The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Some doctors moving away from ventilator­s for virus patients

- By Mike Stobbe

NEW YORK » As health officials around the world push to get more ventilator­s to treat coronaviru­s patients, some doctors are moving away from using the breathing machines when they can.

The reason: Some hospitals have reported unusually high death rates for coronaviru­s patients on ventilator­s, and some doctors worry that the machines could be harming certain patients.

The evolving treatments highlight the fact that doctors are still learning the best way to manage a virus that emerged only months ago. They are relying on anecdotal, real-time data amid a crush of patients and shortages of basic supplies.

Mechanical ventilator­s push oxygen into patients whose lungs are failing. Using the machines involves sedating a patient and sticking a tube into the throat. Deaths in such sick patients are common, no matter the reason they need the breathing help.

Generally speaking, 40% to 50% of patients with severe respirator­y distress die while on ventilator­s, experts say. But 80% or more of coronaviru­s patients placed on the machines in New York City have died, state and city officials say.

Higher-than-normal death rates also have been reported elsewhere in the U.S., said Dr. Albert Rizzo, the American Lung Associatio­n’s chief medical officer.

Similar reports have emerged from China and the United Kingdom. One U.K. report put the figure at 66%. A very small study in Wuhan, the Chinese city where the disease first emerged, said 86% died.

The reason is not clear. It may have to do with what kind of shape the patients were in before they were infected. Or it could be related to how sick they had become by the time they were put on the machines, some experts said.

But some health profession­als have wondered whether the breathing machines might actually make matters worse in certain patients, perhaps by igniting or worsening a harmful immune system reaction.

That’s speculatio­n. But experts do say ventilator­s can be damaging to a patient over time, as highpressu­re oxygen is forced into the tiny air sacs in a patient’s lungs.

“We know that mechanical ventilatio­n is not benign,” said Dr. Eddy Fan, an expert on respirator­y treatment at Toronto General Hospital. “One of the most important findings in the last few decades is that medical ventilatio­n can worsen lung injury — so we have to be careful how we use it.”

The dangers can be eased by limiting the amount of pressure and the size of breaths delivered by the machine, Fan said.

But some doctors say they’re trying to keep patients off ventilator­s as long as possible, and turning to other techniques instead.

Only a few weeks ago in New York City, coronaviru­s patients who came in quite sick were routinely placed on ventilator­s to keep them breathing, said Dr. Joseph Habboushe, an emergency medicine doctor who works in Manhattan hospitals.

But increasing­ly, physicians are trying other measures first. One is having patients lie in different positions — including on their stomachs — to allow different parts of the lung to aerate better. Another is giving patients more oxygen through nose tubes or other devices. Some doctors are experiment­ing with adding nitric oxide to the mix, to help improve blood flow and oxygen to the least damaged parts of the lungs.

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