
Vent Alarms should be Regarded as Code Blue
If you cannot instill this into your culture, patients will die
If they are crashing, do DOPES
ETCO2 on any Vented Pt
This is what the real alarm should be
High (Peak) Pressure

Dyssynchrony
Peak Only
- Check the circuit
- fluid pooling in circuit
- fluid pooling in filter
- kinking of circuit
- Tube too small or biofilmed
- Bronchospasm
- Biting on ETT
Peak & Plat High
- Tube in Mainstem
- Pneumothorax
- Bad Lungs >> Turn down the Vt
- Abd Compartment
Low Peak Pressure
- Disconnect
- ETT Cuff Deflated
- Pt effort
Low Ve/Vt
- Cuff Issues (See EMCrit Wee )
- Bronchopleural Fistula
Low O2 Alarm
- Not hooked Up
- Gases Messed Up
- Sensor Messed up
What to Do with Continued Alarms Despite Sedation, Equipment Check, Suctioning
- Consider Bronchoscopic Assessment
- If Patient begins to crash, consider tube exchange if bronch not available
Breakdown on Alarm Types
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Scott Weingart
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In my mind, part of the problem is that the vent does not distinguish between alarms.
For example, I’d rather not turn off alarms for high respiratory rate – somebody should take a look. But this has the exact same sound as the disconnection or obstruction alarms. Which means the only way to prevent alarm fatigue is to make yourself unaware of more common, but less serious threats.
On the topic of alarms in general, I feel 2 buttons are missing from the monitor :
– button A: this is the patient ‘s known acute physiology. For the next hour, please let me know if vital signs start to deviate from this (far safer than setting HR alarm to 190,then forgetting about it).
– button B: wrong interpretation. This would teach the monitor that what it’ s calling VT is really Sinus tach with Lbbb.
In my mind, part ff the problem is that the vent does not distinguish between alarms.
For example, I’d rather not turn off alarms for high respiratory rate – somebody should take a look. But this has the exact same sound as the disconnection or obstruction alarms. Which means the only way to prevent alarm fatigue is to make yourself unaware of more common, but less serious threats.
On the topic of alarms in general, I feel 2 buttons are missing from the monitor :
– button A: this is the patient ‘s known acute physiology. For the next hour, please let me know if vital signs start to deviate from this (far safer than setting HR alarm to 190,then forgetting about it).
– button B: wrong interpretation. This would teach the monitor that what it’ s calling VT is really Sinus tach with Lbbb.
How do you feel about clamping the ETT with patients on high PEEP before disconnecting the vent?
Do you mean when switching to a portable vent?
if PEEP > 10, we clamp for any circuit disconnects