Scientific Reports (Jul 2023)

Evaluation of electric phrenic nerve stimulation patterns for mechanical ventilation: a pilot study

  • Arnhold Lohse,
  • Philip von Platen,
  • Carl-Friedrich Benner,
  • Matthias Manfred Deininger,
  • Teresa Gertrud Seemann,
  • Dmitrij Ziles,
  • Thomas Breuer,
  • Steffen Leonhardt,
  • Marian Walter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-38316-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Diaphragm atrophy is a common side effect of mechanical ventilation and results in prolonged weaning. Electric phrenic nerve stimulation presents a possibility to avoid diaphragm atrophy by keeping the diaphragm conditioned in sedated patients. There is a need of further investigation on how to set stimulation parameters to achieve sufficient ventilation. A prototype system is presented with a systematic evaluation for stimulation pattern adjustments. The main indicator for efficient stimulation was the tidal volume. The evaluation was performed in two pig models. As a major finding, the results for biphasic pulses were more consistent than for alternating pulses. The tidal volume increased for a range of pulse frequency and pulse width until reaching a plateau at 80–120 Hz and 0.15 ms. Furthermore, the generated tidal volume and the stimulation pulse frequency were significantly correlated (0.42–0.84, $$p<0.001$$ p < 0.001 ). The results show which stimulation parameter combinations generate the highest tidal volume. We established a guideline on how to set stimulation parameters. The guideline is helpful for future clinical applications of phrenic nerve stimulation.