WhiteBoard Medicine - Emergency And Critical Care
BPAP Explained: Indications, Settings, Troubleshooting & Clinical Applications BPAP (Bilevel Positive Airway Pressure) is one of the most commonly used forms of noninvasive ventilation in emergency medicine, critical care medicine, respiratory therapy, and hospital medicine. Understanding when to use BPAP, how to adjust settings, and how to recognize treatment failure is essential for clinicians caring for patients with acute respiratory failure. In this episode, we review the physiology of BPAP, discuss common indications and contraindications, and walk through practical approaches to initiating and troubleshooting noninvasive ventilation. We compare IPAP and EPAP, review oxygenation versus ventilation, and discuss how BPAP can be used to support patients with COPD exacerbations, cardiogenic pulmonary edema, obesity hypoventilation syndrome, and other causes of respiratory failure. Topics Covered: • What is BPAP? • How BPAP works • IPAP vs EPAP • Oxygenation versus ventilation • Initiating BPAP • Selecting initial settings • FiO₂ adjustments • Backup respiratory rates • Monitoring response to therapy • Common troubleshooting strategies • COPD exacerbations • Cardiogenic pulmonary edema • Hypercapnic respiratory failure • Obesity hypoventilation syndrome • Indications for intubation • Noninvasive ventilation pearls and pitfalls 📺 Watch the full video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTX_8CwZH5I [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTX_8CwZH5I] 📚 Download the full study guide + access our complete emergency critical care curriculum: https://www.patreon.com/c/WhiteBoardMedicine [https://www.patreon.com/c/WhiteBoardMedicine] Our Patreon includes: • 📄 Study guides for every video • 📋 One Pagers • 🎓 Mini-courses (ventilation, shock, RRT & more) • ❓ Practice questions • 🚫 Ad-free videos • 🧠 A structured ICU curriculum 🌐 WhiteBoard Medicine Website: https://whiteboardmedicine.com [https://whiteboardmedicine.com/] Disclaimer: This content is intended for educational purposes only and should not be considered medical advice. Clinical decisions should always be based on individual patient circumstances, local protocols, and consultation with appropriate healthcare professionals.
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