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Apex Nursing

Chart — Critical Care

Ventilator Alarm Troubleshooting Chart

High pressure, low pressure, apnea, volume, and FiO₂ alarms — causes, check-first priorities, and clinical actions for ICU nurses.

Educational use only. Ventilator changes are made per provider orders and respiratory therapy protocols; escalate alarms you cannot resolve immediately. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Always assess the patient first — then troubleshoot the machine.

If cause is not immediately clear and patient is deteriorating: disconnect → BVM → call for help.

DOPE — Acute Deterioration

D

Displacement

ETT moved — assess depth, sounds, capnography

O

Obstruction

Secretions / kink / bronchospasm — suction + inspect

P

Pneumothorax

Absent sounds + instability — emergent decompression

E

Equipment

Circuit failure — switch to BVM immediately

High Peak Inspiratory Pressure Alarm

Triggers when airway pressure exceeds set upper limit. Indicates increased airway resistance or decreased lung compliance.

CauseCheck FirstClinical Action
Secretions / mucus plugSuction ETT immediatelyClear secretions; reassess breath sounds; SpO₂ monitoring
Patient biting tubeObserve patient; look for jaw clenchingInsert bite block; reassess sedation level
Patient coughingAssess triggering and synchronyOptimize sedation/analgesia; reassess ventilator triggering
BronchospasmAuscultate for diffuse wheezeAdminister bronchodilator as ordered; notify provider
Circuit kinkInspect full circuit from machine to ETTStraighten tubing; ensure circuit is properly supported
Right mainstem intubationAuscultate bilaterally (absent left sounds)Notify provider; pull ETT back to correct position; obtain CXR
PneumothoraxAbsent unilateral breath sounds + hemodynamic instabilityEMERGENT — notify provider; prepare for needle decompression
Worsening ARDS / ↓ complianceBilateral changes; gradual pressure increase over timeNotify provider; may need plateau pressure assessment and vent adjustment

Low Pressure / Low Exhaled Volume Alarm

Indicates a leak or break in the ventilator circuit — the breath is not reaching or staying in the patient.

CauseCheck FirstClinical Action
Circuit disconnection (most common)Look and listen — visible disconnect; audible hissingReconnect immediately; assess chest rise; verify bilateral breath sounds
ETT cuff leakAudible leak around ETT; low exhaled volume; gurglingCheck cuff pressure (target 20–30 cmH₂O); reinflate; notify provider if ruptured
Loose tubing connectorTrace full circuit — find loose fittingReconnect fitting; verify all connections are secure
Partial extubationETT depth at lips is higher than documented baselineSecure ETT; do not push back — notify provider; prepare for reintubation

Apnea Alarm

Triggers when no breath is detected within the set apnea interval. Vent switches to backup apnea ventilation mode.

CauseCheck FirstClinical Action
Over-sedationRASS score — deeply sedated?Hold sedation per protocol; stimulate patient; notify provider
Opioid-induced respiratory depressionRecent opioid administration? Rate and depth of breathing?Reduce opioid; naloxone if ordered; monitor closely; notify provider
Neurological eventPupillary changes, facial asymmetry, new motor deficitFull neuro assessment; notify provider immediately; emergent imaging if new deficit
Insufficient trigger sensitivityPatient breathing effort present but not triggering ventNotify RT to reassess trigger sensitivity; patient may be breathing spontaneously but effort not detected

Patient-Ventilator Dyssynchrony Types

TypeWhat's HappeningSignsAction
Trigger DyssynchronyPatient effort not triggering vent breathVisible breathing effort without vent cycling; labored breathingNotify RT — reassess trigger sensitivity; check for auto-PEEP
Flow DyssynchronySet flow rate less than patient demandScooped pressure waveform; active patient effort mid-breathOptimize analgesia/sedation; notify RT for flow rate adjustment
Cycle DyssynchronyVent inspiration ends before/after patient effort endsDouble triggering; active exhalation before vent cyclesNotify RT to adjust inspiratory time or cycling threshold
Auto-PEEP (Breath Stacking)Incomplete exhalation before next breath — air trappingElevated baseline PEEP; hypotension (↑intrathoracic pressure)Allow more expiratory time; notify provider; may need rate reduction or bronchodilator

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) · Surviving Sepsis Campaign · American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →