Airway Clearance - Physiotherapy Flashcards

1
Q

What are the active sputum clearance techniques?

A
  • Mobilisation
  • Positive expiratory pressure (PEP)
  • Breathing exercises (ACBT)
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2
Q

What are the passive sputum clearance techniques?

A
  • Postural drainage
  • Percussion & vibrations
  • High frequency oscillating vests (HFOV)
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3
Q

What are the effects of mobilisation?

A
  • Increased flow rates
  • Higher FRC (functional residual capacity)
  • Moving more gas - more pressure behind cough
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4
Q

What does PEP involve?

A
  • Using positive pressure of blowing to create a back pressure in the airways
  • Using collateral ventilation to force air behind sputum in collapsed airways
  • I.e. uses lateral channels as a back door to get around sputum
  • Holds airways open whilst providing expiratory flow
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5
Q

What devices are used for PEP?

A
  • Bubble PEP
  • TheraPEP, PariPEP
  • Oscillating PEPs - Acapella, Flutter
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6
Q

What type of patient would a TheraPEP/PariPEP be used for?

A

Someone with chronic disease requiring ongoing PEP therapy, e.g. chronic bronchitis, CF

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7
Q

What is the function of an oscillating PEP?

A
  • Creates positive pressure

- Plus adds vibration during exhalation

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8
Q

When would you use specific breathing exercises?

A

When mobilisation isn’t enough and/or you can’t use PEP

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9
Q

What are the specific breathing exercises for the larger and smaller airways?

A

Larger: Cough & high volume huff
Smaller: Forced expiratory technique (FET) & active cycle of breathing technique (ACBT)

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10
Q

What is forced expiratory technique (FET)?

A
  • 1-2 huffs from mid-low lung volume
  • Followed by breathing control (period of relaxed, controlled breathing to reduce the possibility of airway closure, desaturation or fatigue)
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11
Q

What is the active cycle of breathing technique?

A
  • Technique to clear bronchial secretions

- Cycles of breathing control, thoracic expansion exercises (TEE) & FET (1-2 huffs, breathing control)

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12
Q

When would you begin using passive airway clearance techniques?

A

When the patient is too tired to continue active techniques or cannot participate in active techniques

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13
Q

What does postural drainage involve?

A
  • Uses gravity to position affected lung segment uppermost
  • Sputum should drain into larger airways to be coughed out
  • Combined with other techniques
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14
Q

What does percussion/vibration involve?

A
  • Tapping or shaking chest wall to loosen sputum from airways
  • Cupped hand and rhythm essential for percussion
  • Time vibrations with exhalations
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15
Q

What should you do if active and passive techniques don’t work?

A

Consider more invasive techniques (learning in CI2)

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16
Q

What should be considered when choosing a treatment for sputum clearance?

A
  • Mobilisation treats multiple problems
  • Start active if possible, passive if necessary
  • Patient experience/preference
  • Patient effort/compliance/fatigue
  • Cost & availability
  • Evidence
17
Q

What factors should be considered when looking for evidence?

A
  • Experimental design (RCT, sample size, outcomes)
  • Disease process
  • Acuity (chronic vs acute)
  • Patient characteristics/settings
  • Specifics of technique used e.g. duration
18
Q

What does the evidence tell us about airway clearance techniques?

A
  • Results vary depending on pathology
  • Most techniques tend to have short term benefits
  • Patients often prefer PEP
  • Don’t know about long term outcomes
19
Q

How do you re-assess following sputum clearance?

A
  • Auscultation - crackles/wheezes
  • Palpation - fremitus
  • Sputum volume
  • SpO2
  • Patient comfort
  • Respiratory rate
  • Dyspnoea
20
Q

What are the components of an effective cough?

A
  • Deep breath in
  • Closure of glottis
  • Contraction of abdominal muscles to build up intra-abdominal pressure & intra-thoracic pressure
  • Opening of glottis
  • Explosive cough
21
Q

What are the warnings associated with cough?

A
  • Pain
  • SOB
  • Dizziness
  • No more than 2 coughs in a row
22
Q

What are thoracic expansion exercises (TEE)?

A
  • Deep breathing exercises emphasising inspiration
  • Inspiration followed by 3 second hold, then passive relaxed expiration
  • Approx 5 breaths/holds
  • Can be encouraged with proprioceptive stimulation (placing hands either side of lower lobes)
23
Q

What are the contraindications to bubble PEP?

A
  • Undrained pneumothorax
  • Frank haemoptysis (coughing up blood)
  • Extensive bullae or cysts
  • Recent pneumonectomy
24
Q

What are the precautions to bubble PEP?

A
  • Altered consciousness/confusion (risk of drinking the water)
  • Paediatric patients (risk of drinking/aspirating)
  • Patients requiring high/continuous oxygen therapy (switch to nasal prongs, monitor SpO2)
25
Q

What are the precautions to the head down tip position (postural drainage)?

A
  • Hypertension
  • Unstable CV system (arrhythmias etc)
  • Immediately following oesophageal surgery (risk gastric aspiration & places strain on anastomoses)
  • Immediately following a meal
  • Hiatus hernia (hernia above diaphragm)
  • GORD
  • Orthopnoea/severe dyspnoea
  • Recent head injury &/or neurosurgery, raised ICP
  • Patient distress/distress in that position
  • Pulmonary oedema/severe cardiac failure
  • Severe obesity/abdominal distension (increase pressure on diaphragm, compresses lung volumes)
  • Recent head/neck surgery/facial trauma (risk of upper airway obstruction)
  • Cerebral/aortic aneurysm
26
Q

What are the warnings associated with postural drainage?

A
  • Pain
  • SOB
  • Headache
  • Dizziness
  • Nausea
27
Q

What are the precautions to percussion & vibrations?

A
  • Fractured ribs
  • Frank haemoptysis (coughing up fresh blood)
  • Rib cancer
  • Osteoporosis/long term steroid use (causes osteoporosis)
  • Burns
  • Surgical incisions
  • ICC
  • Severe bronchospasm
  • Severe pleuritic pain (without adequate pain relief)
  • Very low platelet level/clotting disorders