SoB and Respiratory Flashcards

1
Q

contraindications to NIV

A

respiratory arrest/ need for immediate intubation
facial trauma/ abnormalities
fixed upper airway obstruction
severe vomiting
acute severe asthma
pneumothorax without chest drain

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2
Q

normal anion gap metabolic acidosis causes

A

GI bicarbonate loss: prolonged diarrhoea, fistula
renal tubular acidosis
drugs
Addison’s disease

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3
Q

raised anion gap metabolic acidosis causes

A

lactate: shock, sepsis, hypoxia
ketones: DKA, alcohol
urate: renal failure
acid poisoning: salicylates, methanol

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4
Q

metabolic alkalosis causes

A

vomiting/aspiration
diuretics
hypokalaemia
primary hyperaldosteronism
Cushing’s syndrome
bartter’s syndrome
congenital adrenal hyperplasia

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5
Q

respiratory acidosis causes

A

COPD
life-threatening asthma/ pulmonary oedema
sedative drugs: benzodiazepines, opiate overdose

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6
Q

respiratory alkalosis causes

A

psychogenic
hypoxia causing hyperventilation
early salicylate poisoning
CNS stimulation: stroke, SaH, encephalitis
pregnancy

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7
Q

bleeding diathesis

A

Bleeding diathesis refers to an increased susceptibility to bleeding or bruising. .

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8
Q

congenital causes of bleeding diathesis

A

vWD
haemophilia
ehlers danlos
digeorge

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9
Q

acquired causes of bleeding diathesis

A

vascular problems
decreased pt count
vitK deficiency
increased pt destruction
kidney failure
liver disease
anticoagulant therapy
acquired clotting factor antibody

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10
Q

adrenaline <6 months anaphylaxis

A

100-150micrograms

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11
Q

adrenaline 6 months- 6 years anaphylaxis

A

150 micrograms

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12
Q

adrenaline 6-12 years anaphylaxis

A

300 micrograms

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13
Q

adrenaline adults >12 anaphylaxis

A

500 micrograms

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14
Q

presentation of acute asthma attack

A

Dyspnoea
Coughing
Difficulty breathing
Wheeze
Chest tightness

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15
Q

moderate asthma features

A

Increasing symptoms
PEF >50-75%
No features of severe asthma

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16
Q

severe asthma features

A

PEF 33-50%
RR more than equals to 25
HR more than equals to 110
Inability to complete sentence in one breath

17
Q

features of life-threatening asthma

A

PEF <33%
SO2 <92% or PO2 <8
Cyanosis
Hypotension
Exhaustion, altered consciousness
Silent chest
Tachyarrhythmias

18
Q

criteria for asthma attack referral to intensive care

A

Requiring ventilatory support
With acute severe or life-threatening asthma who is failing to respond to therapy, as evidenced by:
Deteriorating peak flow reading
Persisting or worsening hypoxia
Hypercapnia
Exhaustion, feeble respiration
Respiratory arrest

19
Q

immediate management of asthma attack

A

Sit-up
100% O2 via non-rebreathe mask (aim for 94-98%)
Nebulised salbutamol (5mg) and ipratropium (0.5mg)
Hydrocortisone 100mg IV or prednisolone 50mg PO

20
Q

management of life-threatening asthma

A

Inform the intensive care team
Magnesium sulphate 2g IV over 20 minutes
Nebulised salbutamol every 15min

21
Q

management of asthma attack if no improvement

A

Nebulised salbutamol every 15min
Continue ipratropium 0.5mg 4-6hrly
Consider aminophylline unless already on theophylline
ITU transfer for invasive ventilation

22
Q

monitoring of asthma attack

A

Peak flow measurement every 15-30min pre- and post-Salbutamol
SpO2: keep >92%
Consecutive Arterial blood gas measurements

23
Q

management of COPD attack

A

oxygen therapy
steroids
nebulisted bronchodilators
antibiotics if evidence of infection

24
Q

Further COPD treatments if no response (considering pre-morbid status)

A

Repeat nebulisers and consider aminophylline IV
Consider NIV (BiPAP) if pH <7.35 and/or RR >30
Consider invasive ventilation if pH<7.26