Pulmonary system, vital signs, eval and cardiopulmonary rehab Flashcards

1
Q

pneumonia

A
  • bacterial: acute disease, intra-aveolar infection
  • viral
  • aspiration
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2
Q

Tuberculosis

A

airborne infection from a bacteria
s/s: bad cough, chest pain, blood sputum, weakness/fatigue, weight loss, chills/fever
tx: drug therapy (prolonged)

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3
Q

possible outcomes with TB

A
  • compromised spinal integrity
  • spinal lesions –> motor and sensory impairments
  • brain lesions –> stroke like symptoms
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4
Q

COPD

A
  • poor expiratory flow rates
    1. peripheral airway disease: smoking
    2. chronic bronchitis
    3. emphysema (enlargement and destruction of air spaces)

s/s: dyspnea, wheezing, cough and sputum
interventions: bronchodilators, steroids for anti inflammatory effects, preventative vaccination, O2 therapy

OTs do not change their O2

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5
Q

other chronic obstructive diseases

A

asthma
cystic fibrosis
hyaline membrane disease

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6
Q

chronic restrictive diseases

A

difficulty expanding lungs
can be from bony/muscular/organ changes: bony thorax, ankylosing spondylitis, scoliosis, pectus excavatum, burns, muscular degeneration, SCI, etc

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7
Q

pulmonary edema

A

seepage of fluid from vascular system in interstitial space

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8
Q

pulmonary emboli

A

thrombus from vein becomes embolic and lodges in pulmonary circulation, can cause infarction

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9
Q

pleural effusion

A

excessive fluid between the pleura from inflammatory conditions

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10
Q

atelectasis

A

collapsed or airless alveolar unit

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11
Q

claudication, angina, and dyspnea scales

A

0 - no pain
1 - light/mild
2 - moderate/bothersome
3 - moderate/severe
4 - severe/most pain

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12
Q

vital signs

A

measured before, during, and after activity
note side effects from medications may impact vital signs

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13
Q

HR for infants/adults

A

infant: 120 bpm
adult: 60-100 bpm

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14
Q

BP for infants/adults

A

infant: 75/50 mm Hg
adult: <120/80 mm Hg

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15
Q

RR for infants/adults

A

infant: 40 br/min
adult: 12-20 br/min

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16
Q

diaphoresis

A

excessive sweating with decreased cardiac output

17
Q

pulses

A

decreased or absent associated with PVD

18
Q

skin color and vascular status

A

cyanosis: bluish color
pallor: turning white (limited blood flow)
rubor: redness (PVD)
temp
skin pale, shiny dry, ulcers, gangrene
claudication: pain/cramping/fatigue typically in calves
edema

19
Q

Phase 1 of cardiopulmonary rehab

A

hospitalization (acute)/inpatient rehab
- usually 24 hours after being stable for 24 hours
- bedside eval, MET level 1-2
- educate on energy conservation, cardiac precautions, BREATHING exercises
- monitor vital signs always
- can go to phase 2 when they are at 3.5 mets

20
Q

cardiac precautions

A
  • no holding breath/straining
  • no overhead exercises
  • no lateral arm movements/stretch the chest
21
Q

absolute contraindications to go to cardiac rehab (inpatient and outpatient)

A

acute MI (within 2 days)
unstable angina
uncontrolled cardiac arrhythmias
acute PE or pulmonary infection
acute myocarditis or pericarditis or aortic dissection

22
Q

Phase 2

A

outpatient rehab (subacute)
start at 3.5 METs
- as early as 24 hrs after d/c from hospital
- build up activity tolerance
- ADLs, IADLs, work activities
- lifestyle change support
sex 5-6 mets

23
Q

Phase 3

A

maintenance/training
community exercise programs
gym programs (weight and cardiovascular training)

24
Q

cystic fibrosis

A

pediatric pulmonary disorder
- genetically inherited (both parents are carriers)
- production of abnormal mucous
- chronic, progressive
- exercise intolerance
- poor nutrition, developmental delays

25
Q

respiratory distress syndrome (RDS)

A

pediatric pulmonary disorder - premature birth
- insufficient production of surfactant (coating on the lungs to keep alveoli open)
- lung collapses after each breath
- supplemental O2 with CPAP, intubation with PEEP
- mother is treated with steroid meds 24-36 hours proper to premature delivery to stimulate surfactant production
- baby at risk for hemorrhage, dysplasia, developmental delay

26
Q

bronco pulmonary dysplasia (BPD)

A
  • result of barotrauma (from ventilation, high inflating pressures, infection, aspiration, asphyxia - deprived of O2)
  • prematurity
  • lung walls thicken, making O2 exchange difficult
  • oxygen therapy, ventilation, bronchodialtors
  • risk for hypotonia, gross motor delays, feeding problems, CNS problems
27
Q

when are vital signs monitored during acute phase

A

prior to activity, at the peak, immediately upon cessation, and 4-5 min after activity

28
Q

internal bleeding s/s

A

ecchymosis (black and blue)
swollen, tender, firm (abdomen especially)
different skin color/temp
increased breathing and pulse
low BP
nausea/vom
restlessness/anxiety

minor: RICE
major: alert medical personnel

29
Q

shock s/s

A

pale gray or blue cool skin
increased, weak pulse
increased RR
decreased BP
irritability
diminishing level of consciousness
nausea or vommitting

  • capillary refill test
  • elevate legs
  • no food/drink