SGEM#505: Close Enough for (ARF) Acute Respiratory Failure (HFNO vs NIV)

SGEM#505: Close Enough for (ARF) Acute Respiratory Failure (HFNO vs NIV)

36:37 Mar 14, 2026
About this episode
Date: March 11, 2026 Reference: RENOVATE Investigators and the BRICNet Authors; High-Flow Nasal Oxygen vs Noninvasive Ventilation in Patients With Acute Respiratory Failure: The RENOVATE Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA March 2025 Guest Skeptic: Dr. Rory Spiegel is an emergency medicine and critical care physician known for his work in evidence-based medicine and critical care. He is widely recognized for translating emerging research into practical bedside insights through lectures, writing, and digital medical education. His work focuses on resuscitation science, airway management, and the critical appraisal of medical literature. I’m in Maui at the Centre for Continuing Medical Education Year in Review Course. CCME has been doing courses for almost 40 years. The courses take place at amazing locations in the US, including Maui, Hilton Head, Key West, and NYC. CCME recruits four outstanding educators to review ~260 articles from the past year. It’s a unique course because there are no PowerPoint slides to get in the way of the attendees and the speakers. Two faculty members summarize a few articles on a topic in ½ hour with direct interaction with the speakers. You come to this course…you are up to date on the latest EM literature.   Case: A 64-year-old woman with a history of COPD (GOLD stage III) and hypertension presents to the emergency department (ED) with worsening shortness of breath over the past 24 hours. She reports increased sputum production and wheezing. On arrival, she is tachypneic and speaking in short phrases. Her vital signs are heart rate 104 beats per minute, blood pressure 148/86 mm Hg, respiratory rate 30 breaths per minute, and SpO? 88% on 4 L nasal cannula. She is using accessory muscles and has diffuse expiratory wheezes on auscultation. An arterial blood gas reveals pH 7.29, PaCO? 58 mm Hg, and PaO? 62 mm Hg. Chest X-ray shows hyperinflation without focal consolidation. Background: Acute respiratory failure (ARF) is one of the most common serious respiratory problems managed in emergency medicine and critical care. For decades, noninvasive ventilation (NIV) has been a central part of therapy for selected patients. This is particularly true for those with COPD exacerbations and acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema. By delivering positive pressure, NIV reduces the work of breathing, improves oxygenation and ventilation. This intervention has been shown to reduce intubation rates and mortality in specific populations. However, NIV can be poorly tolerated, requires a tight mask seal and monitoring, and is resource-intensive [1-3]. These downsides can become more problematic in disease states that are not readily reversible over the first few hours. High-flow nasal oxygen (HFNO) has emerged over the past decade as an attractive potential alternative. By delivering heated, humidified oxygen at high flow rates, HFNO improves oxygenation, improves ventilator efficiency by reducing dead space, and is often better tolerated than ma
Select an episode
0:00 0:00