A novel breath pattern model and analysis to minimize patient discomfort in medical ventilators

Abstract Typical waveforms used for the simulation of pressure and volume-controlled ventilation in medical ventilators have been extensively studied in the literature. The majority of simulation studies reported employ the step pattern or ramp pattern to model the pressure and flow variations in pr...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: M. Deepa, R. Vidhyapriya, A. S. Raagul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-01-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-86187-5
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832594675204096000
author M. Deepa
R. Vidhyapriya
A. S. Raagul
author_facet M. Deepa
R. Vidhyapriya
A. S. Raagul
author_sort M. Deepa
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Typical waveforms used for the simulation of pressure and volume-controlled ventilation in medical ventilators have been extensively studied in the literature. The majority of simulation studies reported employ the step pattern or ramp pattern to model the pressure and flow variations in pressure/volume-controlled ventilation. It was observed that the above waveforms tend to add to the discomfort level of patients due to the presence of jerks in derivatives of pressure/flow variations; the pressure/flow variation of air and oxygen mixture should be smooth so that the patient discomfort is kept at a minimal level. To overcome the above-mentioned drawback, a careful study of the flow/pressure simulation using a cycloidal pattern during the inhalation and exhalation phases of the breath cycle was proposed and investigated in this work. Based on transient analysis of the pressure variation simulation, it was observed that the air and oxygen mixture delivered to the patient was relatively jerk-free due to the finite values of first and second-order derivatives of pressure/flow curves. Mathematical models of the proposed simulation study of the cycloidal pattern of flow variation in both pressure/volume-controlled ventilation, are formulated and presented for use by ventilator designers. A comparative study of the simulation of step, ramp and cycloidal profiles applied to the breath cycle in a typical pressure-controlled ventilation is carried out and a marginal decrease in tidal volumes was observed in the case of cycloidal profiles for a given set of ventilator settings and the results are discussed. A typical natural breath pattern of a healthy adult was experimentally measured using a CITRIX breath analyser and the above mathematical model for the volume-controlled ventilation was found to closely describe the natural breathing process, using statistical parameters. Thus, the proposed cycloidal profile of pressure/flow variations in medical ventilators will be a better alternative, when compared to the step/ramp profiles investigated in this work; further, the proposed cycloidal profile matches closely with the natural breath pattern, based on typical experimental studies.
format Article
id doaj-art-21032aeefbd54892a94763f6b50a0e08
institution Kabale University
issn 2045-2322
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Nature Portfolio
record_format Article
series Scientific Reports
spelling doaj-art-21032aeefbd54892a94763f6b50a0e082025-01-19T12:23:36ZengNature PortfolioScientific Reports2045-23222025-01-0115111310.1038/s41598-025-86187-5A novel breath pattern model and analysis to minimize patient discomfort in medical ventilatorsM. Deepa0R. Vidhyapriya1A. S. Raagul2Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, PSG Institute of Technology and Applied ResearchDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, PSG College of TechnologyDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, PSG Institute of Technology and Applied ResearchAbstract Typical waveforms used for the simulation of pressure and volume-controlled ventilation in medical ventilators have been extensively studied in the literature. The majority of simulation studies reported employ the step pattern or ramp pattern to model the pressure and flow variations in pressure/volume-controlled ventilation. It was observed that the above waveforms tend to add to the discomfort level of patients due to the presence of jerks in derivatives of pressure/flow variations; the pressure/flow variation of air and oxygen mixture should be smooth so that the patient discomfort is kept at a minimal level. To overcome the above-mentioned drawback, a careful study of the flow/pressure simulation using a cycloidal pattern during the inhalation and exhalation phases of the breath cycle was proposed and investigated in this work. Based on transient analysis of the pressure variation simulation, it was observed that the air and oxygen mixture delivered to the patient was relatively jerk-free due to the finite values of first and second-order derivatives of pressure/flow curves. Mathematical models of the proposed simulation study of the cycloidal pattern of flow variation in both pressure/volume-controlled ventilation, are formulated and presented for use by ventilator designers. A comparative study of the simulation of step, ramp and cycloidal profiles applied to the breath cycle in a typical pressure-controlled ventilation is carried out and a marginal decrease in tidal volumes was observed in the case of cycloidal profiles for a given set of ventilator settings and the results are discussed. A typical natural breath pattern of a healthy adult was experimentally measured using a CITRIX breath analyser and the above mathematical model for the volume-controlled ventilation was found to closely describe the natural breathing process, using statistical parameters. Thus, the proposed cycloidal profile of pressure/flow variations in medical ventilators will be a better alternative, when compared to the step/ramp profiles investigated in this work; further, the proposed cycloidal profile matches closely with the natural breath pattern, based on typical experimental studies.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-86187-5Ventilator waveformsStepRampCycloidalPCVVCV
spellingShingle M. Deepa
R. Vidhyapriya
A. S. Raagul
A novel breath pattern model and analysis to minimize patient discomfort in medical ventilators
Scientific Reports
Ventilator waveforms
Step
Ramp
Cycloidal
PCV
VCV
title A novel breath pattern model and analysis to minimize patient discomfort in medical ventilators
title_full A novel breath pattern model and analysis to minimize patient discomfort in medical ventilators
title_fullStr A novel breath pattern model and analysis to minimize patient discomfort in medical ventilators
title_full_unstemmed A novel breath pattern model and analysis to minimize patient discomfort in medical ventilators
title_short A novel breath pattern model and analysis to minimize patient discomfort in medical ventilators
title_sort novel breath pattern model and analysis to minimize patient discomfort in medical ventilators
topic Ventilator waveforms
Step
Ramp
Cycloidal
PCV
VCV
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-86187-5
work_keys_str_mv AT mdeepa anovelbreathpatternmodelandanalysistominimizepatientdiscomfortinmedicalventilators
AT rvidhyapriya anovelbreathpatternmodelandanalysistominimizepatientdiscomfortinmedicalventilators
AT asraagul anovelbreathpatternmodelandanalysistominimizepatientdiscomfortinmedicalventilators
AT mdeepa novelbreathpatternmodelandanalysistominimizepatientdiscomfortinmedicalventilators
AT rvidhyapriya novelbreathpatternmodelandanalysistominimizepatientdiscomfortinmedicalventilators
AT asraagul novelbreathpatternmodelandanalysistominimizepatientdiscomfortinmedicalventilators