asthma. bronchiolitis and RSV ppt Flashcards

1
Q

patho of asthma

A

Chronic inflammatory disease of the airways
Asthma causes airway hyper responsiveness, mucosal edema and mucus production.
This chronic inflammation ultimately leads to recurrent episodes of asthma symptoms

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2
Q

causal, contributing, and predisposing factors of asthma?

explain them

A

Predisposing Factors:

 - Atopy (genetic tendency to develop allergic diseases such as allergic rhinitis, asthma and atopic dermatitis)
 - Gender (child asthma more frequent in boys than girls – boys have smaller airways so believe that this may be a cause)

Causal Factors:

 - Exposure to indoor/outdoor allergens 
 - Occupational sensitizers eg nurses and latex

 -Respiratory infections
 -Air pollution
 -Active/passive smoking
 -Diet
 -Obesity
 -?Genetic (strong correlation) o	Weather changes: temp, altitude changes,
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3
Q

asthma triggers

A
Respiratory Infections
Airway Irritants:
     -Weather changes
     -Strong Odours
     -Heat or Cold
     -Perfumes
Exercise
Medication
Stress
GI Reflux
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4
Q

common symptoms of asthma?

less common?

A
Common
COUGH (productive or non-productive)
Chest tightness
Dyspnea
Wheezing
Less common
↑ effort with expiration
Diaphoresis
Tachycardia
Severe hypoxia rare – life threatening
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5
Q

when are symptoms more likely t occur?freq of symptoms, progression?

A

At night or early on the am
variable and recurring symptoms
May begin abruptly
Most frequently preceded by increasing symptoms over the previous few days

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6
Q

subjective questions to ask?

A

o What are your triggers? Has something changed?
o Onset?
o What have you been taking to manage it? Has it been working?
o Are you coughing more? Productive or non-productive?
o Are you more prone to asthma during flu/other seasons?

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7
Q

objective assessment of asthmatic pt

A

o Need to take off shirt to see what’s going on!
o Full set of vitals
o Peak flow
o If bad, need to get an IV in so can administer
o Meds being given through puffer, nebulizer (kids go straight to negulizer because don’t typically use puffer well)

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8
Q

diagnostics done for asthma?

A

o Peak flow meter
 Might do before and after administering ventolin to see if it helped
 Person might know their baseline
o Chest xray
o Sputum sample potentially if productive cough to check for infection
o WBC count to see if might be infection
o Pulmonary fx tests – done by respirologists…done when more stable,

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9
Q

peak flow meter when is it used and when is it high and low?

how do perform peak flow test? wh

A

Used to measure the patient’s maximum speed of expiration
Can be used to monitor a patient’s asthma
Can be referred to as PEF or PERF (peak expiratory flow rate)
High when patients are well and low when airways are constricted
– forceful expiration, will measure pt’s maximum speed of expiration. have graph based on height and gender, will tell you if you’re falling in normal range

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10
Q

complications of asthma

A

status asthmaticus–standard measures not working…very life threatening, prolonged episode
pneumonia
resp failure
atelectasis

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11
Q

other worrisome objective signs?

A
  • Pulsusparadoxsus: large increase in systolic BP during inhalation (>20mmHg)…normally you should see decrease (sign of status asthmaticus, cardiac tamponade, etc.)
  • Silent chest – not necessarily hearing wheezing, person moving chest but not really getting air in…may give illusion of not being as serious;
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12
Q

what clinical signs would you see with status asthmaticus

A
Altered LOC
Exhaustion
Pulsus paradoxsus
Inadequate cardiac output
Cyanosis 
Silent chest (Absence of Audible Breath Sounds)
Poor resp effort
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13
Q

what SpO2 and peak flow would you see with status asthmaticus

A

Peak flow

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14
Q

what clinical signs would you see with Acute / Severe

HR?
RR?

A
RR  ≥ 25
HR  ≥  110
Unable to speak in complete sentences
Reduced Air Entry
Widespread Wheezes
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15
Q

diagnostics of acute/severe asthma

A

Peak flow

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16
Q

short acting meds and their classes for asthma?

