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Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)

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Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)

The “Gregory Box.” Source: Bernsen’s International Press Service Limited.
Diagram of the head box apparatus, from Dr. Gregory’s 1971 paper in New England Journal of Medicine. [2]

Gregory Boxes were briefly produced by Vickers Medical, in England, from around 1972 to 1974. However, many pioneering organizations with NICUs fabricated them in house.

By 1973, the teams of Dr. Kattwinkel and Dr. Agostino separately developed and published a technique for delivering CPAP using soft nasal prongs (below right) or nasal cannulas (below left) which (along with the so-called “bubble CPAP” pioneered by Sahni and Wung) remain the standard of practice today. [4] [5] [6]

The invention of bubble CPAP significantly simplified the use of CPAP for respiratory distress syndrome. A continuous flow of air with a predetermined percentage of O2 is delivered to the infant through nasal prongs or a nasal cannula, but Instead of controlling the end-expiratory pressure with a ventilator and its associated tubing as well as its management by a respiratory therapist, the end-expiratory pressure is managed by the simple expedient of submerging the exhaust tube in a container of water. The depth of the tube in the water controls the pressure (cm of H2O) delivered. The bubbling action also creates gentle vibrations (oscillations) which may assist in gas exchange and lung recruitment.

The introduction of CPAP took place at least 5 years before the widespread availability of infant ventilators, and undoubtedly saved an untold number of lives. Such ventilators as were used at all were adult ventilators such as the MA-1 adapted with pediatric tubing, which were volume-based and poorly matched to premature infant physiology, and were usually a last resort before demise, Severe respiratory distress syndrome continued to take its toll until neonatologists could bring other technologies to bear: time-cycled pressure-limited ventilators such as the Baby Bird, and later, surfactant replacement.


[1] Mai CL, Yaster M, Firth P: “The Development of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure: an Interview with Dr. George Gregory.” Pediatric Anesthesia 23 (2013) 3-8. doi:10.1111/pan.12075

[2] Gregory GA, Kitterman JA, et al: “Treatment of the Idiopathic Respiratory Distress Syndrome with Continuous Positive Airway Pressure.” NEJM 284(24), 1333-1340. June 17, 1971.

[3] Dunn PM: “Continuous Positive Airways Pressure Using the Gregory Box.” Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, (67) 245-247, May 1974.

[4] Kattwinkel J., Fleming D., Cha C. C., Fanaroff A. A., Klaus M. H. A device for administration of continuous positive airway pressure by the nasal route. Pediatrics. 1973 Jul;52(1):131–134.

[5] Caliumi-Pellegrini G., Agostino R., Orzalesi M., Nodari S., Marzetti G., Savignoni P. G., Bucci G. Twin nasal cannula for administration of continuous positive airway pressure to newborn infants. Arch Dis Child. 1974 Mar;49(3):228–230. doi: 10.1136/adc.49.3.228.

[6] 5. Sahni R, Wung J-T. Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). Indian J Pediatr 1998;65:265–71. 10.1007/BF02752303

Last Updated on 02/15/26