𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Bi-level positive airway pressure (BiPAP) ventilation in an infant with central hypoventilation syndrome

✍ Scribed by Maria Pia Villa; Andrea Dotta; Domenico Castello; Silvana Piro; Jacopo Pagani; Sabrina Palamides; Roberto Ronchetti


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
26 KB
Volume
24
Category
Article
ISSN
8755-6863

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


A 4-month-old baby girl, after a period of apparent good health, began to have aphonia, dyspnea, difficulties with swallowing, cyanosis, apnea, and hypopnea during sleep that resulted in admission to an intensive care unit for intubation and mechanical ventilation. At the age of 9 months she was admitted to our hospital with a possible diagnosis of central hypoventilation syndrome. A polysomnographic study showed apnea and hypopnea (apnea + hypopnea index = 47.1), hypercapnia (mean end-tidal PCO2 89 +/- 15.0 mmHg), and arterial desaturation (mean SaO2 91 +/- 1.7%; lowest SaO2 < 50%; 68% of total sleep time at SaO2 below 93%); the study also showed an absent ventilatory response to CO2, absent cardiac responses to apnea during sleep, and right ventricular hypertrophy. Nocturnal nasal bi-level positive airway pressure (BIPAP), applied initially at 6 cmH2O and gradually increased to 16 cmH2O, caused the sleep-related abnormal respiratory events to disappear. End-tidal PCO2 decreased to 39 mmHg, and SaO2 increased to 94%. After 6 months of nocturnal BiPAP ventricular right hypertrophy reversed and arrested growth and hypotonia normalized. The child has tolerated and has remained on BiPAP support up to her current age of 3 years and continues to use this form of ventilatory assistance without difficulties.