Hypoxia And Respiratory Failure Flashcards

1
Q

What is hypoxia?

A

Oxygen deficiency at tissue level

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2
Q

Name the different types of hypoxia

A

Hypoxaemic
Anaemic
Stagnant/circulatory
Cytotoxic

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3
Q

Describe hypoxaemic hypoxia

A

Caused by respiratory failure

Poor oxygenation in the lungs

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4
Q

Describe anaemic hypoxia

A

Insufficient oxygen bound to Hb

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5
Q

Describe stagnant/circulatory hypoxia

A

Poor perfusion to regional arteries
Reduced oxygen delivery
Can be global or local

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6
Q

Describe cytotoxic hypoxia

A

Problem getting oxygen into tissues and using it in these cells
Eg. Cyanide poisoning

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7
Q

Define anaemia

A

Normal partial pressure of oxygen but insufficient haemoglobin

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8
Q

What is the normal range for oxygen saturation?

A

94 - 98%

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9
Q

What is the normal range for partial pressure of oxygen?

A

11.1 - 14.4 kPa

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10
Q

Tissue damage is most likely to occur when oxygen sats or partial pressure oxygen falls below …

A

Oxygen sats < 90%

Partial pressure O2 < 8kPa

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11
Q

Describe a type 1 respiratory failure

A

Partial pressure of oxygen arterial blood low (<8)
Oxygen sats <90%
But carbon dioxide levels are normal or low
(Type 1 affects 1 - oxygen)

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12
Q

Describe a type 2 respiratory failure

A

Partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood <8
Oxygen sats <90%
And partial pressure of CO2 is high

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13
Q

What is the normal partial pressure range for CO2 in plasma?

A

4.3 - 6.4 kPa

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14
Q

What are the 3 general mechanisms of respiratory failure?

A

Ventilatory failure - unable to move sufficient air in and out
Poor diffusion across alveoli
V/Q mismatch
(More than one mechanism may be operating in a given disease)

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15
Q

Give examples of things that cause hypoventilation

A
Opiates
Brain injury 
Myasthenia gravis/Guillain-Barre
Myopathy/MND
Obesity 
Kyphoscoliosis 
Pneumothorax 
Large effusions
Lung fibrosis 
RDS
Foreign body 
Severe asthma 
COPD (late)
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16
Q

Give some causes of chronic type 2 respiratory failure

A
Myopathy 
MND
Obesity 
Kyphoscoliosis 
Lung fibrosis 
Late stages COPD
17
Q

What is a flail segment?

A

Segment of the chest wall where multiple ribs are fractured in 2 places
During inspiration the segment gets sucked inwards
Preventing adequate lung expansion

18
Q

What are the acute effects of type 2 respiratory failure?

A

Partial pressure CO2 rises, oxygen falls
Central chemoreceptors stimulated - increase in ventilation
Unable to completely correct due to disease causing
Respiratory acidosis
Assisted ventilation needed

19
Q

What is the commonest cause of Type 2 resp failure?

A

Acute exacerbation of COPD

20
Q

Give some examples of how diffusion is compromised in certain resp diseases

A

Lung fibrosis - increased thickness of membrane

Emphysema - surface area decreased

21
Q

How do we work out AVR?

A

(Tidal volume - dead space) x resp rate

22
Q

What happens to resp system in a PE?

A

Reduced blood flow to an area (V/Q > 1)
Blood diverted to other parts of the lungs
More blood available than can be used (V/Q <1)
Hypoxia

23
Q

Other than respiratory failure, name some consequence of a massive PE

A

Acute right heart failure (increased resistance in pulmonary circulation)
Reduce cardiac output - circulatory collapse

24
Q

How do we manage respiratory failure?

A

Treat cause of the failure
Oxygen therapy - improve hypoxia
In type 2, problem of hypercapnia often requires assisted ventilation

25
Q

Give some clinical features of hypoxia

A

Exercise intolerance
Confusion
Tachypnoea
Central cyanosis

26
Q

What is cyanosis?

A

Bluish discolouration of skin and mucous membranes due to the colour of desaturated Hb
Present if >50gm/L desaturated Hb in blood

27
Q

What are the effects of chronic hypoxia?

A

Increased EPO causing elevated Hb levels
Increased 2,3 - BPG in RBCs
Hypoxia vasoconstriction of pulmonary arterioles
(Pulmonary hypertension, RH failure, cor pulmonale)

28
Q

Give 2 clinical signs of chronic hypercapnia

A

Warm hands

Flapping tremor

29
Q

What happens to the chemoreceptors in chronic hypercapnia?

A

CSF acidity corrected by addition of bicarbonate by the choroid plexus cells
Now reset to a higher partial pressure of CO2
Peripheral chemoreceptors remain sensitive to hypoxia
Respiration is now driven by hypoxia

30
Q

Why do we need to be careful when treating someone with chronic hypercapnia?

A

Giving them oxygen therapy
Correction of hypoxia may reduce their ventilation because their hypoxia is driving their breathing
This may worsen the hypercapnia
Must use titrated oxygen therapy