84 - Causes and Consequences of Respiratory Centre Depression Flashcards

1
Q

Where is the central respiratory controller?

A

Medulla, in brainstem

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2
Q

Effectors of respiratory centre

A

Respiratory muscles

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3
Q

Locations of chemoreceptors for breathing
1
2

A

1) Central (in medulla)

2) Peripheral (EG: in carotid bodies)

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4
Q

What do central chemoreceptors detect?

A

Respond to PaCO2 via CSF [H+]

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5
Q

What do peripheral chemoreceptors detect?

A

Respond to low PaO2, highPaCO2, pH

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6
Q

When does the body begin to increase ventilation in response to hypoxia?

A

Only when arterial O2 concentration is at around 50mmHg

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7
Q

Ve

A

Minute ventilation.
Amount of air breathed in each minute.
Respiratory rate x tidal volume

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8
Q

Relationship between Ve and work

A

Linear increase until ~60% maximum work.

Past 60% maximum work, steeper gradient of Ve increase, to match O2 consumption and CO2 production.

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9
Q

Why does Ve increase more steeply after 60% maximum work?

A

Because anaerobic metabolism begins here, so H+ is produced as well as CO2, requiring more ventilation to compensate decrease in pH.

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10
Q
What can lead to hypoventilation? 
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A

1) Reduced respiratory centre activity
2) Neuromuscular disease
3) Chest wall deformity
4) Obesity
5) Sleep-disordered breathing
6) Respiratory muscle fatigue secondary to severe lung disease

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11
Q

Things that can reduce respiratory centre activity

A

Drugs (EG: opiates)
Trauma
Vascular accidents

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12
Q

Examples of neuromuscular diseases that can lead to hypoventilation
1
2

A

1) Nerve paralysis (polio, Guillian-Barre, trauma)

2) Muscle weakness (motor neurone disease, muscular dystrophy, drugs)

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13
Q

Example of a chest wall deformity that can cause hypoventilation

A

Severe kypho-scoliosis

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14
Q

Sleep-disordered breathing
1
2
3

A

1) Obstructive sleep apnoea (most common)
2) Central sleep apnoea
3) Obesity hypoventilation syndrome

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15
Q

Obstructive sleep apnoea

A

Transient obstruction of the throat during sleep, preventing breathing and disturbing sleep

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16
Q

Why does obstruction of airways occur during sleep?
1
2
3

A

Airway muscles relax, especially during REM
Throat already narrowed (from obesity, tonsils, etc.)
Tongue falls backwards (particularly if supine)

17
Q

How can there be a period of ~60 seconds of complete airway obstruction during sleep apnoea?

A

During deep sleep brain is quite poor at detecting stimuli, so takes a while for it to realise that it is hypoxic.

18
Q
Cycle of events in obstructive sleep apnoea 
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A
  1. Snoring in light sleep
  2. Complete obstruction (apnoea) in deep sleep
  3. Reduced blood O2, increased CO2, other stimuli
  4. Brain “wakes” to lighter sleep (arousal)
  5. Muscles contract, airways opens, breathing
    recommences
  6. Back into deep sleep, obstructs again
    Often more than 60 events every hour throughout sleep
19
Q

Hypersomnolence

A

Falling asleep during the day

20
Q
When to suspect sleep apnoea
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2
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6
A
  1. Snoring
  2. Witnessed apnoeas
  3. Arousals
  4. Choking
  5. Symptoms of disturbed sleep (excessive daytime somnolence, mood change, poor memory, poor libido)
  6. Difficult to treat hypertension, unexplained respiratory failure etc
21
Q

How can OSA be diagnosed?

A

Overnight sleep study with a polysomnogram.

22
Q
How does a polysomnogram work?
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A

Heat-detecting sensor placed over mouth, detect breathing during sleep.

Attach oximeter to ear or finger, see what O2 saturation is like during sleep.

Abdominal movement is detected

Ribcage movement is detected

23
Q
Treatment for OSA
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A
Nasal CPAP (constant positive air pressure)
Keeps upper airways open (with 4-20cmH2O of pressure)

Can also use mandibular advancement splint (to pull tongue forward, works on mild sleep apnoea)

Surgery is often ineffective

Sleeping on the side

24
Q

Obesity hypoventilation
1
2
3

A

1) Usually presents as ventilatory failure +/- right heart failure
2) “Sensitive” to supplemental oxygen
3) Manage with BiPAP and weight reduction (gastric banding)

25
Q

Central sleep apnoea
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2
3

A

1) From reduced drive to breathe
2) Several forms, eg Cheyne Stokes breathing
3) Manage underlying heart failure etc +/- CPAP or BiPAP

26
Q

Patients that you can’t treat with supplemental O2

A

Those with chronic hypercapnia

27
Q

Why can’t those with chronic hypercapnia be treated with supplemental O2?

A

They’re dependent on hypoxic drive to breathe (not stimulated by hypercapnia to breathe).
Giving O2 reduces hypoxic drive.