A

o Beta2 agonists + anticholinergics = bronchodilators
o beta 2 agonists: Salbutamol/Ventolin only lasts 4-6hrs – very temporary relief, symptoms may return immediately after
o Ventolin side effect = racing heart
Anticholinergics: Ipratropium

17
Q

long acting meds and their classes for asthma?

A

Inhaled corticosteroids: Beclomethasone/Flovent
Oral/IV steroids

Long-acting Beta2 agonists
Salmeterol

Methylxanthines: Bronchodilation

Leukotriene modifiers
Montelukast

o Methoprednisone used iV for individual in status asthmaticus

18
Q

focus of nursing mgmt of asthma?

A

Asthma education

Environmental control

Self – monitoring and action plans

19
Q

what is bronchiolitis?

what causes it?

A

Inflammation of the fine bronchioles & small bronchi -lower respiratory tract infection

Usually due to viruses, 
      particularly RSV (Respiratory Syncytial Virus)
20
Q

how and when does exposure to RSV occur?

who is most likely to be hospitalized?

A

up to 1/3 of children within their first year exposed to RSV
2/3 within first RSV season
nearly all by 2-3 years
Everyone is exposed
Children under 2 years are most affected
• 3-6 months tend to be those who are most likely be hospitalized from this….have passive immunity before this time so more at risk

21
Q

objective assessment data RSV?

A
Work of breathing:
Nasal Flaring
Head bob
Subcostal, intercostal & substernal indrawing
See saw belly breathing

Copious thick secretions?
Oxygen saturation monitor? Sats? Heart rate?
The parent/caregiver? Are they anxious? Relaxed? ie. Is this normal for them?

22
Q

what do you hear with RSV?

A
Cough? (barking, dry, wet, harsh, congested sounding) 
Wheezing? (without stethoscope)
Stridor
With stethoscope: Auscultation
Crackles, wheezes (describe exactly what you hear)
Inspiratory and expiratory phase
Air entry 
Compare both sides
Stridor
23
Q

what is NPW?

A

• NPW = nasopharangeal washing; used to use this technique to take a sample for lab, but now just have long swab

24
Q

what is croup?

A

• CROUP = virus, what causes laryngitis in adults; constriction + inflm of airways; not usually nearly as bad as RSV

25
Q

if a child thats several months old has resp rate of >___ what should you do?

A

• If resp rate >55breaths per minute (after new born phase…a few months old), you typically have child NPO
o 0.7 seconds to coorindate suck, swallow, and breath cycle in infant….if breathing too rapidly, resp compromised and won’t be able to coordinate this in safe fashion
o Normal for new born = 30-60bpm

26
Q

what is the fifth vital sign in peds

A

wt

27
Q

how do you assess circulation and hydration for bronchio/RSV pt

A
Mucous membranes, color and moisture
Peripheral and central color (compare) mottling normal
Intake and output
Weight (why?)
What is nutritional status?
Respiratory rate greater than 55 bpm?
28
Q

what type of crying/tears are concerning?

A

crying but no tears=v dehydrated

29
Q

what type of diagnostics would be done for RSV

A
  • CBC
  • CXR if really bad
  • ABG
30
Q

nursing interventions for RSV peds pt

A
Strict intake and output
Daily weight
NPO if RR over 55 bpm
Hydrate the mother if BF, small frequent feeds
? IV
Group care 
Tylenol? What do you think? 
VS routine and prn                            
Oxygen to keep sats above 96%
NP or Blow by?
NS drops prn
Suction prn
Cardiac sling
Sat probe change q4h (burns)
31
Q

nursing mgmt of bronchiolitis

A
Hydration
Oxygen
Inhaled epinephrine
Nebulized salbutamol
Inhaled hypertonic saline
Ribivirin
32
Q

meds for bronchiolitis…and RSV? the slide doesnt make it clear

A

Inflammatory response so use:
Glucocorticoid steroid (Budesonide)
*Causes thrush (yeast) in mouth so do mouth care
Mother must be treated
too if BF. Thrush spread to mother’s breast, back to baby…need to break this cycle
Immunization for RSV?