Boston (USA): Researchers, including one of Indian origin, have come up with a new approach to sharing ventilators between patients, which they believe could be used as a last resort to treat COVID-19 patients in acute respiratory distress.
The researchers, including Shriya Srinivasan from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US, noted that as more COVID-19 patients experience acute respiratory distress, there has been much debate over the idea of sharing ventilators.
This involves splitting air tubes into multiple branches so that two or more patients can be connected to the same machine, said Srinivasan, lead author of the research published in the journal Science Translational Medicine.
Several physicians' associations have discouraged this practice, saying it poses risk to patients, because of the difficulty in ensuring that each patient is receiving the right amount of air, the researchers said.
Now, a team at MIT and Brigham and Women's Hospital has come up with a new approach to splitting ventilators, which they believe could address many of these safety concerns.
They have demonstrated its effectiveness in laboratory tests, but they still caution it should be used only as a last resort during an emergency, when a patient's life is at stake.
"We hope this approach, which requires off-the-shelf components, can ultimately help patients in extreme need of ventilator support," said Giovanni Traverso, an MIT assistant professor.
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"We recognise that ventilator sharing is not the standard of care, and interventions like this one would only be recommended as a last recourse," Traverso said.
Ventilators are machines that help people breathe by delivering oxygen through a tube placed in the mouth or the nose. Countries around the world have struggled to obtain enough ventilators to handle the Covid-19 outbreak, the researchers said.
The MIT team incorporated flow valves, one for each patient's branch, that allow them to control the amount of air that each receives.