• Home

EMCrit RACC

Online Medical Education on Emergency Department (ED) Critical Care, Trauma, and Resuscitation

  • EDICUs
  • Show Types ▿
    • RACC-Lit
    • Mind of the Resuscitationist
    • Procedures
You are here: Home / squirts / How to configure viral filters on a CPAP or BiPAP circuit

How to configure viral filters on a CPAP or BiPAP circuit

April 4, 2020 by Josh Farkas 10 Comments

I've received several questions on twitter about this.  There are a variety of ways to do it, depending on available materials…

(1) Filter attached directly to the mask

The simplest way to achieve this is to attach the filter directly to the mask, as shown below.

This should work well – provided that the filter and mask are adaptable to one another.

https://twitter.com/doctormromeo/status/1245158922467577856

(2) Two-limb closed system with a full-featured mechanical ventilator

This involves attaching the BiPAP mask to a traditional mechanical ventilator (with both inflow and outflow tubing).  Filters are placed on both the inflow and outflow limbs, generating a completely closed system.

The advantage is that this generates a 100% closed system (assuming no mask leak, of course).

The disadvantage of this approach is that it involves using a full-featured mechanical ventilator to perform CPAP or BiPAP.  Since the ventilator isn't designed for this purpose, it may have inferior leak compensation and trigger sensitivity, when compared to a dedicated BiPAP unit (e.g. a Respironics V60 units).

(3) One-limb system with a specialized noninvasive machine (e.g. Respironics V60)

This involves the following:

  • BiPAP mask is connected to a specialized noninvasive machine.
  • One viral filter is attached to the inflow limb.
  • A second viral filter is attached to the exhaust port, as shown below:

Here's a similar setup (image from tweet by Armstrong Medical).

Advantages:

  • A dedicated noninvasive machine (e.g. Respironics V60) may have superior triggering capacity and leak compensation, compared to a traditional mechanical ventilator.
  • Using a V60 for non-intubated patients will free up a full-featured ventilators for use with intubated patients.

Disadvantages:

  • Some BiPAP devices do have a built-in one-way valve (example below).  This is designed to allow air into the tubing if there is negative pressure.  This valve is intended to prevent the patient from asphyxiating in the event of catastrophic device failure (e.g. if the BiPAP machine stopped functioning or the tubing became occluded).
  • So this isn't a 100% closed system.  However, as long as the BiPAP machine is working, there should be positive pressure within the tubing – so this one-way valve should remain closed.

And make sure you're using the right filters!

  • Not everything that looks like a viral filter is a viral filter (heat and moister exchangers shouldn't be confused with viral filters).

related…

  • Webinar by Weingart on avoiding intubation.
  • Section in IBCC COVID chapter on noninvasive ventilation.

Filed Under: EMCrit

Cite this post as:

Josh Farkas. How to configure viral filters on a CPAP or BiPAP circuit. EMCrit Blog. Published on April 4, 2020. Accessed on December 11th 2025. Available at [https://cmefix.emcrit.org/squirt/filters-bipap/ ].

Financial Disclosures:

The course director, Dr. Scott D. Weingart MD FCCM, reports no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies. This episode’s speaker(s) report no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies unless listed above.

CME Review

Original Release: April 4, 2020
Date of Most Recent Review: Jul 1, 2024
Termination Date: Jul 1, 2027

You finished the 'cast,
Now Join EMCrit!

As a member, you can...

  • Get CME hours
  • Get the On Deeper Reflection Podcast
  • Support the show
  • Write it off on your taxes or get reimbursed by your department

Join Now!


.

Get the EMCrit Newsletter

If you enjoyed this post, you will almost certainly enjoy our others. Subscribe to our email list to keep informed on all of the Resuscitation and Critical Care goodness.

This Post was by the EMCrit Crew, published 6 years ago. We never spam; we hate spammers! Spammers probably work for the Joint Commission.

Comments

  1. Gerry McElvaney says

    April 12, 2020 at 10:05

    How long do filters function if you have to use a humidifier ie delivery through a tracheotomy

    Reply
  2. Kevin Stephens says

    April 20, 2020 at 16:15

    This is how I have set up the disposable CPAP and BILevel masks here. Down side is that My clinical directors boss, said NO WAY because, she believes that the filters don’t work to stop exhalation aerosolization. I have tried showing them evidence. But I don’t seem to have enough puppets and crayons. I don’t know how to add a pic of my rig’s here. We don’t have ventilators, and now we don’t have CPAP. So, for now I teach my Doc’s how to get a bit of CPAP with the BVM. That, I can at least do for now.

    Reply
  3. Gamaliel Isaac says

    April 28, 2020 at 09:59

    Nurses aren’t putting people on CPAP or BIPAP because they are not closed systems so they are afraid to get the virus. This might make them less afraid to do the right thing. See https://youtu.be/mUWwsHY2wss

    Reply
  4. Matt says

    May 5, 2020 at 19:25

    Pretty much all CPAP/BiPAP masks have exhalation ports which is why they are an aersolization risk (not just from mask leak). For any of these interfaces you generally have to use a well fit anesthesia mask and have some other expiratory valve (a dual limbed circuit or a whisper swivel) to avoid this problem and appropriately filter exhaled gas.

    Reply
    • Josh Farkas says

      May 5, 2020 at 21:21

      disagree, in some cases you can put a filter on the exhalation port

      Reply
    • denise maginnis says

      November 17, 2020 at 06:20

      I’m wondering how you attach the filter to the exhalation port.

      Reply
  5. James Puderer says

    May 6, 2020 at 22:29

    What is the purpose of the viral filter on the inflow limb? At least with CPAP, I would expect that the constant positive pressure would prevent exhalation from travelling to the machine. Is this precaution BiPAP specific?

    Reply
    • Al Fantasia says

      February 26, 2021 at 17:51

      It is meant to be used as a “debris” filter….to stop any material that may be sent in to the inspiratory circuit. there is wear and tear on the NIV just like any other machine, its meant to stop it from reaching the patients airway.

      Reply
  6. Charles Parsons says

    May 20, 2020 at 12:26

    We use the filter on the Whisper Valve, this creates a closed system as long as the patient can tolerate the mask. Has anyone transported on Bipap? Looking for suggestions ,input on how it is being done

    Reply
    • Melissa Mac says

      March 7, 2022 at 20:12

      Yes
      Bacteria filter at machine as well as BEFORE exhalation port on circuit.

      Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

EMCrit Join

Login

  • Lost Password
Metasin Coaching
RCM
SCRAM Bag

CME Information

See our CME Information

Other Stuff

  • Have a great idea for the next podcast? Share it here!
  • Tough Questions. Maybe you have an answer!
  • When you're done listening to the podcast,
    check out these great sites.

Who We Are

We are the EMCrit Project, a team of independent medical bloggers and podcasters joined together by our common love of cutting-edge care, iconoclastic ramblings, and FOAM.

Resus Leadership Academy

Subscribe by Email

EMCrit is a trademark of Metasin LLC. Copyright 2009-. This site represents our opinions only. See our full disclaimer, our privacy policy, commenting policy and here for credits and attribution.