Mechanical Ventilation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Speech Effects of a Speaking Valve Versus External PEEP in Tracheostomized Ventilator-Dependent Neuromuscular Patients
Background:
Many patients with respiratory failure related to neuromuscular disease receive chronic
invasive ventilation through a tracheostomy. Improving quality of life, of which speech is
an important component, is a major goal in these patients. The investigators compared the
effects on breathing and speech of low-level positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP, 5 cm
H2O) and of a Passy-Muir speaking valve (PMV) during assist-control ventilation.
Methods:
Flow will be measured using a pneumotachograph. Microphone speech recordings were subjected
to both quantitative measurements and qualitative assessments; these last consisted of a
perceptual score and an intelligibility score determined by two speech therapists using a
French adaptation of the Frenchay Dysarthria Assessment.
METHODS
Patients 10 ventilator-dependent patients with neuromuscular disease. All patients will
receive mechanical ventilation via a cuffless tracheostomy. The study protocol was approved
by our institutional review board, and written informed consent will be obtained from all
patients before study inclusion.
Experimental setup Ventilator-delivered flow will be measured using a pneumotachograph
(Fleisch #2, Lausanne, Switzerland) and tracheal pressure at the proximal end of the
tracheostomy tube using a differential pressure transducer (Validyne MP 45±100 cm H2O,
Northridge, CA, USA). To assess patient gas exchange, oxygen saturation (SpO2) will be
estimated using pulse oximetry (Ohmeda Biox, BOC Healthcare, Boulder, CO, USA).
Acoustic speech signals will be recorded using three methods. The signals recorded from a
microphone (DM202, MDE, Pierron, Sarreguemines, France) positioned 20 cm from the patient's
lips were routed to a microcomputer with an AD converter (MP150® and Acqknowledge®, Biopac
system, Goleta, CA, USA) that synchronized respiratory data (ventilator flow and tracheal
pressure) and acoustic data. The AD converter will digitize respiratory signals at 128 Hz
and speech signals at 20 000 Hz. The acoustic signal will be also routed to the Dragon
NaturallySpeaking 10® speech recognition system (Nuance; Burlington, MA, USA) with its
specific microphone and a laptop computer containing its speech recognition software.
Finally, the acoustic signal will be recorded on a digital recorder (DS55, Olympus®,
Herodphot, Manage, France) with a signal bandwidth between 50 and 19 000 Hz to allow
assessment of fundamental frequency and subsequent qualitative analysis by speech
therapists.
Experimental protocol All patients will be receiving ACV, the ventilation mode used in all
tracheostomized patients followed at our neuromuscular unit. VI, TI, backup rate, and
inspiratory trigger sensitivity will be kept unchanged. Before testing, patients will be
familiarized with the use of 5 cm H2O PEEP and of the PMV. These two conditions will be
tested in random order. With each condition, the patient first will use the Dragon
NaturallySpeaking 10® voice-training menu, which involves reading a text passage for 10
minutes to enable software training. Then, the patient will continuously utter the [a] sound
for as long as possible, read a list of words, utter the [a] sound in a glissando from high
pitch to low pitch then from low pitch to high pitch, and read a standard text passage.
Data analysis RR, TI, VI, and the volume expired through the tracheostomy tube (VE) will be
measured based on the computerized flow signal. The difference between VI and VE will be
used as an approximation of the volume expired through the upper airway. Ventilator
triggering by the patient will be considered significant when RR exceeded the backup rate by
at least 3 cycles/min.
Speech will be evaluated by measuring the mean time spent speaking during the respiratory
cycle, time needed to read the text passage, ability of Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10® to
accurately recognize the spoken words, and perceptual analyses by two speech therapists
blinded to speech condition. The numbers of grammatical and phonological errors made by
Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10® during the standard text reading will be compared between PEEP
and PMV. The two speech therapists will assess the recordings presented in pairs, with PEEP
vs. PMV in random order. The intelligibility scale used will be a French adaptation of the
Frenchay Dysarthria Assessment (0 to 8 scale). In addition, the speech therapists will
determine a perceptual score on a 0-128 scale developed by the French authors who adapted
the Frenchay Dysarthria Assessment.
At the end of each trial, the patients will evaluate subjective respiratory comfort and
subjective speech comfort on 10-cm horizontal visual analog scales (VASs).
Statistical analysis All results will be expressed as means±standard deviation (SD).
Differences between the two conditions will be assessed using a paired t test. P values
<0.05 will be considered statistically significant.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
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