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The relationship between frequency of ventilator circuit changes and infectious hazard.
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1978
Year
AsthmaVentilator Treatment PeriodsVentilator Circuit ChangesVentilator CircuitVentilationPatient SafetyInfectious HazardVentilator CircuitsPulmonary PhysiologyRespiratory InfectionLung MechanicsInfectious Respiratory DiseasePulmonary MedicineAir PollutionMedicinePulmonary DiseaseEmergency Medicine
The relationship between frequency of ventilator circuit changes and risk of ventilator-associated pneumonia was studied using 2 independent approaches. The first was an in-use aerosol contamination study with patients on 8-hour, 16-hour, or 24-hour ventilator changing schedules. The second approach was a study comparing the incidence of pneumonia in patients on ventilators for 2 one-year periods when the ventilator circuit changing time differed. In-use aerosol sampling of 513 ventilator treatment periods showed bacterial contamination greater than 100 organisms per aerosol in 1.8 per cent of 8-hour cycles, in 2.5 per cent of 16-hour cycles, and in 5.4 per cent of 24-hour cycles. These differences were not significant. The incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia was the same for one-year periods when ventilator circuits were changed either every 8 or every 24 hours. It was concluded that changing ventilator circuits every 24 hours provides adequate protection from ventilator-associated pneumonia.