autoflow ( Dräger), adaptive-pressure ventilation (Hamilton Medical), volume-control plus ( Covidien), among others.


Out-dated terminology

Many terms have been developed to describe the same
modes of mechanical ventilation Modes of mechanical ventilation are one of the most important aspects of the usage of mechanical ventilation. The mode refers to the method of inspiratory support. In general, mode selection is based on clinician familiarity and institutional pref ...
.
Nomenclature of mechanical ventilation Many terms are used in mechanical ventilation, some are specific to brand, model, trademark and mode of mechanical ventilation. There is a standardized nomenclature of mechanical ventilation that is specific about nomenclature related to modes, bu ...
has become more standardized and these terms are no longer preferred but still may be seen in older researchChatburn RL. Classification of ventilator modes: update and proposal for implementation. Respir Care 2007; 52:301–323. there are many different names that historically were used to reference CMV but now reference Assist Control. Names such as: volume control ventilation, and volume cycled ventilation in modern usage refer to the Assist Control mode. * Assist/control * A/C * CMV * Volume assist/control * Volume control * Volume limited ventilation * Volume controlled ventilation * Controlled ventilation * Volume targeted ventilation


See also

* Continuous spontaneous ventilation * List of modes of mechanical ventilation by category *
Modes of mechanical ventilation Modes of mechanical ventilation are one of the most important aspects of the usage of mechanical ventilation. The mode refers to the method of inspiratory support. In general, mode selection is based on clinician familiarity and institutional pref ...
* Pressure controlled continuous mandatory ventilation * Pressure controlled intermittent mandatory ventilation * Volume controlled intermittent mandatory ventilation


References

{{Mechanical ventilation Respiratory therapy Mechanical ventilation