Auto-PEEP Expiratory Pause Assessment
Key Points
- Auto-PEEP increases mean airway pressure and can contribute to barotrauma, volutrauma, and hypotension.
- Expiratory pause is used to estimate auto-PEEP during static expiration.
- Continued expiratory flow into tubing during expiratory hold suggests intrinsic pressure trapping.
Equipment
- Mechanical ventilator with expiratory-pause (expiratory hold) capability
- Continuous pressure and flow waveform display
- Hemodynamic monitoring for hypotension surveillance
- Team escalation pathway for ventilator-setting optimization
Procedure Steps
- Identify clinical need for intrinsic PEEP assessment using waveform trends and patient status.
- Verify patient safety and monitoring readiness before maneuver.
- Activate expiratory pause to close expiratory valve during static expiration.
- Observe for continued airway flow into tubing during hold phase.
- Recognize lung-ventilator pressure equilibration during pause.
- Record measured pressure estimate as auto-PEEP value.
- Correlate value with pressure-injury and hemodynamic risk indicators.
- Communicate findings and support ordered ventilator adjustments to reduce trapping risk.
- Repeat assessment after adjustments to confirm improvement.
Common Errors
- Skipping auto-PEEP checks despite waveform concern → delayed recognition of pressure trapping.
- Interpreting measurements without clinical correlation → unsafe over- or under-response.
- Ignoring hypotension during elevated intrinsic pressure → delayed circulatory compromise management.
- Failing to reassess after adjustment → unresolved intrinsic PEEP burden.
Related
- ventilator-waveform-interpretation - Waveform context guides when intrinsic PEEP assessment is needed.
- ventilator-parameter-adjustment-principles - Adjustment strategy follows pressure and gas-exchange findings.